
Acting
Born August 29, 1916 · Brady, Montana, USA
George Montgomery was boxing champion at the University of Montana, where he majored in architecture and interior design. Dropping out a year later, he decided to take up boxing more seriously, and moved to California, where he was coached by ex-heavyweight world champion James J. Jeffries. While in Hollywood, he came to the attention of the studios (not least, because he was an expert rider) and was hired as a stuntman in 1935. After doing this for four years, George was offered a contract at 20th Century Fox in 1939, but found himself largely confined to leads in B-westerns. He did not secure a part in anything even remotely like a prestige picture, until his co-starring role in Roxie Hart (1942), opposite Ginger Rogers. Next, in Orchestra Wives (1942), he played the perfunctory love interest for Ann Rutherford -- though both, inevitably, ended up playing second trombone to Glenn Miller and His Orchestra. In 1947, George got his first serious break, being cast as Raymond Chandler's private eye Philip Marlowe, in The Brasher Doubloon (1947). Reviewers, however, compared his performance unfavourably with that of Humphrey Bogart and found the film 'pallid' overall. So it was back to the saddle for George. Unable to shake his image as a cowboy actor, he starred in scores of films with titles like Belle Starr's Daughter (1948), Dakota Lil (1950), Jack McCall Desperado (1953) and Masterson of Kansas (1954) at Columbia, and for producer Edward Small at United Artists. When not cleaning up the Wild West with his six-shooter, he branched out into adventure films set in exotic locales (notably as Harry Quartermain in Watusi (1959)). During the 60's, he also wrote, directed and starred in several long-forgotten, low-budget wartime potboilers made in the Philippines. At the height of his popularity, George attracted as much publicity for his acting, as for his liaisons with glamorous stars, like Ginger Rogers, Hedy Lamarr (to whom he was briefly engaged) and singer Dinah Shore (whom he married in 1943). After his retirement from the film business, he devoted himself to his love of painting, furniture-making and sculpting bronze busts, including one of his close friend Ronald Reagan.

Ransom
1988

Wild Wind
1985

When the West Was Fun: A Western Reunion
1979

The Daredevil
1972

Satan's Harvest
1970

Ride the Tiger
1970

Strangers at Sunrise
1969

Warkill
1968

Bomb at 10:10
1967

Hostile Guns
1967

Hallucination Generation
1966

Battle of the Bulge
1965

Django the Condemned
1965

Hell of Borneo
1964

Guerillas in Pink Lace
1964

Samar
1962

The Steel Claw
1961

King of the Wild Stallions
1959

Watusi
1959

Badman's Country
1958

The Toughest Gun in Tombstone
1958

Man from God's Country
1958

Black Patch
1957

Pawnee
1957

Street of Sinners
1957

Gun Duel in Durango
1957

Last of the Badmen
1957

Huk!
1956

Canyon River
1956

Claire
1956