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  1. Lesley Selander

    Lesley Selander

    American film director

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  1. Lesley Selander (May 26, 1900 – December 5, 1979) was an American film director of Westerns and adventure movies. His career as director, spanning 127 feature films and dozens of TV episodes, lasted from 1936 to 1968. Before that, Selander was assistant director on films such as The Cat and the Fiddle (1934), A Night at the Opera (1935), and ...

  2. Lesley Selander (1900-1979) was a prolific director of B westerns, thrillers and adventure films. He also worked as a camera operator, assistant director and cinematographer in the early days of Hollywood.

    • January 1, 1
    • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Los Alamitos, California, USA
  3. Lesley Selander. Director: Traffic in Crime. Lesley Selander's film career, which lasted more than 40 years, started in the early 1920s as a teenager when he got a job at a studio as a lab technician. He soon managed to work his way into the production end of the business and secured employment as a camera operator, then an assistant director, with several side trips as a director of two-reel...

    • May 26, 1900
    • December 5, 1979
  4. Lesley Selander was an American film director of Westerns and science fiction movies from 1936 to 1968. He directed 107 Westerns, 23 episodes of Lassie, and other TV shows and films, such as The Thin Man, Fury, and Flight To Mars.

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  6. Lesley Selander was an American film director of Westerns and adventure movies. His career as director, spanning 127 feature films and dozens of TV episodes, lasted from 1936-68. Before that, Selander was assistant director on films such as The Cat and the Fiddle (1934), A Night at the Opera (1935), and Fritz Lang's Fury (1936).

  7. Lesley Selander was a prolific and skilled director of westerns, adventure and action films from 1936 to 1968. Learn about his career, his best works and his legacy on AllMovie.

  8. Began his career as a lab technician after high school and moved up through the ranks before emerging as an assistant director in 1924, confecting several comedy shorts before enlistining with MGM, where he assisted on such productions as "The Thin Man" (1934) , and "A Night At the Opera" (1935). At the behest of pal Buck Jones, Selander was ...

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