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Tiger Fangs is a 1943 American adventure/thriller film directed by Sam Newfield and starring Frank Buck and June Duprez. It was distributed Producers Releasing Corporation . The film's sets were designed by the art director Paul Palmentola .
Besides his role in Tiger Fangs he is known today for his roles in Man Hunt (1941), The Valley of Vanishing Men (1942), Hangmen Also Die (1943), The Adventures of Rusty (1945), Secret Agent X-9, the 1945 version of this Universal Serial, and 13 Rue Madeleine.
Frank Howard Buck (March 17, 1884 – March 25, 1950) was an American hunter, animal collector, and author, as well as a film actor, director, and producer. Beginning in the 1910s he made many expeditions into Asia for the purpose of hunting and collecting exotic animals, bringing over 100,000 live specimens back to the United States and elsewhere for zoos and circuses and earning a reputation ...
Tiger_Fangs_(1943)_film_still_02.jpg (366 × 265 pixels, file size: 37 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Title Director Cast Genre Notes Above Suspicion: Richard Thorpe: Joan Crawford, Fred MacMurray, Conrad Veidt: Spy: MGM: Action in the North Atlantic: Lloyd Bacon, Raoul Walsh: Humphrey Bogart, Raymond Massey, Alan Hale Sr.
Dan Seymour (born Daniel Seymour Katz; February 22, 1915 – May 25, 1993) was an American character actor who frequently played villains in Warner Bros. films. He appeared in several Humphrey Bogart films, including Casablanca (1942), To Have and Have Not (1944) and Key Largo (1948).
A few seconds of film exist. Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp: 21 October: This Is the Life # 4 November: The Rose of Blood # Miss U.S.A. # 11 November: The Painted Madonna # 18 November: All for a Husband # 25 November: A Branded Soul # 28 November: The Scarlet Pimpernel # 2 December: The Babes in the Woods: 9 December: Unknown 274 # Trouble ...
In 1941, he became one of many actors cast by Universal Pictures in their large film serial, 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 Technicolor film, The Desperadoes (1943).