Kenneth Gamet


Biography

Filmography

 

Writer (Feature Film)

Apache Rifles (1964)
Story
Domino Kid (1957)
Screenwriter
The Lawless Eighties (1957)
Screenwriter
The Maverick Queen (1956)
Screenwriter
A Lawless Street (1955)
Screenwriter
Ten Wanted Men (1955)
Screenwriter
Hell's Outpost (1954)
Screenwriter
The Stranger Wore a Gun (1953)
Screenwriter
Last of the Comanches (1953)
Written for Screen by
The Last Posse (1953)
Screenwriter
Indian Uprising (1952)
Screenwriter
Thunderbirds (1952)
Story
Man in the Saddle (1951)
Screenwriter
Santa Fe (1951)
Screenwriter
Flying Leathernecks (1951)
Story
Fighting Coast Guard (1951)
Screenwriter
The Savage Horde (1950)
Screenwriter
The Doolins of Oklahoma (1949)
Writer
Canadian Pacific (1949)
Screenwriter
Wake of the Red Witch (1948)
Screenwriter
Adventures in Silverado (1948)
Screenwriter
Blonde Ice (1948)
Screenwriter
Coroner Creek (1948)
Screenwriter
Thunderhoof (1948)
Additional Dialogue
Betrayal from the East (1945)
Screenwriter
Tampico (1944)
Screenwriter
Bomber's Moon (1943)
Screenwriter
Flying Tigers (1942)
Screenwriter
Juke Girl (1942)
Adaptation
Pittsburgh (1942)
Screenwriter
Flying Tigers (1942)
Original Story
The Smiling Ghost (1941)
Screenwriter
Strange Alibi (1941)
Screenwriter
International Squadron (1941)
Screenwriter
Kisses for Breakfast (1941)
Screenwriter
Highway West (1941)
Screenwriter
The Great Mr. Nobody (1941)
Screenwriter
Flowing Gold (1940)
Screenwriter
Granny Get Your Gun (1940)
Original Screenplay
South of Pago Pago (1940)
Story and Screenplay
Tear Gas Squad (1940)
Original Screenplay
Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase (1939)
Original Screenplay
Devil's Island (1939)
Screenwriter
Everybody's Hobby (1939)
Screenwriter
Nancy Drew... Trouble Shooter (1939)
Original Screenplay
Nancy Drew... Reporter (1939)
Original Screenplay
Torchy Blane...Playing with Dynamite (1939)
Contr to Screenplay const
You Can't Get Away with Murder (1939)
Screenwriter
Nancy Drew: Detective (1938)
Original Screenplay
Broadway Musketeers (1938)
Original Screenplay
Smart Blonde (1937)
Screenwriter
Missing Witness (1937)
Original Screenplay
Fly Away Baby (1937)
Screenwriter
The Case of the Stuttering Bishop (1937)
Adaptation
Midnight Court (1937)
Original and Screenplay
Missing Witnesses (1937)
Screenplay

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, The (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Bishops Don't Often Need Lawyers First shot for Donald Woods as Perry Mason in his only outing as the lead character in the last feature in the Warner Bros. series, briefly Ann Dvorak as assistant Della, then Edward McWade as, it seems, a bishop, his first spoken lines, in The Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, 1937, from an Erle Stanley Gardner novel.
Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, The (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Conscience Or Curiosity Clever doings for the principals, Donald Woods the hero, Ann Dvorak his gal Della, Joseph Crehan the P-I Paul Drake, pursuing a mystery gal who may have clobbered the missing title character, in the final Warner Bros. Perry Mason mystery, The Case Of The Stuttering Bishop, 1937.
Stranger Wore A Gun, The (1953) -- (Movie Clip) William Clarke Quantrill The narrated opening, James Millican as the notorious semi-Confederate raider William Clarke Quantrill, we meet top-billed Randolph Scott as his not-overly conscientious spy Jeff Travis, and director Andre De Toth provides action for the original 3-D production, in The Stranger Wore A Gun, 1953.
Stranger Wore A Gun, The (1953) -- (Movie Clip) You Ride A Careless Horse Seeking refuge in Prescott, Arizona, after facilitating a massacre with Quantrill’s Raiders in Kansas, Travis (Randolph Scott) meets goons (including Lee Marvin, and Ernest Borgnine in his first movie!) who report to slippery Mourret (George Macready) in The Stranger Wore A Gun, 1953.
Stranger Wore A Gun, The (1953) -- (Movie Clip) Thieves, Cutthroats And Murderers Fleeing on a riverboat after unintentionally abetting William Clarke Quantrill’s historic Lawrence (Kansas) Massacre, Travis (Randolph Scott) plays cards with Josie (Claire Trevor, her first scene) and it becomes clear he’s been tracked down, Andre De Toth directing, in the originally 3-D The Stranger Wore A Gun, 1953.
Canadian Pacific (1949) -- (Movie Clip) It Got Too Tame Railroad surveyor Tom (Randolph Scott) rides into the construction camp east of the Rockies, meeting Branagan, (Walter Sande), buddy Dynamite (J. Carrol Naish) and villain Cagle (Don Haggerty), the new lady doctor Edith Cabot (Jane Wyatt) intervening, early in Canadian Pacific, 1949.
Canadian Pacific (1949) -- (Movie Clip) What Girls Have You Seen Lately? Odd mix of Alberta locations and soundstage, as railroad surveyor Tom (Randolph Scott) has left the construction camp to resume his other “project,” which turns out to be frisky CineColor Nancy Olson as Cecille, in producer Nat Holt and director Edwin L. Marin’s Canadian Pacific, 1949.
Canadian Pacific (1949) -- (Movie Clip) That Man Will Find A Path After an elaborate narrated prologue, Robert Barrat as railroad exec Van Horne addresses the parliament in Ottawa, waxing about his surveyor Tom Andrews (Randolph Scott), who needs not speak, even when hunted by villains Victor Jory and Don Haggerty, early in Canadian Pacific, 1949.
Lawless Street, A (1955) -- (Movie Clip) I'll Have The Silent Treatment Later in the morning that began with menacing gunman Dingo (Frank Hagney) riding into Medicine Bend, Colorado, Marshal Ware (Randolph Scott) visits barber Tony (Harry Tyler), then an early climax, with comments from Cody (John Emery), who was laying odds, in A Lawless Street, 1955.
Lawless Street, A (1955) -- (Movie Clip) Lily Langtry Never Had Better In director Joseph H. Lewis’ efficient, stylish Western, we join Marshal Ware (Randolph Scott) with gambler Cody (John Emery), observing Jean Parker with entrepreneur Dean (Hamer Thorne), who greets showgirl Tally (Angela Lansbury), who seems to know the marshal, in A Lawless Street, 1955.
Flying Leathernecks (1951) -- (Movie Clip) We Have Arrived Major Kirby (John Wayne) leads squadron (Robert Ryan, Adam York, James Dobson et al) arriving over Guadalcanal, forceful combination of color combat and movie footage by director Nicholas Ray, in Flying Leathernecks, 1951.

Bibliography