Yahoo Web Search

  1. Richard Wallace

    Richard Wallace

    American film director

Search results

  1. Richard Wallace (August 26, 1894 – November 3, 1951) was an American film director. He began working in the editing department at Mack Sennett Studios in the early 1920s. He later moved on to rival Hal Roach Studios where he began directing two-reel films, on some of which he collaborated with Stan Laurel .

  2. Richard Wallace. Director: Captain Caution. Richard Wallace was born in Sacramento, California, in 1894. At 14 years of age he got a job as a theater projectionist, a job he held for four years. He later traveled to Los Angeles to get into the film industry, and wound up as an editor for such studios as Triangle and Robertson-Cole.

    • Director, Writer, Producer
    • August 26, 1894
    • Richard Wallace
    • November 3, 1951
  3. Richard Wallace. Director: Captain Caution. Richard Wallace was born in Sacramento, California, in 1894. At 14 years of age he got a job as a theater projectionist, a job he held for four years. He later traveled to Los Angeles to get into the film industry, and wound up as an editor for such studios as Triangle and Robertson-Cole. His career was interrupted by service in the US Army Signal...

    • Director, Writer, Producer
    • 6' (1.83 m)
    • Clarence Richard Wallace
    • August 26, 1894
  4. R ichard Wallace was a veteran film director who started off directing Hal Roach comedies and, with the help of Corinne Griffith, became a feature director in 1927. His first picture was "McFadden's Flats." During the next 24 years, Mr. Wallace directed scores of successful films.

  5. Richard Wallace was an American film director. Introduction Richard Wallace (director) Richard Wallace (director) Filmography; References

  6. Richard Wallace was an American film director. In 1926, Wallace began directing feature-length films. He began working in the editing department at Mack Sennett Studios in the early 1930s. He later moved on to rival Hal Roach Studios where he began directing two-reel films, some of which he collaborated with Stan Laurel.

  7. Working titles for this film were Cavalier of the Streets and Gentleman of the Streets.Onscreen credits and most reviews list Richard Wallace as director, however, Motion Picture Herald lists Wallace as co-director with Edward Goodman, whom Motion Picture Almanac lists as dialogue director.

  1. People also search for