Jack Slade (film)
1953 film by Harold D. Schuster
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jack Slade is a 1953 American black-and-white Western film directed by Harold Schuster, written by Warren Douglas and starring Mark Stevens.[1] It was followed by a sequel, The Return of Jack Slade (1955), also directed by Schuster, written by Douglas and starring John Ericson.[2] Both were based on chapter 9 through 11 of Mark Twain's book Roughing It.[3]
Directed byHarold Schuster
Written byWarren Douglas
Produced by
- John H. Burrows
- Lindsley Parsons
StarringMark Stevens
Dorothy Malone
Barton MacLane
Dorothy Malone
Barton MacLane
| Jack Slade | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Harold Schuster |
| Written by | Warren Douglas |
| Produced by |
|
| Starring | Mark Stevens Dorothy Malone Barton MacLane |
| Cinematography | William A. Sickner |
| Edited by | Leonard W. Herman |
| Music by | Paul Dunlap |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by |
|
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Cast
- Mark Stevens as Jack Slade
- Dorothy Malone as Virginia Maria Dale
- Barton MacLane as Jules Reni
- John Litel as Judge Davidson
- Paul Langton as Dan Traver
- Harry Shannon as Tom Carter
- John Harmon as Hollis
- Jim Bannon as Farnsworth
- Lee Van Cleef as Bolt Mackay
- David May as Tump
- Ron Hargrave as Ned Prentice
- Sammy Ogg as Joey Slade
- Nelson Leigh as Alf Slade
- Richard Reeves as Rufe Prentice
- Dorothy Kennedy as Mrs. Ward
- Duane Thorsen as Tad Prentice
- Robert Carson as Holdup Man
- Harry Cheshire as Mr. Hill
- Bill Coontz as Barfly
- Steve Darrell as Holdup Man
- Tex Driscoll as Barfly
- Donald Elson as Mr. Ward
- Nancy Gilbert as Little Girl
- John Halloran as Johnny Danton
- Chick Hannan as Barfly
- Jim Hayward as Bartender
- Ray Jones as Townsman
- Harry Landers as Danton Son
- Scotty Morrow as The Ward Boy
- Anna Navarro as Mexican Girl
- Fox O'Callahan as Barfly
- Tex Palmer as Townsman
- Hank Patterson as Old Tom
- Steve Pendleton as Stage Passenger
- Jack Tornek as Barfly
- Bob Woodward as Stage Driver
Production
It was one of a series of Westerns featuring Dorothy Malone.[4]
Reception
The film was popular at the box office.[5]