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Steve McQueen - Marc Eliot [143]

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Philip D’Antoni. Executive producer: Robert Relyea. Screenplay: Alan R. Trustman, Harry Kleiner, based on the novel Mute Witness, by Robert L. Pike. With Steve McQueen, Jacqueline Bisset, Robert Vaughn.

19. The Reivers (Cinema Center/National General) 1969. Director: Mark Rydell. Producer: Irving Ravetch. Executive producer: Robert Relyea. Screenplay: Irving Ravetch, Harriet Frank Jr., based on the novel by William Faulkner. With Steve McQueen, Sharon Farrell, Will Geer, Rupert Crosse, Mitch Vogel, Lonny Chapman, Burgess Meredith.

20. Le Mans (Cinema Center/National General) 1971. Director: Lee Katzin. Producer: Jack Reddish. Executive producer: Robert Relyea. Screenplay: Harry Kleiner. With Steve McQueen, Siegfried Rauch, Elga Andersen.

21. On Any Sunday (Cinema 5) 1971. Director: Bruce Brown. Producer: Joe Wizan, in association with Solar Productions. Motorcycle racing documentary. McQueen appears in brief cameo as himself.

22. Junior Bonner (ABC-Cinerama) 1972. Director: Sam Peckinpah. Producer: Joe Wizan. Screenplay: Jeb Rosebrook. With Steve McQueen, Robert Preston, Ida Lupino, Joe Don Baker, Barbara Leigh, Mary Murphy, Ben Johnson.

23. The Getaway (National General) 1972. Director: Sam Peckinpah. Producer: David Foster, Mitchell Brower. Screenplay: Walter Hill, based on the novel by Jim Thompson. With Steve McQueen, Ali MacGraw, Ben Johnson, Sally Struthers, Al Lettieri, Slim Pickens.

24. Papillon (Allied Artists) 1973. Director: Franklin Schaffner. Producers: Robert Dorfman, Franklin Schaffner. Screenplay: Dalton Trumbo, Lorenzo Semple Jr., based on the book by Henri Charrière. With Steve McQueen, Dustin Hoffman, Victor Jory, Don Gordon, Anthony Zerbe.

25. The Towering Inferno (20th Century Fox and Warner Bros.) 1974. Director: John Guillermin. Producer: Irwin Allen. Screenplay: Stirling Silliphant, based on two novels—The Tower by Richard Martin Stern and The Glass Inferno by Frank M. Robinson and Thomas Scortia. With Steve McQueen, Paul Newman, William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Fred Astaire, Susan Blakely, Richard Chamberlain, Jennifer Jones, O. J. Simpson, Robert Vaughn, Robert Wagner, Susan Flannery, Don Gordon.

26. An Enemy of the People (Warner Bros.) 1978. Director: George Schaefer. Producer: George Schaefer. Executive producer: Steve McQueen. Screenplay by Alexander Jacobs, based on Arthur Miller’s adaptation of the play by Henrik Ibsen. With Steve McQueen, Charles Durning, Bibi Andersson.

27. Tom Horn (Warner Bros.) 1980. Director: William Wiard. Producer: Fred Weintraub. Executive producer: Steve McQueen. Screenplay: Thomas McGuane, Bud Shrake, from Life of Tom Horn, Government Scout and Interpreter, Written by Himself. With Steve McQueen, Linda Evans, Richard Farnsworth, Billy Green Bush, Slim Pickens.

28. The Hunter (Paramount) 1980. Director: Buzz Kulik. Producer: Mort Engelberg. Screenplay: Ted Leighton, Peter Hyams, from the book by Christopher Keane, and the life of Ralph Thorson. With Steve McQueen, Eli Wallach, Kathryn Harrold, LeVar Burton, Ben Johnson.


THEATER

1. Peg o’ My Heart. 1952. Produced by a local theater company in Fayetteville, New York.

2. Member of the Wedding. 1952. Rochester, New York.

3. Time Out for Ginger. 1952. National road company.

4. The Fingers of Pride. 1955. Summer stock, Ogunquit, Maine.

5. A Hatful of Rain. 1956. Broadway. Toured briefly, later that year, in the national road company.


TELEVISION

1. Goodyear Playhouse, “The Chivington Raid.” NBC. Live telecast 3.27.55.

2. U.S. Steel Hour, “Bring Me a Dream.” CBS. Live telecast 1.4.56.

3. Studio One, “The Defender.” Live two-part telecast 2.23.57, 3.4.57.

4. West Point, “Ambush.” CBS. Live telecast 3.8.57.

5. Climax, “Four Hours in White.” CBS. Film. 2.6.58.

6. Tales of Wells Fargo, “Bill Longley.” NBC. Film. 2.10.58.

7. Trackdown, “The Bounty Hunter.” CBS. Film. 3.7.58.

8. Wanted: Dead or Alive. 94 episodes, three seasons. CBS. Premiere 9.6.58; final episode 3.29.61.

9. Alfred Hitchcock Presents, “Man from the South.” CBS. Film. 1.3.60.

10. Dick Powell’s Zane Grey Theatre, “Thunder in a Forgotten

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