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Famous Like Me > Director > M > George Melford

Profile of George Melford on Famous Like Me

 
Name: George Melford  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 19th February 1877
   
Place of Birth: Rochester, New York, USA
   
Profession: Director
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
George Melford, 1920

George H. Melford (February 19, 1877 – April 25, 1961) was an American stage and film actor and film director.

Born in Rochester, New York, Melford graduated from McGill University in Montreal, Canada. He was an accomplished stage actor working in Cincinnati, Ohio before joining the Kalem Company motion picture business in New York City in 1909. Hired by Sidney Olcott for character actor roles, in the fall of 1910 he was sent to work with a film crew on the West Coast. In 1911, with Robert Vignola, he co-directed Ruth Roland in his first short film titled "Arizona Bill" based on a script he had written. From there, Melford went on to direct another thirty films for Kalem Studios until 1915 when he was hired by Jesse L. Lasky to direct feature-length films for his Feature Play Company. That same year, Melford became one of the founding members of the Motion Picture Directors Association.

In 1916, George Melford directed "To Have and to Hold," a film based on the Mary Johnston novel that had been the bestselling novel in the United States for the year 1900. In 1921, he directed "The Sheik" starring Rudolph Valentino that is probably his most famous silent film.

Melford remained with Lasky's company for ten years then joined Universal Studios where he directed his first talkie in 1929. The following year, because he could speak the language, he co-directed four Spanish language films including the 1931 acclaimed Spanish version of Drácula. Melford filmed it simultaneously with the English version on the same sets at night using a different cast and crew.

His last major work as a director came in 1937 when he and Harry L. Fraser co-directed Columbia Pictures' first serial, a 15 episode, five hour long adventure film titled "Jungle Menace" and starring Frank Buck. At age sixty, the workaholic Melford needed to slow down and decided to give up the stressful job of directing to take on simple character actor roles. However, in 1946 Harry L. Fraser convinced him to co-direct "Jungle Terror," a feature-length sequel to their successful "Jungle Menace" serial.

George Melford married Louise Knauft Marsland around 1898 and they remained together until her passing in 1942. They had a son, Judson Calkins Melford born in 1900 in New York city. As a boy, Judson Melford appeared with his father in several films between 1911 and 1913. Following the death of his wife, George Melford next marriage was to actress Diana Miller.

Melford loved the film business, and although financially independent he never stopped working. Having directed more than one hundred and thirty films, he continued to work in small character roles, notably making an appearance in the 1956 epic The Ten Commandments. He appeared in his last film in 1960 at the age of eighty-three, passing away in Hollywood the following year of heart failure. He is interred in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California.


Selected directorial works:

  • Arizona Bill (1911)
  • The Boer War (1914)
  • Young Romance (1915)
  • To Have and to Hold (1916)
  • The Sea Wolf (1920)
  • Behold My Wife (1920)
  • The Sheik (1921)
  • Burning Sands (1922)
  • Going Crooked (1926)
  • La Voluntad del muerto (The Cat and the Canary) (1930)
  • Drácula (1931)
  • The Viking (1931)
  • The Penal Code (1933)
  • Jungle Menace (serial) (1937)
  • Jungle Terror (1946)


External link

  • George Melford at the Internet Movie Database

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article George Melford