Biography
Making an appearance on the 1950 TV anthology series
Magnavox Theater, American actor Robert Clarke was billed as "that fast-rising leading man." What audiences didn't know was that Clarke had been on a very slow ascension for nearly six years. Signed to an RKO contract in 1944, Clarke was seen in such budget-conscious productions as
The Body Snatcher,
Bedlam, and
Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome. Beginning with 1951's
The Man From Planet X, he became a fixture of inexpensive horror and sci-fi epics. His film manifest includes such jewels as
Captive Women (1952),
The Incredible Petrified World (1962), and
Terror of the Bloodhunters (1962). Upon completing
The Astounding She-Monster (1958), Clarke, by now convinced that any film could attain a release no matter how wretched, made his directorial debut with
The Hideous Sun Demon (1958). With such lofty credits to his name, Clarke was bound to achieve cult-idol status at some point or another; he became a much sought-after interview subject and movie-convention guest speaker during the 1980s and 1990s. In 1995, Robert Clarke, in collaboration with film historian Tom Weaver, penned an entertaining autobiography, To "B" or Not to "B": A Filmmaker's Odyssey. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide