Showing posts with label State: California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State: California. Show all posts

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Bobette Buster: Hollywood's Secret




Bobette "Bobbie" Buster was born on September 4, 1953 in Ohio, raised in a small town of Leitchfield, Kentucky until 1958 when her father, Bob Buster, moved the family to to Cincinnati, Ohio. Her father  taught US and World History at Sycamore High School in Blue Ash. During his 25 years, and he became Asst. Superintendent, facilitating the rise of the Sycamore Township School System to city, state and national prominence. Growing up in Ohio, she would collect stories in her youth about the older generation, which included her own family members, and has the oral histories preserved at the Kentucky Museum. She graduated Northwestern University with a B.S. in Speech and USC Film School with an M.F.A. in the Peter Stark Producing Program. Currently she is the Special Projects Adj. Professor of Storytelling at Tufts University, while writing/producing documentaries. She is also writing her third book.

Currently living in Los Angeles, she has been working as a part-time lecturer as a Stark adjunct professor since 1992. Her lecturing and consulting experiences have comprised of Pixar, Disney, Le Femis (Paris), DFFB (Berlin), 20th Century Fox, Sony Animation, Screen Training Ireland, North By Northwest (Denmark), and more. Her area of expertise in the film industry focuses on the development of storytelling for all cultures, incorporating corporate, nonprofit, and academia. Her influences extend to writers like, Josh Goldsmith (EP, King of Queens, What Women Want), Pete Chiarelli (The Proposal), Elizabeth Klaviter (Producer/Writer, Grey’s Anatomy), Dana Fox (EP, Ben and Kate), Miles Millar & Alfred Gough (EPs, Smallville), Garret Lerner & Russell Friend (EPs, House), John August (screenwriter,) documentary producer Karen Johnson (Double Dare,) and many more. She focuses on principles such as The History of Hollywood Economics, Violence in Entertainment, The Purpose of Happily Ever After, Epiphany, and The Ten Stages of Transformation, among other important storytelling principals.

Aside from lecturing, Bobette is also a screenwriter and documentary producer. "There is phenomenal work being done in documentaries," she praised. "The constraints of raising funds and delivering ideas that can be marketed worldwide have created a really taut story discipline among documentary makers." Her works include Deadly Code (2013), Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound (2016) and Weapons of Mass Distraction (1997). She also has written a book that is apart of the “Do” series, entitled, Do Story: How to tell your story so the world listens that engages and connects the craftsmanship of storytelling. She is a member of the Writers Guild, and in December of 2007 while picketing outside of Paramount during the writer's strike, she reinforced, "Writers took the lead here because we're contrarians, independent thinkers."
(c. 1971, high school senior year)

Sunday, August 21, 2016

John E. Buster: The doctor that helped create embryo transfer


Computers weren’t the singular mind-blowing science reveal that came out of the 1980’s. As an alternative option for infertility, to that of test tube babies, was the embryo transfer. Dr. John E. Buster and his team not only grabbed headlines, but defined history. John Edmond Buster was born on July 18, 1941 at the seaside city of Oxnard, west of Los Angeles, and was named after his uncle and father. His grandfather, Edmond Sr., left rural Texas for urban California, during the height of the Roaring Twenties, to find steady pay and extended education for John’s father and uncle. Because his father, Edmond Jr., was a mechanical engineer, John had the encouragement and accessibility to attend college. He graduated from Stanford University within three years instead of four in 1962, and earned a medical degree and completed his residency at the University of California. His areas of specialties: obstetrics, gynecology, reproductive endocrinology and infertility.

In 1973, he took on two more life progressions. In late January, he married his sweetheart, Frances Bunn.  And, despite the tragic downturn of the Vietnam War unceremoniously ending with the withdrawal of troops in April, he patriotically joined the military as a lieutenant colonel. Serving out his two years, in part treating military wives, he left his yearly $11,434 salary to start earning about $60,000 a year when he returned to UCLA.  His pursuit in seeking improvements in women’s health led to a medical breakthrough.

John and his research team began to develop the embryo transfer procedure in 1982. For women who had unhealthy ovaries, carried genetic disorders, or couldn’t produce useful eggs, they were providing an additional option. What that entailed was an egg donation and insertion of a fertilized egg, or zygote, from a glass vessel, (the in virto tube,) into a syringe that pushed the zygote through a thin hose to deposit it into a fallopian tube. The differences between this procedure to that of other in vitro fertilizations “test-tube babies” at the time were that, one,  it required no surgeries to extract and insert the eggs, and, two, that the baby would not be biologically related to the mother. Instead, mothers would have the zygotes easily inserted, and donors would “flush out” their mature egg during their cycles.  The flushing out is a delicate procedure which a double-lumen needle extracts follicular fluid that holds the egg while saline fluid is exchanged in another channel into the follicle; a small, fluid-filled sac in the ovary that contains one immature egg. 

After forty-six attempts, on February 3, 1984, the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center announced the first live birth of a human baby, and three months later, a second birth followed. While the Dallas Morning News casually underrated the success as a “milestone,”  the Today Show, Good Morning America, Oprah Winfrey, Phil Donahue, the New York Times, People Magazine, and Time Magazine said otherwise.  

This exposure reinforced his goals. For the next forty years as he constructed his career, John was a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UCLA, University of Tennessee, Baylor College of Medicine, and Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, and served on the Board of Directors and Scientific Board. He invested his experiences to help create a Silicon Valley medical device company, Previvo Genetics, Inc. His series of patents as one of his partners for Previvo Genetics, Inc. include a method for producing an in vivo environment suitable for human embryo transfer recovery and processing of human embryos formed in vivo, and uterine lavage for embryo retrieval.  In addition to infertility, he specializes in other female challenges such as ectopic pregnancies, hormone replacement, mood disorders, and so on.  Since the 1984 via in vitro fertilization, John and his team have been accredited to over 200,000 live births as recorded by the Centers for Disease Control.   In 2017, he has been inducted into ACOG Hall of Fame and the second Buster listed in America’s Who’s Who.

Today, John has only slowed down just a little bit. The aging doctor, who resembles the aging actor, Jonathan Banks, but without the facial hair and the intensely stern stare, maintains his connection in researching and consulting.  


INFERTILE WOMAN HAS BABY THROUGH EMBRYO TRANSFER
By SANDRA BLAKESLEE
The New York Times
Published: February 4, 1984

embryo transfer
LONG BEACH, Calif., Feb. 3— The birth of the first baby conceived in one woman's womb and carried to birth in another's without the use of ''test tube'' fertilization was announced here today by a team of California physicians.

The baby, a boy born about two weeks ago, ''is just beautiful,'' said the team leader, Dr. John E. Buster of the University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine. He described the embryo transfer technique, long used in cattle but just now applied to humans, at a news conference at Long Beach Memorial Hospital. The technique does not require surgery, anesthetic or test tube fertilization of the egg, Dr. Buster said. A report of the birth appears in today's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.

In the procedure, an embryo that was just beginning to develop was transferred from one woman in whom it had been conceived by artificial insemination to another woman who gave birth to the infant 38 weeks later. The sperm used in the artificial insemination came from the husband of the woman who bore the baby.

Dr. Buster said the technique was different from ''test tube'' fertilization, which involves surgical removal of an unfertilized egg from a woman, fertilization of the egg in a laboratory dish, and implantation of the fertilized egg into the womb. Technique Is Described

Australian researchers last month reported the first successful birth in which an egg donated by one woman was fertilized and then implanted in an infertile woman. It was similar to the procedure announced today in that it used a donor's egg that had already reached the embryo stage and then was implanted in another woman. But the Australian case still required fertilization of the egg in a glass dish rather than in the donor's body.

Along with a half-dozen colleagues, Dr. Buster described the technique and his plans to establish the first ovum transfer clinic at Memorial Hospital this spring.

The hormonal cycles of the egg donor and recipient must be well matched, the physicians said. Five days after a donor is artificially inseminated, her uterus is flushed out and if a healthy embryo is present it is inserted immediately into the recipient's uterus. The embryo may consist of only 8 to l0 cells and would not be visible to the naked eye.

Donors and recipients are also matched by blood type, Rh factor, and hair and eye color. Beneficiaries of Procedure

transfer technique
The embryo transfer technique should prove desirable to women who have defective ovaries and thus produce no functional eggs of their own, who are tired of surgery attempts that have not yet worked or who may carry genetic disorders, Dr. Buster said. As long as the infertile couple is willing to accept a donated egg, the technique can be carried out in a doctor's office. Fertility and Genetics Research Inc., a Chicago-based company that helped develop the technique, announced plans to establish a national computer base to handle a stock of fertilized eggs. It has also applied for patents on the instruments used in transferring human embryos.

The company's right to such patents and to set up clinics across the country has been challenged by Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation for Economic Trends in Washington, because the technique ''reduces the process of human reproduction to a commercialized product to be bought and sold in the marketplace.'' Mr. Rifkin said he planned a suit in patent court.

But Dr. Buster said the recipient mother, a woman in her 30's who had an eight-year history of infertility, is not upset over such issues. ''She is very happy and has a beautiful baby,'' he said.

The research team has attempted 46 transfers and had two successes. The second woman pregnant by the technique will be ready to give birth soon, he said, adding, ''We are very proud.''


(Standford University Yearbook, 1962)

Edmond Beatty Buster Jr (b.1918, Parker Co, TX) FATHER

Edmond "Bate" Beatty Buster Sr (b. 1891, Parker Co, TX,) GRANDFATHER

Green Newton Buster (b. 1858, Lawrence Co, AR) GREAT-GRANDFATHER

John Francis Buster (b. 1831, VA) 2ND GREAT-GRANDFATHER


Francis Beatty Buster (b. 1818, Scott, VA) 3RD GREAT-GRANDFATHER

John Buster Sr. (b.1755  Orange, NC ) 4TH GREAT-GRANDFATHER

William Buster Jr. (b.1729  Albemarle, VA ) 5TH GREAT-GRANDFATHER

William Buster Sr. (b.?? ) 6TH GREAT-GRANDFATHER


Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Budd Leland Buster


*B-Western Hollywood actor, Budd Buster, was 1st cousin, 3 times removed to Cole Younger of the James-Younger gang. His great-grandmother, Lucy Younger, was Cole's father's sister!

Budd Leland Buster (14 June 1891 – 22 December 1965), briefly was an American actor known for western films. Since his first film credit in 1935, he appeared in 304 films. He was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado and died in Los Angeles, California. As Henchman Coffee, Buster appeared in Westward Ho in 1942 and his career begun in 1933. Buster also appeared on television. On Rotten Tomatoes, Buster's highest-rated film was in Bus Stop, a 1956 film. On the same website, his lowest-rated film was the 1953 It Came from Outer Space, with 81%. His final film appearance was in Guns of the Timberland in 1960.

Wiry, feisty Budd Buster was one of the most prolific…and talented…character actors to ever appear in B-westerns. Old timer, outlaw henchman, townsman, the leading lady’s father, military officer, scout, newspaper editor, store clerk, lawman, even sidekick a few times…Budd did it all in over 250 B-Westerns for over 20 years from 1933-1960, appearing in a staggering 32 movies in 1937. Other years from ‘35-‘46 he was in 20 or more! (Oddly, Budd took a several year hiatus from 1949 to the mid ‘50s.)

Budd, a name he adopted, was born Leland Buster in Colorado (probably near Colorado Springs) June 14, 1891 (some references list 1892 but in Budd’s own handwriting he listed 1891 on his 1917 WWI draft registration card.) His parents were John M. Buster and Anna (Annie) Moore Buster, both from Missouri. By the 1900 census the family, including Leland’s younger (by one year) sister, Demple, and his grandmother on his father’s side, was living in Colorado Springs. By 1920 Leland/Budd was married to Mary with two children, Mary Jane (4) and John (1), and was employed as a driver at a livery house in Ivywild, CO.

At some point it’s believed Budd got into vaudeville which led to film work by 1933, as one of his greatest talents was his ability to apply makeup, giving him wide latitude in portraying various characters. That expertise allowed him to play multiple roles in several films. In Bob Steele’s “Cavalry” (‘36 Republic) Budd had the titular role of Steele’s wagon boss sidekick as well as Abraham Lincoln in silhouette. In Montie Montana’s “Circle of Death” (‘35 Kent) Budd is a wagon train scout and a storekeeper. He’s a trading post operator as well as a waiter in the barroom in Bill Cody’s “Six Gun Justice” (‘35 Spectrum). For Hoot Gibson’s “Cavalcade of the West” (‘36 Diversion) Budd is a stage guard and an Indian. He was a rustler and a townsman in “Between Men” with Johnny Mack Brown (‘35 Supreme) This chameleonic ability also kept Budd in demand by national ad agencies who used him on national billboards for Studebaker, Eastside Beer and others. Studio-wise, Budd was everywhere, but PRC and Monogram might have gone out of business if not for Budd’s participation. As stated, Budd did it all. We’d have to devote an entire issue to Budd in order to cover all his roles. As for badmen, see him at his nefarious best in “Colorado Kid” (‘37 Republic) w/Bob Steele, a bank robber in “Desert Justice” (‘36 Atlantic) w/Jack Perrin, a rustler in “Silent Valley” (‘35 Reliable) w/Tom Tyler, “Texas Marshal” (‘41 PRC) w/Tim McCoy, “Billy the Kid Trapped” (‘42 PRC) w/Buster Crabbe, “Man’s Country” (‘38 Monogram) w/Jack Randall, “Overland Stagecoach” (‘42 PRC) w/Bob Livingston, a Nazi saboteur in “Cowboy Commandoes” (’43 Monogram) w/Range Busters, an underhanded foreman in “Brand of the Devil” (‘44 PRC) w/Dave O’Brien/Jim Newill, a crooked postmaster in “Border Badmen” (‘45 PRC) w/Buster Crabbe and, best of all, as a crazy old coot in a haunted mine in “Wild Horse Phantom” (‘44 PRC) w/Buster Crabbe.

Budd was even a bonafide sidekick to Jack Randall in Monogram’s “Covered Wagon Trails” (‘40), Crescent’s “Drums of Destiny” (‘37) w/Tom Keene and “Feud of the Range” (‘39 Metropolitan) w/Bob Steele. But perhaps the best role of Budd’s illustrious career was in “Trail of Terror” (‘43 PRC) w/Dave O’Brien and James Newill as the interested “protector” of saloon lady Patricia Knox much like Richard Barthelmess was for Marlene Dietrich a year earlier in “The Spoilers”.

Interesting to note Budd’s 27 year old son, John L. Buster, got into the act in two mid-‘40’s Buster Crabbe Westerns at PRC—he even sings in “Prairie Badmen” (‘46). It’s imperative we point out that character player George Selk (1893-1967), while bearing a slight passing resemblance to Budd, is not Budd using an alias nor is he in any way related. Selk was in films from ‘53-‘66 and is best noted for playing stableman Moss Grimmick on “Gunsmoke” in the ‘60s. Budd barely ventured into TV, but two of his last roles were on “Buffalo Bill Jr.: Black Ghost” (‘55) and “Gene Autry: Outlaw Warning” (‘54).

Budd passed away in 1965 due to a heart attack. He was 74 years old.


John M. Buster (b.1862, Clay, MO) FATHER

Charles Wallace Buster (b. 1833, Clay, MO,) GRANDFATHER

James Jarman Buster (b. 1798, Washington, VA) GREAT-GRANDFATHER

Michael Sr. Buster (b. 1757, Russell, VA) 2ND GREAT-GRANDFATHER

William Jr. Buster (b. 1735, Albemarle, VA) 3RD GREAT-GRANDFATHER

William Sr. Buster/Bustard (abt. 1694, UK )4TH GREAT-GRANDFATHER


*FROM ANCESTRY.COM

Born in Colorado in 1891, there's scuttlebutt that Budd worked briefly in some early films on the east coast, long before Hollywood was created. And he also appeared in vaudeville and road shows.  But all of that is suspect. From birth through the 1930 census, he's living in Colorado Springs or Ivywild, Colorado, both communities located in El Paso County. He's a "liveryman", "driver" and "breeder - kennels" in the 1920 and 1930 census and his World War I draft registration. And Colorado Springs City Directories note that Budd, his father John and another gent are owners of the Colorado Springs Auto and Carriage Livery Company. And in 1930, Budd built a Pee-Wee football field in Colorado Springs. More on all of this is below. 

There were a few articles on Budd at the Newspaper Archive:

Birthday party article in the April 27, 1905 Colorado Springs Weekly Gazette. Excerpts: "The Elk hotel was the scene of a ... children's party yesterday ... Dimple, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Buster, celebrated her eleventh birthday anniversary. The guests were ... Leland Buster ..."

November and December, 1930 newspaper articles on Budd and Pee-Wee Football in his Colorado Springs, Colorado home town:

Headline: "'Pee-Wee' Football Invades Colorado." Excerpt: "Colorado Springs, Colo., Nov. 5. - Comes now miniature football. This sport world innovation is announced by Bud L. Buster, Colorado Springs dog fancier ..." 

Headline: "MINIATURE FOOTBALL MAKES COLORADIO [sic] BOW" Excerpt: "Bud Buster, of Colorado Springs, has constructed a half-size gridiron on which miniature teams can play ..."
1937 newspaper article about Budd working in the Bob Steele CAVALRY oater. Caution on this as it could have been lifted from a pressbook (and is more hype than reality; and may be the source of that scuttlebutt on Budd doing early east coast films, vaudeville and road shows): 

Excerpts: "Born, raised and educated in Colorado Springs, Colorado, Budd joined a stock company and road show stopping at his home town. Since then, he has made appearances in every state in the union in some stage production. Budd made his first motion picture, for Powers Company of New York, 'Frozen on Love's Trail,' back in 1909." and "Budd has collected more than 200 different costumes worn by him in some stage production or motion picture during his career."  

(Footnote: tradepapers have 1912 as the release year for 'Frozen on Love's Trail'.)

It's 1930 and Budd is nearly forty years old. He's still in Colorado, operating a kennel and building a Pee-Wee football stadium. His film career begins late 1933 - early 1934. The reasoning behind that move to Tinseltown and the movie business is lost in Hollywood history. 

Les Adams has him in about 300 sound films - of those, 254 are westerns and 18 are serials. He played all kinds of parts - henchie, old codger, townsman, father of the heroine, military officer, lawman, ranch owner, bank clerk, newspaper editor, wagon train scout ... you name it. He could also handle a team of horses, and you'd occasionally see him driving a buckboard, wagon or stage. While Budd seemed to be a 1940s fixture in sagebrush adventures at Monogram and PRC, he did about 65 films for Republic Pictures during the years 1936-1954 - and these were mostly cliffhangers and westerns. 

Perhaps Budd Buster's greatest talent was his ability to handle any kind of role by modifying his look via makeup or a costume change. And if the job required an older man or a younger man, Budd added a moustache or dark hair or grey hair, etc. That expertise with makeup - along with an extensive costume collection - allowed Budd to play multiple roles in a film. A few examples follow:

In Bob Steele's CAVALRY (A. W. Hackel/Republic, 1936), Budd portrayed the wagon train boss as well as Abraham Lincoln. In Montie Montana's solo starring effort, CIRCLE OF DEATH (Kent, 1935), Budd is the wagon train scout and a storekeeper. He's a townsman and a member of the rustler gang in the Johnny Mack Brown BETWEEN MEN (Supreme, 1935). In Hoot Gibson's CAVALCADE OF THE WEST (Diversion, 1936), Buster is a stage guard and an Indian. On a few occasions, Budd was the helper to the hero. Some examples: he sidekicked Tom Keene in DRUMS OF DESTINY (Crescent, 1937), assisted Bob Steele in FEUD OF THE RANGE (Metropolitan, 1939), and was Jack Randall's pal in COVERED WAGON TRAILS (Monogram, 1940). 

I have several favorite Budd Buster roles: he's the old, grizzled and dirty "desert rat" in the Tim McCoy FIGHTING RENEGADE (Victory, 1939); and he portrays a crazed miner in WILD HORSE PHANTOM (PRC, 1944), the Buster Crabbe and Fuzzy St. John comedy western with the flying bat zoomin' around a mine shaft. 

You may want to go to the In Search Of ... page on the Old Corral and then to the California Death Index. There you will find a record for: Budd L. Buster, born 6/14/1891 in Colorado, Mother's maiden name of Moore, and he passed away on 12/22/1965. There is a corresponding record in the Social Security Death Index (SSDI).

The Family Search website (free) and Ancestry.com (subscription) have more on Budd Buster and family. An unanswered question is whether his real name was Budd ... or was that a nickname that he later adopted. He does report his full name as "Budd Leland Buster" on his World War I and World War II draft registrations.

1900 census - 38 year old John M. Buster (born Missouri), his 28 year old wife Annie (born Missouri), 8 year old son Leland (born Colorado), 6 year old daughter Demple [sic] (born Colorado), 64 year old mother Mrs. G. A. Buster (born Kentucky), and a lodger reside in Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado:
 https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MQMC-FY1

Ancestry had the 1900 census takers worksheet - the family is living at 220 South Conefos (?) Street, Colorado Springs. Father John M. Buster's occupation is "Transferman".

1910 census - living in Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado are 45 year old John M. Buster (born Missouri), his 35 year old wife Anna (born Missouri), 19 year old son Badr [sic] Buster (born Colorado), and 15 year old daughter Dimple (born Colorado): https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MK43-JC4

Ancestry had the 1910 census takers worksheet - the family is renting at 324 N. Nevada Avenue, Colorado Springs. Occupation of father John M. is "Keeper - Livery Stable". No occupation is listed for son "Badr Buster". Looking closely at the spelling of the first name, it is "Budd".

World War I draft registration dated June 5, 1917 - 25 year old Budd Leland Buster was born June 14, 1891 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He is a self-employed "Liveryman" working in Colorado Springs. He, his wife and one child reside at 504 N. Spruce, Colorado Springs: https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-26425-9394-46?cc=1968530

Ancestry.com had about ten Colorado Springs city directories spanning the years 1907-1918. In those, Budd is sometimes Leland Buster, sometimes B. Leland Buster, etc. Additionally, Budd, his father John and another individual were owners of a livery business. From the 1916 Colorado Springs, Colorado City Directory: Buster, Williams & Buster (J. M. Buster, J. C. Williams, B. L. Buster), proprietors Colorado Springs Auto and Carriage Livery Company.

1920 census - 27 year old Leland Buster, 23 year old wife Mary, 4 year old daughter Mary Jane, and 1 year old son John, and the family is living in Ivywild, El Paso County, Colorado:https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MX2R-H75

Ancestry had the 1920 census takers worksheet - they own their home but the address was difficult to read. Budd's occupation is "Driver - Tourist". 1920 census for Budd's parents - 58 year old John M. Buster (born Missouri) and his 58 year old wife Anna M. (born Missouri) are lodgers living in Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado: https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MX2P-H8F

Ancestry had the 1920 census takers worksheet - John M. Buster's occupation is "Auto Livery - Tourist Business" and it looks like Anna is 50 years old, not 58. John and Anna are among dozens of lodgers and boarders at a hotel/rooming house at 112-20 Cascade Avenue, Colorado Springs.

1930 census - living in Ivywild, El Paso County, Colorado are 37 year old Bud L. Buster, 33 year old wife Mary, 14 year old daughter Mary Jane, and 11 year old son John:https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/X747-5CC

Ancestry had the 1930 census takers worksheet - they own their home but address was difficult to read. Budd's occupation is "Breeder ??? - Kennels".

1940 census - 48 year old Budd, 43 year old wife Mary A., and 21 year old son John L. are in Los Angeles: https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K9C6-24R

1940 census takers worksheet has Budd, wife Mary and son John L., and their home address is 7167 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles. Both Budd and son John L. report their occupation as "Actor - Pictures", and wife Mary is a "Beauty operator - Beauty Salon". And in 1939, Budd worked 40 weeks and earned $1100.00: https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1961-27797-3308-38?cc=2000219&wc=MMYH-X1V:1535596176

1942 World War II draft registration - Budd Leland Buster was born June 14, 1891 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Wife Mary is his contact and they live at 7167 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles. His occupation is "Actor - Free Lance": https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1-16389-63209-5?cc=1861144&wc=MMRW-1R1:n1009056979

Some Budd Buster tidbits:

There is an error in some Budd Buster biographies and filmographies - Budd Buster is not actor George Selk. George W. Selk was born May 15, 1893 in Nebraska and passed away on January 22, 1967. Selk's most remembered role was as stableman "Moss Grimmick" on TV's GUNSMOKE.

Budd's son John L. Buster appears in a few mid 1940s Buster Crabbe PRC westerns. He has a large role - including some singin' and guitar playin' - in the Buster Crabbe PRAIRIE BADMEN (PRC, 1946). The California Death Records database has a record on: John Buster, born 7/29/1918 in Colorado and he passed away 6/4/1974 in the Los Angeles area. U. S. Air Force veteran John L. Buster (1918-1974) is interred at Los Angeles National Cemetery, Los Angeles, California. If ol' Budd got listed on the ad/artwork or in the film's cast listing, his first name was often misspelled as "Bud" (with one D).

 Although some of the data is incomplete or inaccurate, the Internet Movie Database (IMDb) has information on Budd Buster (as of June, 2006, Budd's film work has been erroneously combined with actor George Selk): http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0124560/ and the IMDb record for Budd's son John L. Buster: http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0124564/

Jim Tipton's Find A Grave website has a photo of the marker for Budd L. Buster (1891-1965) who is interred at Pierce Brothers Valhalla Memorial Park, North Hollywood, Los Angeles County, California: 
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7994222

Find A Grave has info on Budd's son, U. S. Air Force veteran John L. Buster (1918-1974), who is interred at Los Angeles National Cemetery, Los Angeles, California:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=118820391

The U. S. Veterans Administration gravesite locator website at http://gravelocator.cem.va.gov/ has the following information on Budd's son, John L. Buster:
     PFC (Private First Class) US AIR FORCE
     WORLD WAR II, KOREA
     DATE OF BIRTH: 06/29/1918
     DATE OF DEATH: 06/04/1974
     LOS ANGELES NATIONAL CEMETERY
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