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  1. Other articles where Warren William is discussed: Roy Del Ruth: Early films: …and Employees’ Entrance (1933) starred Warren William as an unscrupulous department-store manager who wreaks havoc on the lives of those around him. Del Ruth handled five more films in 1933: The Little Giant, with Edward G. Robinson in good comic form as a beer baron who, after the repeal of…

  2. 11 – Madman’s Diary — This is the same episode as The Girl from Shadowland, see above, which explains why both episodes conclude with mention of next weeks episode, Emeralds Come High. 12 – Emeralds Come High starring Warren William, Lurene Tuttle, Howard Culver, original music by Del Castilio.

  3. Eric Blore happy, Warren William not so much. One Dangerous Night centers around the murder of a slimy fellow called Harry Cooper. Incidentally, Cooper is played by William’s eventual successor as The Lone Wolf, Gerald Mohr. When we first see Cooper he is sending his manservant Arthur (Louis Jean Heydt) ahead to the airport with his luggage.

  4. Warren William was an American stage, screen, and radio actor, popular as a film leading man during the early 1930s, and later nicknamed the 'King of Pre-Code'. He is best remembered for portraying am

  5. Warren William’s Captain Burke in Monogram’s Fear (1946) is Poverty Row’s version of Dostoevsky’s Porfiry on Raskolnikov’s trail. Peter Cookson stars in the Raskolnikov role, here dubbed Larry Crain. While director Alfred Zeisler is also co-credited for the original story and screenplay, Fear is the Americanized and modernized low ...

  6. In a letter from Warren William to Warner Brothers’ legal executive Roy Obringer dated January 8, 1935, William, while arguing about the size of his billing in an ad for Living on Velvet (1935), gripes of the “irreparable damage” the studio has done to him by, among other offenses, “reassigning other pictures that have heretofore been ...

  7. Jun 1, 2015 · Warren William—On The Air. Featured Journal June 1, 2015. 3183. People who discover the provocative pre-Code movies made in the early 1930s inevitably become fans of leading man Warren William, an urbane actor (sometimes referred to as the poor man’s John Barrymore) who starred in so many memorable films of that period: Beauty and the Boss ...

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