Upon graduating from high school, American writer/director Clyde Bruckman entered the infant movie industry as a "gag man" for the many comedy studios of the era. Bruckman settled with Buster Keaton's company in 1921, working on the writing team for Keaton's classic feature films The Three Ages (1923), Our Hospitality (1923), Sherlock Jr. (1924) and The Navigator (1925). In 1926 he moved on to Harold Lloyd's staff, contributing material to Lloyd's For Heaven's Sake (1926), Welcome Danger (1929), Feet First (1930) and Movie Crazy (1932). Bruckman was also credited as director on the three last-mentioned films, and had previously co-directed Keaton's The General (1926). While at Hal Roach studios, Bruckman was listed as director on Laurel and Hardys Putting Pants of Philip (1927), Battle of the Century (1927) and Leave 'Em Laughing (1928). Most historians have concluded that Bruckman's directorial credits were nominal at best; most of the top comedians virtually directed themselves, but didn't want to appear egomaniacal by grabbing all the credit. As proof of this, Bruckman's detractors cite his work on such films as Robert Woolsey's Everything's Rosie (1931), Lloyd Hamilton's Too Many Highballs (1933) and The 3 Stooges' Horses Collars (1935). Without strong creative input from the stars, these films are sloppily constructed and lacking in pace. Bruckman's best talkie work was in collaboration with another self-starting comedian, W.C. Fields; Field's two-reeler The Fatal Glass of Beer, directed by Bruckman, is a comedy classic by any standard. Increasingly uncomfortable as a director, Bruckman drowned his insecurities in liquor. During production of W. C. Fields' Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935), Bruckman disappeared for nearly a week, compelling Fields himself to take over direction. Virtually unemployable in feature films after this, Bruckman found work with Jules White's short subject unit at Columbia, where he filled his scripts with gags and routines lifted from his best silent work. The limit came when Bruckman copied Harold Lloyd's "magician's coat" routine from Movie Crazy (1932) and transplanted it nearly word for word into the 3 Stooges short Loco Boy Makes Good (1942). Lloyd sued Columbia, and Bruckman never again received a movie credit. His last work was for the syndicated Abbott and Costello Show, where once again his scripts were overloaded with repeated routines from Bruckman's glory days. Broke and depressed, Clyde Bruckman borrowed Keaton's gun, purportedly for target practice, and shot himself in a Santa Monica restaurant on January 4, 1955.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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The Abbott & Costello Show [TV Series]
Screenwriter |
1952 | |||
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Her Lucky Night
Screenwriter |
1945 | |||
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She Gets Her Man
Screenwriter |
1945 | |||
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Under Western Skies
Screenwriter |
1945 | |||
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Moon Over Las Vegas
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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South of Dixie
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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Swingtime Johnny
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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Twilight on the Prairie
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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Weekend Pass
Screenwriter |
1944 | |||
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Honeymoon Lodge
Screenwriter |
1943 | |||
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So's Your Uncle
Screenwriter |
1943 | |||
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Blondie Goes to College
Screen Story |
1942 | |||
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General Nuisance
Screenwriter |
1941 | |||
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Nothing But Pleasure
Screenwriter |
1940 | |||
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Pardon My Berth Marks
Screenwriter |
1940 | |||
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The Spook Speaks
Screenwriter |
1940 | |||
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The Taming of the Snood
Screenwriter |
1940 | |||
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Mooching Through Georgia
Screenwriter |
1939 | |||
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Pest from the West
Screenwriter |
1939 | |||
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Professor Beware
Screenwriter |
1938 | |||
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Half-Shot Shooters
Screenwriter |
1936 | |||
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Horses' Collars
Director |
1935 | |||
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Spring Tonic
Director |
1935 | |||
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The Man on the Flying Trapeze
Director |
1935 | |||
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Three Little Beers
Screen Story, Screenwriter |
1935 | |||
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The Fatal Glass of Beer
Director |
1933 | |||
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Movie Crazy
Director, Screenwriter |
1932 | |||
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Everything's Rosie
Director |
1931 | |||
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A Flask of Fields
Director |
1930 | |||
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Feet First
Director |
1930 | |||
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Welcome Danger
Director, Screenwriter |
1929 | |||
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Leave 'Em Laughing
Director |
1928 | |||
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The Cameraman
Screen Story |
1928 | |||
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The Finishing Touch
Director |
1928 | |||
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Call of the Cuckoo
Director |
1927 | |||
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Horse Shoes
Director |
1927 | |||
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Love 'em and Feed 'em
Director |
1927 | |||
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Putting Pants on Philip
Director |
1927 | |||
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Should Tall Men Marry?
Director |
1927 | |||
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The Battle of the Century
Director |
1927 | |||
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The General
Director, Screenwriter |
1927 | |||
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For Heaven's Sake
Screenwriter |
1926 | |||
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Seven Chances
Screenwriter |
1925 | |||
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The Freshman
Screenwriter |
1925 | |||
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Sherlock Jr.
Screenwriter |
1924 | |||
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The Navigator
Screenwriter |
1924 | |||
|
Our Hospitality
Screenwriter |
1923 | |||
|
Three Ages
Screenwriter |
1923 |

