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  1. Alexander Hall

    Alexander Hall

    American film director and film editor

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  1. Alexander Hall (January 11, 1894 – July 30, 1968) was an American film director, film editor and theatre actor. Biography. Hall acted in the theatre from the age of 4 through 1914, when he began to work in silent movies. Following his military service in World War I, he returned to Hollywood and pursued a career in film production.

    • January 11, 1894, Boston, Massachusetts, US
    • Lola Lane (1934–1936), Marjorie Hunter (? – ?)
    • American
    • Overview
    • Early work
    • The Columbia years
    • Later films

    Alexander Hall (born January 11, 1894, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.—died July 30, 1968, San Francisco, California) American director whose wide-ranging films notably included Little Miss Marker (1934) and Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941).

    Originally an actor, Hall began performing on stage at the age of four, and in 1914 he appeared in the first of several silent films. In the 1920s he worked as an assistant director and an editor, and he also made several short films. In 1932 he made his feature-film directorial debut with Sinners in the Sun, a thriller for Paramount that starred C...

    In 1938 Hall moved to Columbia, a less glamorous studio, but the one out of which his best work would emerge. His first film there was There’s Always a Woman (1938), which was inspired by the popular Thin Man series. The comedy featured Melvyn Douglas and Joan Blondell as a husband-and-wife crime-fighting team who spar in the best William Powell–Myrna Loy tradition. I Am the Law (1938) cast Edward G. Robinson against type as a special prosecutor who fights corruption in city government, while Douglas and Blondell reteamed for The Amazing Mr. Williams and Good Girls Go to Paris (both 1939). In 1940 Hall directed the comedies The Doctor Takes a Wife, with Ray Milland and Loretta Young, and He Stayed for Breakfast, featuring Douglas as a Russian who melts under the charms of an American (Young). Arguably better was This Thing Called Love (1940), with Rosalind Russell and Douglas as a recently married couple who struggle after she insists on three months of celibacy.

    The pinnacle of Hall’s career came in 1941 with Here Comes Mr. Jordan. The whimsical tale centres on a prizefighter (Robert Montgomery) who dies in a plane crash but is permitted to return to life in another body to complete his quest for the heavyweight crown. A critical and commercial success, it was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including best picture, director, actor (Montgomery), supporting actor (James Gleason), and cinematography, and both its original story and its screenplay won Oscars. It was remade in 1978 by Warren Beatty and Buck Henry as Heaven Can Wait.

    Hall worked for a variety of studios over the remainder of his career. In 1949 he helmed the comedy The Great Lover (1949), with Bob Hope as a scout leader tempted by a duchess (Rhonda Fleming). Two romances were released in 1950: Love That Brute (1950)—starring Paul Douglas, Cesar Romero, and Jean Peters—and Louisa (1950), which presented a love triangle among senior citizens, as a grandmother (Spring Byington) is wooed by a grocer (Charles Coburn) and her son’s boss (Edmund Gwenn); Ronald Reagan was cast as the son. Up Front (1951) was an entertaining dramatization of Bill Mauldin’s best seller about World War II, but Because You’re Mine (1952), with Mario Lanza, was largely forgettable. Let’s Do It Again (1953), a musical remake of The Awful Truth (1937), with Jane Wyman and Milland, was lively, though. Hall’s last film was Forever Darling (1956), an amusing vehicle for Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, then at the height of their popularity. Hall retired thereafter.

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    • Michael Barson
  2. Alexander Hall mortgages. Expert mortgage advice tailored to you from an expert London mortgage company. Search for the best mortgage deals, buy-to-let mortgages, remortgage rates or use our online mortgage calculators to find out how much you could borrow with London's mortgage broker, UK.

  3. As one of the most historic and recognizable structures on the Princeton campus, Alexander Hall was chosen by the U.S. Postal Service to appear on a postcard commemorating Princeton’s 250th anniversary in 1996.

  4. Alexander Hall (1894-1968) Alexander Hall. Director. Editor. Actor. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Making his stage debut in 1898 at age four, Alexander Hall entered films in 1914 as an actor. Leaving the film industry to serve in the American army in World War I, he returned from military service in 1917 and re-entered the business, but this time ...

    • January 1, 1
    • Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • San Francisco, California, USA
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  6. Mar 19, 2024 · 99+ Photos. Alexander Hall is a British/American award-winning screenplay/children's book writer and short film writer/director. At the age of twenty, Alexander co-wrote and directed the short film, 'The Magic Bag', while working as a Production Runner at Steven Spielberg's company, Amblin Entertainment, in Hollywood.

  7. Feb 21, 2022 · American skier Alex Hall admitted Wednesday he talked with his coach about the possibility of skiing for Italy at the Winter Olympics because he also holds Italian citizenship. Hall, who won...

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