'' (1931) Beginning his film career as Robert Bradbury Jr., he was able to get roles in a series of historical Westerns being directed by his father, Robert North Bradbury, at Sunset Productions, including
With Daniel Boone Thru the Wilderness (1926),
With Davy Crockett at the Fall of the Alamo (1926), and
With Sitting Bull at the Spirit Lake Massacre (1927). While working at Sunset, he was able to get a role at
Film Booking Offices of America (FBO) in the 1926 film
The College Boob. Bob was screen tested by FBO in 1927 for a planned series of
Westerns, and won the contract over fifteen other actors. Screenwriter
Oliver Drake encouraged Bob to change his name. Now appearing as Bob Steele, his breakout film was the silent Western,
The Mojave Kid (1927), directed by his father.
The Mojave Kid was a success and launched Steele into stardom. He would go on to star in thirteen additional silent Westerns. Steele was well positioned to make the jump from silent Westerns to sound. He was youthful, with good acting ability, and his short stature drew fans who loved to see him take on larger, less good-looking outlaws. His first "talkie" was ''
Near the Rainbow's End in 1930, which he followed with thirteen major films. Steele became one of the most popular B-Western stars of the 1930s and 1940s and worked for almost every minor film studio, including Monogram, Supreme, Tiffany, Syndicate, Republic, including several films of The Three Mesquiteers'' series, and
Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC), including the initial films of their "
Billy the Kid" series. He was even able to land the occasional role in an A-movie, as in the adaptation of
John Steinbeck's novel,
Of Mice and Men in 1939. '', part of the Trail Blazers series. In the 1940s, Monogram signed Steele to appear in four of their
Trail Blazers series alongside
Hoot Gibson and
Ken Maynard. Steele's career as a
cowboy hero was on the decline, although he still had leading roles in Westerns as late as 1946 in films such as
Ambush Trail (1946). He kept himself working regularly by accepting supporting roles in big movies like
Howard Hawks'
The Big Sleep, and the
John Wayne vehicles
Island in the Sky,
Rio Bravo,
Rio Lobo,
The Comancheros, and
The Longest Day. Besides these he made occasional appearances in science fiction films like
The Atomic Submarine and
Giant from the Unknown. He also performed on television, including the role of Sergeant Granger in the premiere episode, "The Peacemaker", in 1957 of the
ABC/
Warner Bros. Western series,
Colt .45. In 1957, he was cast as Sam Shoulders in "Bunch Quitter" in another ABC/WB Western series,
Sugarfoot, with
Will Hutchins. He appeared in 1958 and 1959 in two episodes of the
NBC Western,
The Californians, and three episodes of
Maverick with
James Garner, including "The War of the Silver Kings", "The Seventh Hand", and "Holiday at Hollow Rock". Steele appeared as Kirby with
Agnes Moorehead and
Madlyn Rhue in the 1959 episode "In Memoriam" of another ABC Western series,
The Rebel, starring
Nick Adams. He also appeared as Deputy Sam in four episodes of
Hugh O'Brian's
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. In 1959, he appeared with
Mason Alan Dinehart, another
Wyatt Earp alumnus, in the episode "Half a Loaf" of the
syndicated series,
Death Valley Days, hosted by
Stanley Andrews. Steele appeared in six different episodes of the
Walt Disney's Western television series
Texas John Slaughter with
Tom Tryon. On January 25, 1960, Steele was cast as the frontier gunfighter
Luke Short in an episode of the
CBS Western series,
The Texan, starring
Rory Calhoun. In the mid-1960s, Steele was cast in a regular supporting role as Trooper Duffy in ABC's
F Troop, which allowed him to show his comic talent. Trooper Duffy in the
F Troop story line claimed to have been "shoulder to shoulder with
Davy Crockett at the
Alamo" and to have been the only survivor of the battle 40 years before. In real life, 40 years before
F Troop, Steele played a supporting role in his father's 1926 film
Davy Crockett at the Fall of the Alamo. In 1970, he played “The Old Cowhand” in that episode of Family Affair. ==Death and legacy==