Robert Hartford-Davis
Robert Hartford-Davis (born William Henry Davis, 23 July 1923 – 12 June 1977) was a British born producer, director and writer, who worked on film and television in both in the United Kingdom and United States. He is also sometimes credited as Michael Burrowes or Robert Hartford.
Hartford-Davis was born in Ramsgate, Kent in 1923 as William Henry Davis; he changed his name on becoming a television director in 1955. His television career encompassed drama, comedy and entertainment shows. Bob, as he liked to be called, started his career as an electrician in a South London film studio, where he went on to develop his skills as a cameraman. During the fifties he made a number of short films. These were innovative with the choice of cast and script content. In the late fifties he became an agent and worked for Roy Rogers, amongst others (in England).
His talents included co-writing many scripts for 'exploitation' movies and he used media events and people to forward his career. The Yellow Teddy Bears is a prime example of his vivid imagination, using an article in a national newspaper as fodder.
Robert dealt with the downturn of the film industry in the UK by investing his own money in two movies, The Fiend and Nobody Ordered Love.

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The First Churchills

Saturday Night Out

Saturday Night Out

That Kind of Girl

Corruption

The Sandwich Man

Blood Suckers

Black Gunn

Black Gunn

The Black Torment
Nobody Ordered Love

The Fiend

Gonks Go Beat

Gonks Go Beat

The Smashing Bird I Used to Know

The Yellow Teddy Bears

The Fiend

Explosion

The Yellow Teddy Bears

The Take

Press for Time
Nobody Ordered Love

Stranger in the City

The Black Torment

Crosstrap

Stranger in the City

Stranger in the City

Gonks Go Beat
A Christmas Carol
A Christmas Carol

The Sandwich Man
Man on the Cliff

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Family
