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  1. Film. He started Sturt Stross Film Productions in 1937 becoming the second youngest director-producer in the country at the time. His company's first production was a film called The Show's the Thing [4] He also directed the 1937 film The Reverse Be My Lot. By 1951 he owned a chain of theatres as well as being a producer.

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  4. The film was an international co-production between Mitchum's production company, D.R.M., and that of producer Raymond Stross . Plot. Dermot O'Neill is recruited into the Irish Republican Army (IRA) when a unit is formed in his Northern Ireland town during World War II.

  5. The film was based on a script by Gerry O'Hara. Film producer Raymond Stross liked the dialogue of one of O'Hara's other scripts and asked to read anything else the writer-director had. Stross suggested O'Hara write something set in Chelsea, so he wrote his script "A Time and a Place", which became The Pleasure Girls.

  6. Aug 2, 1988 · Aug. 2, 1988 12 AM PT. Raymond Stross, the British-born producer who made a series of avant-garde films, many with sexual overtones and some starring his wife, died Sunday of the complications...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anne_HeywoodAnne Heywood - Wikipedia

    It was produced by Raymond Stross, who married Heywood. She starred in some British comedies, Petticoat Pirates (1961) and Stork Talk (1962) then did three thrillers produced by Stross: The Brain (1962), The Very Edge (1963), and 90 Degrees in the Shade (1965).

  8. Raymond Stross was born on 22 May 1915 in Leeds, England, UK. He was a producer and director, known for The Very Edge (1963), An Alligator Named Daisy (1955) and Shoot First (1953). He was married to Anne Heywood. He died on 31 July 1988 in the UK.

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