Robert Buckner

American film producer (1906–1989)


title: "Robert Buckner" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1906-births", "1989-deaths", "alumni-of-the-university-of-edinburgh", "university-of-virginia-alumni", "people-from-crewe,-virginia", "american-male-screenwriters", "new-york-world", "american-male-short-story-writers", "film-producers-from-virginia", "american-emigrants-to-mexico", "20th-century-american-businesspeople", "20th-century-american-short-story-writers", "20th-century-american-male-writers", "screenwriters-from-virginia", "robert-meltzer-award-winners", "20th-century-american-screenwriters"] description: "American film producer (1906–1989)" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Buckner" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American film producer (1906–1989) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameRobert Buckner
birth_date
birth_placeCrewe, Virginia, United States
death_dateAugust 18, 1989 (aged 83)
death_placeSan Miguel de Allende, Mexico
occupationWriter
::

| name = Robert Buckner | image = | alt = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = | birth_place = Crewe, Virginia, United States | death_date = August 18, 1989 (aged 83) | death_place = San Miguel de Allende, Mexico | nationality = | other_names = | known_for = | occupation = Writer | years_active = | spouse = | children =

Robert Buckner (May 28, 1906 – August 18, 1989) was an American film screenwriter, producer and short story writer.

Biography

Buckner studied at the University of Virginia and the University of Edinburgh. He began his professional writing career at age 20, as London correspondent for the New York World.

He wrote a play An Affair of the State; the novels Sigrid and Sergeant (1959), Tiger By the Tail (1960) and Starfire (1960); and the short story "The Man Who Won the War" (1936).

Screenwriter

Buckner joined Warner Bros as a writer. His first credit was Gold Is Where You Find It (1938). He did some uncredited work on Jezebel (1938) and wrote Love, Honor and Behave (1938), Comet Over Broadway (1939), The Oklahoma Kid (1939), and You Can't Get Away with Murder (1939).

Buckner had a big hit with Dodge City (1939) starring Errol Flynn, based on his original screenplay. He was credited on Angels Wash Their Faces (1939), and Espionage Agent (1939) was based on his story.

Buckner wrote a follow-up to Dodge City, Virginia City (1940) with Flynn, and worked on the script for My Love Came Back (1940).

Buckner received acclaim for a biopic, Knute Rockne All American (1940). He did a third Western for Flynn, Santa Fe Trail (1940) and was put on a war film for Flynn, Dive Bomber (1941).

Buckner had a huge success with his script for Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) a biopic of George M Cohan. This resulted in Bucker being promoted to producer at Warners.

Producer

Buckner's first film as producer was Gentleman Jim (1943) a biopic of Jim Corbett starring Flynn. He produced Mission to Moscow (1943) a biopic of Joseph E Davies and wrote and produced The Desert Song (1943).

Buckner made another movie with Flynn, Uncertain Glory (1944). He made God Is My Co-Pilot (1945), and wrote and produced Confidential Agent (1945) with Charles Boyer.

Buckner produced a popular Western with Flynn, San Antonio (1945). He did a biopic of the Brontë family, Devotion (1946), and did a crime drama, Nobody Lives Forever (1946).

Buckner produced a Western, Cheyenne (1947), and the prestigious stage hit Life with Father (1947).

In June 1947 Buckner left Warner Bros for Universal.

Universal

Buckner's first film at Universal was Rogues' Regiment (1948), which he wrote and produced, from a story by Buckner and director Robert Florey.

He went on to wrote and produce Sword in the Desert (1948), based on an old story of Buckner's which he had turned into a novel called Night Watch. It helped make a star of Jeff Chandler.

He wrote and produced Free for All (1949), Deported (1950), shot in Italy with Chandler, and Bright Victory (1951).

Freelance writer

Buckner provided the story for When in Rome (1952) and The Man Behind the Gun (1953). He went to England to write To Paris with Love (1955), House of Secrets (1956) and two for Warwick Films, A Prize of Gold (1956) and Safari (1956).

Buckner began writing for TV, adapting Twentieth Century and A Bell for Adano for Ford Star Jubilee.

20th Century Fox

Back in Hollywood Buckner wrote Love Me Tender (1956) at 20th Century Fox, a film best remembered as Elvis Presley's debut movie. In 1957 he wrote Sigrid and the Sergeant, his first prose in almost twenty years. The following year he wrote and produced From Hell to Texas (1958) directed by Henry Hathaway at Fox.

Also for Fox Bucker created a TV series Hong Kong (1960–61) starring Rod Taylor. It only lasted a season, Bucker produced the pilot for a follow up, Dateline: San Francisco but it did not result in a regular series.

At Disney, his 1960 novel Starfire provided the story for Moon Pilot (1962).

Buckner went on to write episodes of The Rogues, Burke's Law, The Wackiest Ship in the Army, The Name of the Game and Bonanza. He also wrote the features Return of the Gunfighter (1967).

Later life

In his later life, Buckner lived in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He was an artist and recognized leader in the art community there. He died and was buried in San Miguel in 1989.

Works

References

References

  1. (11 December 1929). "TALKIE TALKS.". [[Glenelg Guardian]].
  2. (2 November 1937). "The Man Who Won The War". [[Daily News (Perth, Western Australia).
  3. (26 May 1938). "FILMS OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW". [[The Sun (Sydney).
  4. (10 November 1939). "ROYAL". [[The Newcastle Sun]].
  5. Brady, Thomas F.. (14 Aug 1947). "BUCKNER TO MAKE A COMEDY FOR U-I: Former Producer at Warners Also Will Write the Scenario of 'Patent Applied For'". New York Times.
  6. 'Letter From Hollywood' By Frank Daugherty Special to The Christian Science Monitor. ''The Christian Science Monitor'' [Boston, Mass] 29 Apr 1949: 5.
  7. (1 July 1949). "Film Completed In Secrecy Shows Jews Killing Britons". [[Cobram Courier]].
  8. (5 August 1954). "Alec Guinness in sophisticated comedy". [[Western Mail (Western Australia).
  9. Vagg, Stephen. (8 December 2025). "Forgotten British Film Moguls: Cubby Broccoli and Irving Allen".
  10. Smith, Cecil. (3 Nov 1957). "Robert Buckner Hit by Novelist's Jitters: Robert Buckner Veteran Film Writer, Gets Novelist's Jitters". Los Angeles Times.
  11. (18 January 1961). "ROD TAYLOR STARS IN "HONG KONG"". [[The Biz (newspaper).
  12. THOMAS F. (6 July 1948). "U-I TO MAKE FILM OF 'NIGHT WATCH': Buckner's Novel on Palestine Purchased by the Studio -- Author Will Produce". BRADY Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES.. New York Times.
  13. KATHERINE VON BLON. (12 Feb 1949). "'PORTRAIT OF A LADY' WELL DIRECTED, ACTED". Los Angeles Times.
  14. "SFE: Buckner, Robert".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

1906-births1989-deathsalumni-of-the-university-of-edinburghuniversity-of-virginia-alumnipeople-from-crewe,-virginiaamerican-male-screenwritersnew-york-worldamerican-male-short-story-writersfilm-producers-from-virginiaamerican-emigrants-to-mexico20th-century-american-businesspeople20th-century-american-short-story-writers20th-century-american-male-writersscreenwriters-from-virginiarobert-meltzer-award-winners20th-century-american-screenwriters