Michael F. Blake spent 60 years working in the film and television industry prior to his retirement in 2018. He began acting at the age of two, and for the next twenty years appeared in numerous television shows such as Adam-12, The Lucy Show, The Munsters, Red Skelton Show, Kung Fu, Bewitched and Bonanza. For 40 years he worked as a makeup artist on numerous movies and television shows, such as X-Men: First Class, Westworld, Spider-Man 3, Happy Days (final season), Soapdish, Tough Guys, Independence Day, Disney Sunday Night Movie, Magnum, P.I. (pilot) and Strange Days to name a few. He received two Emmy Awards for Best Makeup in 1998 (Buffy, the Vampire Slayer) and 2016 (Key and Peele). He has written three books on Hollywood’s “Man of a Thousand Faces,” Lon Chaney, which are considered the definitive work on the actor’s life and career. His books served as the basis for Kevin Brownlow’s 2000 documentary for Turner Classic Movies, Lon Chaney: A Thousand Faces. Blake also authored My Code of Honor: The Making of High Noon, Shane and The Searchers and Hollywood and the O.K. Corral, both of which are considered valuable contributions to the genre. The Cowboy President: The American West and the Making of Theodore Roosevelt was named the best political biography of 2018 by True West magazine. The book also won the gold medal in the Biography/Memoir category from the Will Rogers Medallion Awards. My follow-up book, Go West, Mr. President: Theodore Roosevelt’s Great Loop Tour of 1903 has been praised for shining a light on a little-known aspect of the 26th President’s life and career. Blake also writes about Hollywood, filmmaking, and the West for Wild West, American Cinematographer, True West, Round-Up and Los Angeles Times.
"""A friend of mine recently remarked that more than a hundred years after he began directing movies, there is still much to learn about John Ford. Case in point: Michael F. Blake's magnificent analysis of the three Cavalry films Ford made after World War II. By turns forensic and elegiac, Blake unlocks the majestic secrets of these unforgettable films."" -- Scott Eyman, author of Print the Legend. --Scott Eyman, author of Print the Legend ""A most unusual angle on film history, taking you through Ford's magnificent Cavalry Trilogy at great pace, revealing so much with such knowledge and enthusiasm that you'll want to watch the films again and again."" --Kevin Brownlow, documentary filmmaker, author, film historian The untold story of John Ford's three cavalry masterpieces could not have a more suitable and sympathetic chronicler than Michael F. Blake, whose prose, much like the films he writes about, is hard-nosed, insightful, and, by the last chapter, as poignant as Taps played by a lone bugler. --Steve Bingen, film historian and author of The Fifty MGM Films That Transformed Hollywood."