Buck Braithwaite is an actor, known for Nefarious (2019), Masters of the Air and Fair Play.
Buck Brown is known for Red Rose of Normandy (2011), Iron Cross: The Road to Normandy (2022) and Left Behind or Led Astray?: Examining the Origins of the Secret Pre-Tribulation Rapture (2015).
Rudolph Bucko (real name Rudolph Bouckou) was a working cowhand from Yakima, Washington, who, with his brother Roy Bucko, drifted south and found themselves riding Hollywood's western ranges. Neither brother was often billed but Rudolph was billed by his nickname, "Buck' Bucko, and he actually had a credit or so when he was billed as Rudolph "Buck" Bucko. Because of the two different billing names in his few credited roles, trade journals of the time, especially the annual "Film Daily Year Book", carried a listing for both Rudolph Bucko and Buck Bucko, even though both names were for the same actor. Some sources don't know that so, based on their skimpy and incorrect research, three Bucko brothers have been "created." Buck worked in well over 200 sound-era westerns and serials, and both Bucko brothers appeared in most of the Ken Maynard westerns of the era. Both were primarily mainstays at Columbia and Universal during that period, and both worked in many Republic films from 1935-1952 or so. Both Bucko brothers were present in most of the films either worked in, but not always - Roy appeared in at least 55 more films than Rudolph Ralph was the smaller of the two brothers
Buck Burns is known for Ape vs. Monster (2021), The X Species (2018) and Reconquest (2022).
Buck Connors was born on November 22, 1880 in Streator, Illinois, USA. He was an actor and director, known for The Radio Detective (1926), The Duke of Chimney Butte (1921) and Straight Shootin' (1927). He was married to Hazel Powell. He died on February 4, 1947 in Yuma, Arizona, USA.
Buck Estes is an actor and director, known for Neighborhood Watch (2018), Twisp is Real (2018) and It's a Keeper (2018).
Buck Heffernan is known for Super Troopers 2 (2018), Quasi (2023) and Tacoma FD (2019).
Buck Hujabre is an American-born Afghan actor fluent in several languages, including Farsi, Dari, and Pashto. He also speaks French and Italian, and has a working conversational knowledge of Spanish. Most recently part of the hit Broadway Musical, Jersey Boys, he's had a busy pilot season (The Guest, Freedom Fighters, & Blind Date), and is the host of Happy Hour Hideaways.
Buck Jones was one of the greatest of the "B" western stars. Although born in Indiana, Jones reportedly (but disputedly) grew up on a ranch near Red Rock in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), and there learned the riding and shooting skills that would stand him in good stead as a hero of Westerns. He joined the army as a teenager and served on US-Mexican border before seeing service in the Moro uprising in the Philippines. Though wounded, he recuperated and re-enlisted, hoping to become a pilot. He was not accepted for pilot training and left the army in 1913. He took a menial job with the Miller Brothers 101 Ranch Wild West Show and soon became champion bronco buster for the show. He moved on to the Julia Allen Show, but with the beginning of the First World War, Jones took work training horses for the Allied armies. After the war, he and his wife, Odelle Osborne, whom he had met in the Miller Brothers show, toured with the Ringling Brothers circus, then settled in Hollywood, where Jones got work in a number of Westerns starring Tom Mix and Franklyn Farnum. Producer William Fox put Jones under contract and promoted him as a new Western star. He used the name Charles Jones at first, then Charles "Buck" Jones, before settling on his permanent stage name. He quickly climbed to the upper ranks of Western stardom, playing a more dignified, less gaudy hero than Mix, if not as austere as William S. Hart. With his famed horse Silver, Jones was one of the most successful and popular actors in the genre, and at one point he was receiving more fan mail than any actor in the world. Months after America's entry into World War II, Jones participated in a war-bond-selling tour. On November 28, 1942, he was a guest of some local citizens in Boston at the famed Coconut Grove nightclub. Fire broke out and nearly 500 people died in one of the worst fire disasters on record. Jones was horribly burned and died two days later before his wife Dell could arrive to comfort him. Although legend has it that he died returning to the blaze to rescue others (a story probably originated by producer Trem Carr for whatever reason), the actual evidence indicates that he was trapped with all the others and succumbed as most did, trying to escape. He remains, however, a hero to thousands who followed his film adventures.
Buck Jordan is known for his work on The Next Thing You Eat (2021).