Home in San Antone
1949 film by Ray Nazarro
- April 15, 1949 (1949-04-15)
Running time
Home in San Antone is a 1949 American Western musical film directed by Ray Nazarro, and starring Roy Acuff, The Smoky Mountain Boys, The Modernaires, Doye O'Dell, Lyn Thomas, and Bill Edwards. The film was released by Columbia Pictures on April 15, 1949.[1][2][3]
Plot
Cast
- Roy Acuff as Roy Acuff aka Jack Jones
- The Smoky Mountain Boys as Roy Acuff Band
- The Modernaires as Vocal Quintet
- Doye O'Dell as Radio Singer
- Lyn Thomas as June Wallace (as Jacqueline Thomas)
- Bill Edwards as Ted Gibson
- George Cleveland as Grandpa Gibson
- Lloyd Corrigan as Uncle Zeke Tinker
- William Frawley as O'Fleery
- Fred F. Sears as Rado Announcer Breezy (as Fred Sears)
- Dorothy Vaughan as Ma Gibson
- Ivan Triesault as Jewel Thief
- Matt Willis as Jewel Thief Thorg
- Sam Flint as Dan Wallace
- Eddie Acuff as Postman (uncredited)
- Slim Duncan as Fiddle Player (uncredited)
- Ralph Dunn as Cop at Road Block (uncredited)
- Peggy Leon as Middle Aged Woman (uncredited)
- Lee Phelps as Police Captain (uncredited)
- Bertha Priestley as Fat Woman (uncredited)
- Rudy Sooter as Musician (uncredited)
- Robert B. Williams as Arresting Officer (uncredited)
References
External links
- Home in San Antone at IMDb
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Films directed by Ray Nazarro
- Al Jennings of Oklahoma
- Apache Territory
- The Arkansas Swing
- Baby Burlesks
- Bandits of El Dorado
- The Black Dakotas
- Blazing Across the Pecos
- The Blazing Trail
- Buckaroo from Powder River
- Challenge of the Range
- Cowboy Blues
- Cripple Creek
- Cyclone Fury
- David Harding, Counterspy
- The Desert Horseman
- Domino Kid
- El Dorado Pass
- Fort Savage Raiders
- Frontier Outpost
- Galloping Thunder
- Gunning for Vengeance
- Heading West
- Hoedown
- Home in San Antone
- Indian Uprising
- Junction City
- Kansas Pacific
- The Kid from Amarillo
- Laramie
- Laramie Mountains
- Last Days of Boot Hill
- Law of the Canyon
- The Lone Hand Texan
- Lone Star Moonlight
- Montana Territory
- Outlaws of the Rockies
- Over the Santa Fe Trail
- The Palomino
- Phantom Valley
- Quick on the Trigger
- Renegades of the Sage
- Return to Warbow
- Roaring Rangers
- Roaring Roads
- Rose of Santa Rosa
- The Rough, Tough West
- Singin' Spurs
- Singing on the Trail
- Six-Gun Law
- Smoky Mountain Melody
- Song of the Prairie
- South of Death Valley
- Southwest Passage
- Streets of Ghost Town
- Terror Trail
- Texas Dynamo
- Texas Panhandle
- That Texas Jamboree
- Throw a Saddle on a Star
- Top Gun
- The Tougher They Come
- Trail of the Rustlers
- Trail to Laredo
- Two-Fisted Stranger
- West of Dodge City
- West of Sonora
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This article related to an American film of the 1940s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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