Fred Graham(1908-1979)
- Actor
- Stunts
- Additional Crew
Baseball gave burly Fred Graham his start in motion pictures. In 1928
he was working for the MGM sound department and also playing semi-pro
baseball on the side. The studio was making a murder mystery called
Death on the Diamond (1934),
starring Robert Young and
Nat Pendleton. Graham was hired to tutor
Young and Pendleton in the fine points of the game, and doubled
Pendleton in the catching scenes. This started him on a more than
40-year career as a stuntman and actor. While at the studio he doubled
Clark Gable,
Nelson Eddy and
Charles Bickford. He went over to
Warner Bros. in 1938, and his initial assignment was to double
Basil Rathbone in
The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).
In 1941 he moved to Republic Pictures and worked on the studio's famed
westerns and serials, and was a major part of the team of stunt
experts, including such aces as
David Sharpe and
Tom Steele, responsible for the
reputation that Republic enjoyed as having the best stunt department in
the business. Graham met John Wayne
there and stunted for him in many of the films Wayne made at the
studio. He also appeared in many films as an actor, usually playing
truck drivers, cops, soldiers, crooks, etc. In 1968 he went to work for
Arizona's Department of Economic Planning and Development of Motion
Pictures, and had more to do with bringing filming to the state of
Arizona than anyone else. In Arizona they have the "Carefree at
Southwest Studios", which was formerly known as "The Graham Studio". In
1978 "Slugger", a nickname he got in his Republic days, passed away.