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  1. Benjamin Stoloff

    Benjamin Stoloff

    American film director

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  1. Benjamin Stoloff (October 6, 1895 – September 8, 1960) was an American film director and producer. He began his career as a director of short films, and he moved into directing and producing feature films. Director filmography. 1940s–1950s. Home Run Derby (1959) – TV series. Footlight Varieties (1951) It's a Joke, Son! (1947)

    • Director, producer
    • 1920–1960
  2. Benjamin Stoloff (1895-1960) Director. Producer. Production Manager. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. A UCLA graduate, Ben Stoloff started his career as a comedy short director for Fox Films, and later became a feature director for such western icons as Tom Mix and Buck Jones.

    • Director, Producer, Production Manager
    • October 6, 1895
    • Benjamin Stoloff
    • September 8, 1960
  3. Benjamin Stoloff. Director: The Devil Is Driving. A UCLA graduate, Ben Stoloff started his career as a comedy short director for Fox Films, and later became a feature director for such western icons as Tom Mix and Buck Jones. He also directed a number of musicals for Fox and was a producer and director of features, mostly "B" pictures, and ...

    • Director, Producer, Production Manager
    • September 8, 1960
    • October 6, 1895
  4. Benjamin "Ben" Stoloff (October 6, 1895 – September 8, 1960) was an American film director and producer. He began his career as a short film comedy director and gradually moved into feature film directing and production later in his career. Stoloff was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

  5. Benjamin Stoloff was a Hollywood filmmaker. He directed B movies at RKO in the 1930's. During the 1940's he became a producer. Anthony Mann directed a remake of Stoloff's Two in the Dark for producer Stoloff, at an early stage of Mann's career. Benjamin Stoloff: Subjects. Common plot elements in Benjamin Stoloff films:

  6. It's a Joke, Son! is a 1947 American comedy film directed by Benjamin Stoloff (in his final directorial role in a film) featuring radio comedian Kenny Delmar as Senator Beauregard Claghorn, a character on Fred Allen's radio program and later the inspiration for the cartoon character Foghorn Leghorn.

  7. U.C.L.A. graduate Ben Stoloff launched his film directorial career in the early '20s, graduating from two-reel comedies to features by the middle of the decade. Stoloff was especially busy at Fox during the early-talkie period, helming such carefree musical comedies as Soup to Nuts (1930) and Movietone Follies of 1930.