William Beaudine
From Wikipedia
William Beaudine (January 15, 1892 – March 18, 1970) was an
American film actor and director. He was one of Hollywood's most prolific
directors, turning out films in remarkable numbers and in a wide variety of
genres.
In 1915 he was hired as an actor and director by the Kalem
Company. He was an assistant to director D.W. Griffith on The Birth of a Nation
and Intolerance. By the time he was 23 Beaudine had directed his first picture,
a short called Almost a King (1915). He would continue to direct shorts
exclusively until 1922, when he shifted his efforts into making feature-length
films.
Beaudine directed silent films for Goldwyn Pictures (before
it became part of MGM), Metro Pictures (also before MGM), First National
Pictures, Principal and Warner Brothers. In 1926 he made Sparrows, the story of
orphans imprisoned in a swamp farm starring Mary Pickford. Beaudine had at
least 30 pictures to his credit before the sound era began. Among his first
sound films were short Mack Sennett comedies; he made at least one film for
Sennett while contractually bound elsewhere, resulting in his adopting the
pseudonym "William Crowley." He would occasionally use the pseudonym
in later years, usually as "William X. Crowley."
He ground out several movies annually for Fox Films, Warner
Brothers, Paramount, and Universal Pictures. His most famous credit of the
early 1930s is The Old-Fashioned Way, a comedy about old-time show folks
starring W. C. Fields.
Beaudine was one of a number of experienced directors
(including Raoul Walsh and Allan Dwan) who were brought to England from
Hollywood in the 1930s to work on what were in all other respects very British
productions. Beaudine directed four films there starring Will Hay, including
Boys Will Be Boys (1935) and Where There's a Will (1936).
Beaudine was often entrusted with series films, including
the Torchy Blane, The East Side Kids, Jiggs and Maggie, The Shadow, Charlie
Chan and The Bowery Boys series. His efficiency was so well known that Walt
Disney hired him to direct some of his television projects of the 1950s and had
him direct a feature western, Ten Who Dared (1960). Beaudine became even busier
in TV, directing Naked City, The Green Hornet, and dozens of Lassie episodes.
His last two feature films, both released in 1966, were the
horror-westerns Billy the Kid vs. Dracula (with John Carradine) and Jesse James
Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. By the end of the decade he was the industry's
oldest working professional, having started in 1909.
Beaudine died of uremic poisoning in 1970 in California and
was interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood.