Career Highlights: Ride Clear of Diablo, To Hell and Back, The Fugitive
First Major Screen Credit: Flowing Gold (1940)
Biography
An assistant director by the '40s, Hibbs helmed his first film in 1953, the football drama The All-American. Over the '50s he specialized in westerns, most notably the Audie Murphy oaters Ride Clear of Diablo, Walk the Proud Land, and Ride a Crooked Trail; he also directed Murphy in an adaptation of the actor's autobiography To Hell and Back, the boxing drama World in My Corner, and the postwar adventure tale Joe Butterfly. By the end of the '50s Hibbs switched his attention to television, where he helmed numerous episodes of Perry Mason, Ironside, and The FBI. ~ All Movie Guide
Like several other USC players of the 1920s and 1930s, including Wayne, Ward Bond, Cotton Warburton and Aaron Rosenberg, Hibbs entered the film industry and became an assistant director. He got his first opportunity to direct in 1953, on the Tony Curtis football drama The All-American. He went on to work primarily in westerns; seven of his eleven features were within the genre, along with much of his television work. He also worked regularly with Audie Murphy – on the westerns Ride Clear of Diablo, Walk the Proud Land, and Ride a Crooked Trail, as well as the film version of Murphy's life story To Hell and Back, the boxing film World in My Corner, Shining Victory, and Joe Butterfly. In later years Hibbs switched worked mainly in television, directing episodes of Perry Mason, Ironside, and The F.B.I., as well as various western series.
Hibbs died at age 79 in Ojai, California. He was inducted into the USC Athletic Hall of Fame in 1999.