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  1. He used a view camera, and had a darkroom at his home in North Hollywood, California. Had a son, Bill Bartell. In the 1960's, Harry Bartell worked for the CBS Radio Network as the announcer on the 2-minute weekday segment, "Dear Abby".

  2. Harry Alfred Bartell (November 29, 1913 – February 26, 2004) was an American actor and announcer in radio, television and film. With his rather youthful sounding voice, Bartell was one of the busiest West Coast character actors from the early 1940s until the end of network radio drama in the 1960s.

  3. With Nick Adams, Harry Bartell, Jack Hogan, Richard Evans. Charlie Burton summons Yuma and three other members of a rebel raiding party in which his son was killed. He informs them that he is giving them a gold mine in the Mojave Desert in memory of his son.

  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm0058438Harry Bartell - IMDb

    Harry Bartell. Actor: Dragnet. Harry Bartell was born on 28 November 1913 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. He was an actor, known for Dragnet (1951), The Adventures of Jim Bowie (1956) and Bonanza (1959). He died on 26 February 2004 in Ashland, Oregon, USA.

  5. 29 de nov. de 2015 · On the radio western Fort Laramie, actor Harry Bartell—born in New Orleans, LA on this date in 1913—played the part of Lieutenant Richard Sieberts, a greenhorn junior officer stationed at the outpost. Listening to Harry play the character, he is absolutely convincing as a young, earnest officer occasionally handicapped by his inexperience. Bartell was also forty-two at the time, older than ...

  6. 9 de abr. de 2012 · During the 1980s, Bartell's son, George D. Bartell, gradually began assuming more responsibility in the company's operations. He was more ambitious than his father, and, along with Storrs and O'Reilly, played a leading role in the company's rapid growth during these years.

  7. In the early 1930s Harry Bartell was a student at Rice University in Houston, from which he graduated Phi Beta Kappa before going on to Harvard Business School. He had met Sylvester Gross, the chief announcer at KPRC radio in that city. Gross included Bartell in a new program that showcased condensed reenactments of MGM movies; the actors were ...