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Entering the film business in 1915, Scott Dunlap worked his way up through the ranks and became a director in 1919. He worked steadily, though unspectacularly, directing many low- and medium-budget films, often Westerns, for various studios. He left film production with the coming of sound and became a talent agent and business manager, notably of cowboy star Buck Jones, and the two became close friends (in fact, Dunlap was injured in the fire in the Coconut Grove nightclub in which Jones died). In the late 1930s Dunlap returned to the business as a producer of low-budget films--again, mostly westerns--and in the late '40s was hired as production chief for Monogram Pictures, where his main duty was to oversee production of the company's westerns.