Richard Bartlett

Richard H. Bartlett (8 November 1922 – 11 June 1994), also known Dick Bartlett, was an American director and producer in film and TV. He also acted and wrote. He is best known for has low budget features in the 1950s and his television work in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

In 1956 he teamed up with Norman Jolley to form Bartlett-Jolley Productions. With Jolley writing, Bartlett directing and both men producing, they made eight movies for Universal-International within two years and worked on critically acclaimed segments of "Wagon Train" and later Cimarron City. [1][2]

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gollark: English Literature is where you read books and poems and such, agonisingly slowly, and write entirely pointless essays.
gollark: No, I meant most of those things you could probably learn yourself. First aid you would likely benefit from in person teaching in but the rest is just "read the news" or "read a few pages explaining mortgages".
gollark: It is hard to know in advance whether you'll be interested in stuff which needs that several years later.
gollark: Yeees? I mean, I don't know how hard first aid is, but mortgages are trivial.
gollark: Anyway, maths is useful basically anywhere you'll need to analyze stuff quantitatively. Science, programming, engineering, finance, data science. School maths probably less so.

References

  1. Norman Jolley: [Final Edition] Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 24 Aug 2002: 4B.
  2. THE TV SCENE---: New Epic Styled After Wagon Train Smith, Cecil. Los Angeles Times 13 Aug 1958: A6.
  3. TWO-GUN LADY Monthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 26, Iss. 300, (Jan 1, 1959): 152.


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