You can bend any wood. However soft woods like Doug Fir and so on are challenging. One wood I have not been able to bend is redwood. Below is an answer I got off the web. Since Doug fir is sometimes used as a tonewood and not as a back and side wood, why not just use a hard wood on the back and sides and go for a Doug Fir top?
According to the US Forest Products Laboratory in this 1957 Publication softwoods do not in general work as well as hardwoods in bending applications. Indeed, USFPL cites yew and Alaskan yellow cedar as exceptions. Other species of softwoods (Douglas-fir, southern yellow pine, northern and Atlantic white-cedar, and redwood) are perfectly good for bending, but usually cannot be used for extreme bends. With any species of wood the success rate for bending apparently varies from tree to tree.
To answer your explicit question - it looks like the answer is "no".
However it sounds like you can use other softwoods if you are willing to accept a high level of failures between successful bends. So the alternative answer is "yes" if you're lucky and follow some tips and guidelines:
Softwood requires more steaming before it becomes sufficiently plastic for successful bending
But over-steamed wood is more likely to fail during the bending process
Use straight grained wood that is free of flaws
Surface the wood before bending
Don't try to bend wood that's thicker than you need