1953, his hair was longer and curly (with blond tones and highlights added). During and after filming Caine, June-Aug. Before starting production in June 1953 on Caine, Bob had slightly longer hair, cut into what was often known as a “Princeton,” as in the March-April1953 photo above. During that time, 1951-1953, he had a military/G.I. Bob’s hair was cut in a classic style (combed over and parted) prior to going into the U.S. The haircut styles fall into calendar-related periods. 28, 1955, photo was definitely made on that day. Specific dates are given for a handful of photographs, e.g., the Friday, Jan. Determining chronology, therefore, takes some detective work centered on (1) Bob’s haircut style, (2) clothing, (3) background details, and (4) clues from other sources, e.g., information from his siblings, Lillian and Bill, and other media coverage. The photos used in these stories and photo essays may have been made months, perhaps a year or more earlier. BUT, an August 1954 magazine would have been on newsstands in early July and would have gone to press in mid-June. Articles from fan magazines appear - approximately - as they are dated, e.g., a cover dated August 1954 (when there was a media blitz in conjunction with the opening of Caine). #THE CAINE MUTINY CAST MOVIE#In the pages about Bob’s career in the context of the Star and Studio Systems, you will discover Bob apparently spent as much time being photographed for posed portraits, candid shots, and similar as he did in front of the movie cameras. Therefore, dating (precisely or best guess) in order to create a more-or-less chronological presentation is a challenge. Each website page, especially Biography, uses images that are for the most part undated. Much of Bob’s story is told in photographs. (May Wynn appeared in a number of other movies and on television programs.) This website will help you discover not only what happened to Bob before and after Caine, but also about the time in which his promising film career began and flourished, the waning years of Hollywood’s Star and Studio Systems, and then ended in a tragic airplane accident. But the young co-stars - Robert Francis and May Wynn - are likely to have escaped your memory, especially Bob. You probably know something about what happened to them post- Caine, movie and television credits, and when they died. At the end, you perhaps talked or thought about the leading players (Humphrey Bogart, Jose Ferrer, Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray) and some of the supporting cast who became more famous after the film’s release in 1954 (Claude Akins, Lee Marvin, Arthur Franz, Herbert Anderson, Jerry Paris). Welcome to You may be one of the many who come to this website because you recently saw The Caine Mutiny on Turner Classic Movies.
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