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  1. Webster Cullison was born on 18 February 1880 in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. He was a director and actor, known for God's Gold (1921), The King of the Jungle (1927) and In for Thirty Days (1919). He was married to Lucie K. Villa. He died on 7 July 1938 in Glendale, California, USA.

    • Webster Cullison
    • July 7, 1938
    • February 18, 1880
  2. Into the Foothills (1914) is an American short (two-reel) silent Western film. It was written and directed by Webster Cullison and filmed on location in Tucson, Arizona in December 1913. [1] The movie is believed to be lost .

  3. Webster Cullison is known as an Director and Assistant Director. Some of their work includes The Girl Stage Driver, Other Men's Daughters, The Caballero's Way, The Price Paid, The Fighting Stranger, The Aztec Treasure, The Bludgeon, and The Last Chance.

  4. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.

  5. Battling Bates is a 1923 American silent Western film directed by Webster Cullison and starring Edmund Cobb, Florence Gilbert and Ashton Dearholt.

  6. To capitalize on European interest in the Mexican Revolution, the French-owned motion picture firm dispatched director Webster Cullison from its Fort Lee, New Jersey headquarters in October 1913 to start a western branch.

  7. www.mexfilmarchive.com › earticles › Early Filmmaking in TucsonEarly Filmmaking in Tucson

    In October 1913, the actor and director Webster Cullison established a studio at the Sorin mansion, on 430 North Main Street. Five months later, the entire crew of the Éclair headquarters in Fort Lee, New Jersey, moved to Tucson.