Robert Hinkle
Robert Hinkle
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Robert (Texas Bob) Hinkle's show-business career went from the rodeo to
the studio, and spans the latter half of the 20th-century. After
graduating from high school in his home-town of Brownfield, Texas, Bob
enlisted in the United States Air Force in November of 1947 and
received his honorable discharge in March of 1950. He joined the rodeo
circuit upon discharge and it was at a rodeo in Moses Lake, Washington,
where Bob was competing as a calf-roper and a bulldogger, that Bob had,
in his opinion, his 'most memorable achievement'; he bet a fellow
competitor $20 he could get a date with the Queen of the Rodeo, Miss
Sandra Larson. He met her, took her to the rodeo dance that night,
collected his twenty-bucks; and married the beautiful lady fifteen
months later. This 'cowboy-and-the-lady' union is still intact after 56
years, and the raising of their three children, Michael, Bradley and
Melody. While visiting his rodeo friends on the set of Universal's 1952
"Bronco Buster," Bob's western appearance and demeanor caught the eye
of director Budd Boetticher and landed
him an uncredited role as a combination cowboy stuntman. That was all
it took for Bob to decide that the "reel" west of Hollywood was more to
his liking than breaking bones in real-west rodeos. Acting roles soon
led him to another turning point when, in 1955, he found himself back
in Texas at the Marfa location of George Stevens' "Giant" as a
combination of technical/dialogue director/coach, and advising the
likes of James Dean, Rock Hudson, Mercedes McCambridge, and Dennis Hopper on how to 'talk Texas.' Later, he did the same coaching job on "Hud," with Paul Newman, Patricia Neal and Melvyn Douglas. He also created and directed the 'pig scramble' segment in that film. His 1955 work on "Giant," thanks to all the generous tips and questions-answered by George Stevens, expanded Bob's interest
in the film business beyond action and, in 1960, Bob wrote, directed
and produced "Old Rex" for Universal Pictures, and also a short called
"Born Hunters." This led him to producing a live-action short for
Paramount, "Mr. Chat." His expanding career found him in 1964 producing
a series of country-music specials called "Hollywood Jubilee" with
Jeannie Seely,
Henson Cargill and an unknown singer
named Glen Campbell. In 1964 he
became the personal manger for his old friend, fellow-Texan,
Chill Wills. Also, in 1963-65, Bob wrote,
directed and produced a series of two-reel shorts for Paramount. These
were shot in Technicolor and on location throughout the United States,
and some of the titles were "Born Hunter," narrated by
Tex Williams; "Thoroughbred Racing", shot
in Kentucky and narrated by Don 'Red' Barry; and
"Texas Today" and "Virginia City," narrated by
Chill Wills. A daredevil stunt performer
named Robert Craig "Evel" Knievel hired Bob as his promoter in 1968-71.
In 1970 Hinkle became the personal manager for
Marty Robbins and remained so until
Robbins' death in 1982. In 1972 Bob combined his film production roots
with country music by producing and directing, for Universal, "Country
Music Jubilee" starring Marty Robbins and
Sammy Jackson, and followed that
in 1972 with "Guns of a Stranger," starring his two clients, Marty
Robbins and Chill Wills. He pulled out all the stops in 1982 with
"Atoka," in which 100,000 people went on a picnic with
Willie Nelson,
Larry Gatlin, Don Williams,
Freddy Fender,
Hoyt Axton,
David Allan Coe, Freddie Weller, Red
Steagall and Marty Robbins. Bob was later the General Manager of
Network One in Nashville, where he produced numerous TV shows, music
videos and national commercials. Bob and Sandra Hinkle now reside back
in Dallas, back to his roots, where he is semi-retired but his fast
pace continues as he helps disaster victims through his work with the
Federal Emergency Management Agency.
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