
Tulsa
Tempestuous loves! Lusty adventures! Violent hates!
It's Tulsa, Oklahoma at the start of the oil boom and Cherokee Lansing's rancher father is killed in a fight with the Tanner Oil Company. Cherokee plans revenge by bringing in her own wells with the help of oil expert Brad Brady and childhood friend Jim Redbird. When the oil and the money start gushing in, both Brad and Jim want to protect the land but Cherokee has different ideas. What started out as revenge for her father's death has turned into an obsession for wealth and power.
- 6.3
- 1949
- Released
- 1h 30m

Susan Hayward
Cherokee Lansing
Robert Preston
Brad Brady
Pedro Armendáriz
Jim Redbird
Lloyd Gough
Bruce Tanner
Chill Wills
Pinky Jimpson (Narrator)
Ed Begley
John J. 'Johnny' Brady (as Edward Begley)
Jimmy Conlin
Homer Triplette
Roland Jack
Steve, Cherokee's Ranchhand
Harry Shannon
Nelse Lansing
Lola Albright
Candy Williams (uncredited)
Paul E. Burns
Tooley (uncredited)
John Dehner
Oilman (uncredited)
Dick Gordon
Party Guest (uncredited)
Fred Graham
Charlie - Cherokee's Foreman (uncredited)
Frank Hagney
Doorman at Gambling Emporium (uncredited)
Selmer Jackson
Oilman (uncredited)
Larry Keating
Bit Part (uncredited)
Frank Mills
Moving Man (uncredited)
Roger Moore
Oilman (uncredited)
Charles Sherlock
Firefighter (uncredited)
Jay Silverheels
Creek Indian (uncredited)
Dick Wessel
Joker (uncredited)
Released
en
- #oklahoma
- #power takeover
- #business woman
- #business ethics
- #revenge
- #oil
- #oil industry
- #dead father
- #oil well
- #cattle baron
- #cherokee
- #wildcatter
- #oil field
- #tulsa, oklahoma
- #land rights
- #oil boom
- #greedy woman
- #lust for power
- #land preservation
- #nature and conservation
- #interracial woman
- #oil well fire
- #lust for wealth
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Reviews

This has a slightly incongruous conservation slant to it as it follows the battle between the oil drillers and the local, largely indigenous, Oklahoman farmers. Now forgetting the terrible song at the start from "Pinky" (Chill Wills) - who provides us with the optimistic narration; we are introduced to the honorable "Cherokee" (Susan Hayward) who is after compensation when her father is killed by

Seynatawnee means Red Hair, but to him it means Boss! Tulsa is directed by Stuart Heisler and adapted to screenplay by Frank S. Nugent and Curtis Kenyon from a Richard Wormser story. It stars Susan Hayward, Robert Preston, Pedro Armendáriz, Lloyd Gough and Ed Begley. Music is by Frank Skinner and cinematography by Winton C. Hoch. It's Tulsa at the start of the oil boom and when Cherokee Lans











