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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Blue_HawaiiBlue Hawaii - Wikipedia

    Blue Hawaii is a 1961 American musical romantic comedy-drama film directed by Norman Taurog and starring Elvis Presley. The screenplay by Hal Kanter was nominated by the Writers Guild of America in 1962 in the category of Best Written American Musical.

  2. Blue Hawaii: Directed by Norman Taurog. With Elvis Presley, Joan Blackman, Angela Lansbury, Nancy Walters. After arriving back in Hawaii from the Army, Chad Gates defies his parents' wishes for him to work at the family business and instead goes to work as a tour guide at his girlfriend's agency.

    • (7.5K)
    • Comedy, Musical
    • Norman Taurog
    • 1962-02-09
  3. Norman Taurog. Writers. Edmund Beloin. Henry Garson. Stars. Elvis Presley. Juliet Prowse. Robert Ivers. See production info at IMDbPro. STREAMING. RENT/BUY. from $3.99. search Amazon. Add to Watchlist. Added by 3.9K users. 61 User reviews. 24 Critic reviews.

    • (4.5K)
    • Comedy, Musical
    • Norman Taurog
    • 1960-11-23
  4. Taurog directed six Martin and Lewis films, and nine Elvis Presley films, more than any other director. For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Taurog has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1600 Vine Street.

  5. Who was Norman Taurog? - It is a legitimate question because he remains one of the most elusive characters in Elvis Presleys remarkable career. Even in Starmaker, the memoirs of Hal B. Wallis, for whom Taurog produced six Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis movies and three Presley flicks, he seems a bit player.

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  7. G.I. Blues is a 1960 American musical comedy film directed by Norman Taurog and starring Elvis Presley and Juliet Prowse. The movie – Presleys fifth, but his first after discharge from the US Army – was filmed at Paramount Pictures studio, with some pre-production scenery shot on location in West Germany while Presley was stationed there. [5] .

  8. May 8, 2024 · Norman Taurog (born February 23, 1899, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died April 7, 1981, Rancho Mirage, California) was an American director of some 80 feature films, many of which were comedies, including a number with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, and musicals, nine of which starred Elvis Presley.