
Place of Birth:
Shannon, Texas, USA
Date of Birth:
5/10/1919
Charles Hugh Roberson (May 10, 1919 – June 8, 1988) was an American actor and stuntman. Roberson was born near Shannon, Texas, the son of farmer Ollie W. Roberson and Jannie Hamm Roberson. Raised on cattle ranches in Shannon, Texas, and Roswell, New Mexico, he left school at 13 to become a cowhand and oilfield roughneck. He married and took his wife and daughter to California, where he joined the Culver City Police Department and guarded the gate at MGM Studios. Following army service in World War II, he returned to the police force. During duty at Warner Bros. studios during a labor strike, he met stuntman Guy Teague, who alerted him to a stunt job at Republic Pictures. Teague had been John Wayne's stunt double for many years and was able to show him the ropes. Chuck also resembled John Carrol whom Roberson doubled in his first picture, Wyoming (1947). He played small roles and stunted in other roles in the same film. He graduated to larger supporting roles in Westerns for Wayne and John Ford, and to a parallel career as a second-unit director. His television appearances include The Lone Ranger, The Adventures of Kit Carson, Lawman, Death Valley Days, Have Gun – Will Travel, Laramie, Gunsmoke, The Virginian, Laredo, Bonanza, Daniel Boone, and The Big Valley. Roberson also appeared in Disney's television Westerns The Swamp Fox and Texas John Slaughter. They were part of The Wonderful World of Color. Before that, he portrayed a Confederate Prison Captain in The Great Locomotive Chase. In 1980 he published an autobiography, The Fall Guy: 30 Years as the Duke's Double. Roberson died of cancer on June 8, 1988, in Bakersfield, California, and is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Hollywood Hills, California, next to his brother, actor Lou Roberson. Bob Dylan drew him as Long Tom in his Beaten Path series, the drawing is entitled "Untitled 1" and is based on a frame from the film Winchester '73 (1950). Roberson and Wayne Burson, another stuntman, were partners in breeding and training racehorses, with Roberson furnishing the horses from his Bakersfield, California, ranch and Burson training them.

Shock Corridor

The Stone Killer

Hondo

The Plainsman and the Lady

Calendar Girl

Song of Scheherazade

Jesse James Rides Again

The Flame

California Firebrand

The Arizona Ranger

Homicide for Three

Stampede

Roughshod

Law of the Golden West

Haunted Trails

The James Brothers of Missouri

The Fighting Kentuckian

Western Renegades

Trail of the Rustlers

The Capture

Cow Town

Hills of Oklahoma

Hi-Jacked

Atom Man vs. Superman

The Scalphunters

Night Passage

Seven Men from Now

Merrill's Marauders

Rio Lobo

The Sons of Katie Elder

Forty Guns

Smoky

Hellfire

Black Spurs

Buffalo Bill in Tomahawk Territory

The Big Country

Ten Wanted Men

The Searchers

Sergeant Rutledge

The Wings of Eagles

Man of the West

Two Rode Together

How the West Was Won

Cheyenne Autumn

Donovan's Reef

Way of a Gaucho

The Lusty Men

Cat Ballou

The Far Country

The Green Berets

Sign of the Pagan

The Prodigal

McQ

Big Jake

Chisum

The Undefeated

Hellfighters

Welcome to Hard Times

The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin

Nevada Smith

Shenandoah

Smoky

Blindfold

Lady Godiva of Coventry

The Rounders

Advance to the Rear

Mail Order Bride

The Hired Gun

The Rawhide Years

Red Sundown

The Great Locomotive Chase

The Second Greatest Sex

Kentucky Rifle

Timberjack

The Lone Gun

Jubilee Trail

Calamity Jane

Gun Belt

Raiders of the Seven Seas

The Blazing Forest

Abbott and Costello Meet Captain Kidd

Blackbeard, the Pirate

Cattle Town

Indian Uprising

McLintock!

Spartacus

Winchester '73

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

Rio Bravo

Last of the Wild Horses

Rio Grande

Two Rode Together

Wake of the Red Witch

The Gallant Legion

99 and 44/100% Dead

Outcasts of Black Mesa

The War Wagon

Cow Country

The King and Four Queens

Hannah Lee: An American Primitive

Cahill: United States Marshal

Run of the Arrow

The Alamo

El Dorado

The Tall Men

Albuquerque

The Wonderful Country
John Wayne's 'The Alamo'

Song of Scheherazade

The Western: A Lost TV Special