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(7 April 1870 – 2 April 1949)
Neal Hart was a former cowpuncher, stage driver, city marshal, and
member of the famous Miller 101 Wild West Show crew, American action
lead Neal Hart entered films in 1916 on the strength of his kinship
with Western star William S. Hart, reportedly his cousin.
Neal made himself indispensable to the sprawling Universal company
as an assistant to director George Marshall, by writing scenarios,
and eventually by starring in a steady stream of low-budget
Westerns, all the while increasing his salary from five dollars a
day to a reported 500 dollars a week.
Leaving Univeral in 1920, Hart made a series of pictures for Poverty
Row company Pinnacle before embarking on a long association with
low-budget entrepreneur William Steiner. Hart produced, wrote, and
starred in scores of Western programmers throughout the decade but,
like most Gower Gulch mavericks, he was to find the advent of
talkies a tough challenge. No longer a star, Neal Hart nevertheless
gamely went on appearing in B-Westerns until 1949.
He appeared in 125 films between 1916 and 1949. He also directed 23
films between 1919 and 1928. |