Steve Hayden is a well-known figure in the field of advertising. He is the Vice Chairman and Chief Creative Officer of Ogilvy Worldwide.
Stephen Edward Hayden was born on May 21, 1947 in St. Louis, Missouri. His father was an internist and his mother was an opera singer. He was the youngest of four sons. In 1949, when Steve was two years old, his family relocated to San Jose, California where his father was the first internist in the area and eventually ran the O'Connor Hospital there. At 14, Steve was sent to boarding school at the Interlochen Center for the Arts where he studied cello (and where he now serves as chairman of the board of trustees). After graduating from high school at Interlochen, he moved to Los Angeles to go to school at University of Southern California. He graduated in 1968 with a degree in English.
Hayden launched his career in Detroit as a copywriter on the General Motors corporate account. When he returned to California, he divided his attention between advertising and television scriptwriting (for Welcome Back, Kotter), eventually focusing on advertising. After honing his craft at a number of agencies on a variety of accounts, Steve was recruited to Chiat-Day where he and Lee Clow made advertising history as co-creators of the breakthrough 1984 Orwellian take-off campaign for Apple Inc..
Senior Detective Steve Hayden is a fictional character from the Tessa Vance series by Jennifer Rowe which laid the base for the television show Murder Call. He was portrayed by Peter Mochrie in Murder Call.
Heavily arguing with his partner that there are more stars in the country, Steve is quickly pegged as a man of the bush. Accordingly, he often shows his discomfort for the city and longing for the countryside. Growing up in a Catholic home, Steve says he is now on the side of the angels, and believes there is a higher place where all souls will end up after death.
As a kid he played cricket, proud to say he once bowled a leg break. (Though, he could not gain much attention for this from Tessa, who knows very little of sports.) And apparently he had a certain fear of the great, big animals at the zoo, because he used to bring a spud gun when visiting.
Coming to the urban city for education and work, Steve was or got married at some point while in uniform, but things did unfortunately not work out. Tired of his work claiming him, his wife filed for a divorce, leaving Steve to get his own place in dungy Arthur Street, Sydney, where renovation was a must. It took a while for him to realise he did not love his wife, but once he knew that, he stopped missing her.
Actors: Robert Gallinowski (actor), Stephan Luca (actor), Luca Maric (actor), Bjarne Mädel (actor), Helmut Zhuber (actor), Alwara Höfels (actress), Katrin Ingendoh (actress), Dagmar Manzel (actress), Klara Manzel (actress), Lena Münchow (actress), Felicitas Woll (actress), Eberhard Jost (producer), Thorsten Näter (writer), Ingo Frenzel (composer), Helene Hohensee (costume designer),
Genres: Comedy, Crime,Actors: Bob Baker (actor), Robert Barron (actor), Johnny Mack Brown (actor), Roy Bucko (actor), Ed Cassidy (actor), Bill Cody Jr. (actor), Jim Corey (actor), Ralph Dunn (actor), Frank Ellis (actor), Al Haskell (actor), Fuzzy Knight (actor), Johnny Luther (actor), Frank McCarroll (actor), W.H. McCauley (actor), Bud McClure (actor),
Plot: Following 1939's "The Phantom Stage", the last of 12 series westerns made at Universal by Trem Carr and Paul Malvern starring Bob Baker, Universal kicked off a new series of six starring their new series-sign Johnny Mack Brown (who had already starred in three Universal serials with one more to go.) Baker was now odd-man-out at the studio as his contract had been with Trem Carr, and Carr and associate Malvern had moved over to Monogram to begin a series of four "Tailspin Tommy" features. Universal, usually late to the party anyway, added Baker and comedian Fuzzy Knight to the first-six Brown films to form a trio angle along the lines of Republic's highly successful "Three Mesquiteers" series, but there were no continuing roles in these films---they even killed Baker off in the 2nd film---and Baker's 2nd-lead soon went to 3rd-lead (behind Knight) and then to "gone" after the sixth film. When Bob Baker was next seen in a film at Universal, it was as the uncredited bus driver in Abbott and Costello's "Ride 'Em Cowboy" in 1942. From this point onward, Fuzzy Knight was the sidekick in every B-series western made by Universal until they closed shop on series westerns and serial production when they merged with International Pictures to become Universal-International: In this one, Steve Hayden, working undercover, comes to Denton to help restore law and order. The men secretly responsible for the lawlessness are Big Bill Tanner and Melenkthy Culp, the town banker. (A pairing made in filmdom heaven since the meaner and more desperate the two become, the more enjoyable they are to watch.) Judith Lantry arrives from back east to check on her ranch holdings ran by her cousin Bill "Cousin Willie" Strong, and Tanner and Culp, fearful she will discover the faked mortgages they put on her property, send henchman Ortega to do away with her, but Steve saves her life. She and Cousin Willie put Steve in charge of the ranch, and he quickly fires her crooked foreman Lon, and hires Clem Waters and a whole new group of cowhands. Steve captures Lon with 200 head of horses belong to Judith, and he confesses and implicates Tanner and Culp.
Keywords: 1880s, accordion, ambush, american-indian, b-movie, b-western, barfly, bartender, cattle, cattle-rustling