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  1. C.C. Burr (1891–1956) was an American film producer of the silent and early sound eras. He also directed eleven short films. Originally an employee at Paramount Pictures, he branched out into independent production working with a number of different distributors over two decades.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0122991C.C. Burr - IMDb

    C.C. Burr was born on 30 January 1891 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Luck (1923), The Western Limited (1932) and Special Agent K-7 (1936). He was married to Clemence Amy. He died on 4 June 1956 in Hollywood, California, USA.

    • Producer, Additional Crew, Director
    • January 30, 1891
    • C.C. Burr
    • June 4, 1956
  3. The Reckless Way. by. C.C. Burr Productions, Inc. Usage. Public Domain Mark 1.0. Topics. Marian Nixon, Kane Richmond, Inez Courtney. Helen Rogers (Marian Nixon) will do just about anything to become a star - she will aim for the top 'the reckless way' . . . Addeddate. 2012-07-05 08:26:45. Ia_orig__runtime. 68 minutes 36 seconds. Identifier.

  4. An obscure poverty row western starring singing cowboy Fred Scott. It was produced and completed in 1939 by C.C. Burr Productions, but they went belly-up before it could be distributed. In 1940 it was retrieved by Arthur Ziehn and released under his label. "Ridin' the Trail" was telecast once in 1946 and doesn't seem to have been heard of since.

  5. C.C. Burr was born on 30 January 1891 in Brooklyn, New York, USA. He was a producer and director, known for The Western Limited (1932), Special Agent K-7 (1936) and Kentucky Blue Streak (1935). He was married to Clemence Amy.

    • January 30, 1891
    • June 4, 1956
  6. C C Burr and east coast production - 1923 edition 101 is designed for beginners with questions about the site, SCM, or early comedy. Use this forum without fear of taunting from advanced users or the local curmudgeons.

  7. The film was "the second of four singing Westerns Scott made for C. C. Burr". It was distributed in the United Kingdom in 1940 by Equity British Films. The film begins with a statement explaining the conflict: