
Howard Wright
Acting
Born 1896-09-30 · San Diego, California, USA
Howard Wright (born Frederick Howard Wright) was a songwriter ("The Strawberry Roan," "When the Bloom Is on the Sage"), composer, author, singer, radio actor, writer, producer and director, educated in college and then an Army officer in World War I. He appeared in musical comedies and tab shows, and also directed and produced in Portland, Oregon; San Francisco; Oakland; Long Beach; San Diego; and Honolulu. He toured in vaudeville and was a member of the radio and recording team The Happie Chappies, with Nat Vincent. Also he wrote for acts, including the original Beverly Hillbillies. For twelve years, he acted in the "Ma Perkins" radio series, as well as in many other radio shows. In addition, he wrote scripts for radio series ("Mystery Is My Hobby," "Deadline") and extras. Joining ASCAP in 1957, his chief musical collaborator was Nat Vincent, and other examples of his popular-song compositions include "Mellow Mountain Moon," "Little Girl Dressed in Blue," "At the End of the Lane," "Sitting on the Bank by the River," "It's Great to Love Someone Who Loves You Too," "My Pretty Quadroon," "Me and My Burro," "Old Black Mountain Trail," "My Dear Old Arizona Home," and "It's Time to Say Aloha."
Filmography

The Legend of Earl Durand
Oct 8, 1974

What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice?
Aug 20, 1969

Good Times
Apr 11, 1967

The Chase
Feb 18, 1966

Apache Rifles
Nov 26, 1964

The Solid Gold Girl
Feb 14, 1964

Five Minutes to Live
Dec 7, 1961

Young Jesse James
Aug 2, 1960

The Legend of Tom Dooley
Jul 1, 1959

The Louisiana Hussy
Apr 1, 1959

Earth vs. the Spider
Sep 1, 1958

War of the Colossal Beast
Jun 4, 1958

The Bonnie Parker Story
May 28, 1958

Cha-Cha-Cha Boom!
Oct 2, 1956

Stranger at My Door
Apr 6, 1956

Headline Hunters
Sep 15, 1955

The Gun That Won the West
Sep 1, 1955

One Desire
Jul 20, 1955

Seminole Uprising
May 1, 1955

Cell 2455 Death Row
Apr 19, 1955

The Raid
Aug 4, 1954

Tennessee Champ
Mar 3, 1954

The Long, Long Trailer
Feb 19, 1954

Last of the Pony Riders
Nov 3, 1953