Gene Fowler recognized Brown's difficulties as simply a need for compromise.
In 1932, when Gene Fowler met him, Brown already had a reputation as a stormy petrel Peckinpau.
Gene Fowler, noticing a Bible on the shelf, asked Fields, "What the hell are you doing with that?"
It was owned and operated by Gene Fowler and his employees.
The film was based on a biography of Walker, also titled Beau James, written by Gene Fowler.
When his mother remarried, young Gene took his stepfather's name to become Gene Fowler.
Fields, whose animus toward children is legendary, claimed that Gene Fowler's sons were the only children he could stand.
Gene Fowler died in Los Angeles, California.
Her associate, Gene Fowler, notes that 75 percent of the chicks that are born die of starvation already.
Beau James is a 1957 film based on a non-fiction book of the same name by Gene Fowler.