Burt Kennedy(1922-2001)
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
American screenwriter and director--particularly of westerns--Burt
Kennedy was the son of performers. He was part of their act, "The
Dancing Kennedys", from infancy. He served in World War II as a cavalry
officer and was highly decorated. After the war he joined the Pasadena
Community Playhouse, but was ousted after one play as an actor for
missing rehearsal. He found a job writing radio programs such as "Hash
Knife Hartley" and "The Used Story Lot", then used his army fencing
training to land work as a stunt fencer in films. Kennedy was hired to
write 13 scripts for a proposed television program, "Juan and Diablo",
with plans for John Wayne's Batjac
Co. contract player
Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez to star.
The show was never produced, but Kennedy was kept on at Batjac to write
films for producer Wayne. His initial effort,
7 Men from Now (1956), was
a superb western, the first of the esteemed collaboration between
director Budd Boetticher and star
Randolph Scott. Kennedy wrote
most of that series, as well as a number of others for Batjac, although
it would be nearly 20 years before Wayne actually appeared in the film
of a Kennedy script. In 1960 Kennedy got his first job as director on a
western, The Canadians (1961), but
it was a critical failure. He turned to television where he wrote and
directed episodes of Lawman (1958),
The Virginian (1962) and most
notably Combat! (1962). He returned
to films in 1965 with the successful
The Rounders (1965), later producing
and directing the pilot for the TV series of the same name.
His output since then has consisted of a number of popular Westerns, both theatrical and for television, as well as an occasional non-Western, but always with his trademark humor and stylish dialogue.
His output since then has consisted of a number of popular Westerns, both theatrical and for television, as well as an occasional non-Western, but always with his trademark humor and stylish dialogue.