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Five Bold Women

as 'Big Foot' - the wagon driver

1960
The Hired Gun

as Elby Kirby

1957
Circus Boy

as

1956
Man from Del Rio

as Fred Jasper

1956
Southwest Passage

as Tall Tale

1954
The Outlaw's Daughter

as Moose, Deputy

1954
Springfield Rifle

as Sgt. Snow

1952
Man in the Saddle

as Bourke Prine

1951
Rocky Mountain

as Pap Dennison (CSA)

1950
Brimstone

as Art Benson

1949
Station West

as Mick Marion

1948
Singing on the Trail

as Big Boy Webster

1946
Belle of the Yukon

as Sheriff Mervin Maitland

1944
Hands Across the Border

as Teddy Bear

1944
Cowboy and the Senorita

as 'Teddy' Bear

1944
Nevada

as Dusty

1944
Swing in the Saddle

as 'Tiny' Baldwin

1944
Cowboy Canteen

as Spud Harrigan

1944
Minesweeper

as CPO Ichabod Ferdinand 'Fixit' Smith

1943
The Desperadoes

as Nitro Rankin

1943
American Empire

as Sailaway

1942
Mr. Wise Guy

as Luke Manning

1942
Silver Queen

as Blackie

1942
Lure of the Islands

as Jinx

1942
You'll Never Get Rich

as Kewpie Blain

1941
Swamp Water

as Bud Dorson

1941
Billy the Kid

as Ed Bronson (blacksmith)

1941
Riders of Death Valley

as Borax Bill

1941
Santa Fe Trail

as Windy Brody

1940
Virginia City

as Marblehead

1940
Guinn Williams Guinn Williams

Birthday

1899-04-26

Place of Birth

Decatur, Texas, USA

Biography

From Wikipedia Guinn Terrell Williams Jr. (April 26, 1899 – June 6, 1962) was an American actor who appeared in memorable westerns such as Dodge City (1939), Santa Fe Trail (1940), and The Comancheros (1961). He was nicknamed "Big Boy" as he was 6' 2" and had a muscular build from years of working on ranches and playing semi-pro and professional baseball. Williams made his screen debut in the 1919 comedy, Almost A Husband, with Will Rogers and Cullen Landis, and was featured in a large supporting role ten years later in Frank Borzage's Lucky Star with Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell. Throughout the 1920s Williams would have a string of successful films, mostly westerns. He then appeared in The Great Meadow alongside Johnny Mack Brown, which was Brown's breakout film. Throughout the 1930s, Williams acted in supporting roles, mostly in westerns, sports, or outdoor dramas. Although not the lead actor in any of them, he was always employed, and was successful as a supporting actor. He often played alongside Hoot Gibson and Harry Carey during that period. In 1941, he became one of many actors cast by Universal Pictures in their large film series, Riders of Death Valley. From the late 1930s to the mid-1940s, Williams appeared in supporting roles in a number of A-pictures, sometimes with high billing, such as You Only Live Once, and in Columbia's first Technicolour film The Desperadoes (1943). Williams was frequently teamed with Alan Hale, Sr. as sidekicks to Errol Flynn in several of his pictures. In 1960, he was cast in the epic film The Alamo and in Home from the Hill with Robert Mitchum. His last role was opposite his close friend John Wayne and Stuart Whitman in The Comancheros.
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