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  1. William F. Claxton

    William F. Claxton

    American television director and television producer

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  1. Film/Television producer, editor, & director. Years active. 1940–1988. Spouse. Janet G. Claxton. William Francis Claxton (October 22, 1914 – February 11, 1996) was an American film and television producer, editor and director. He made a number of films for Robert L. Lippert.

  2. William F. Claxton was born on 22 October 1914 in Los Angeles County, California, USA. He was a director and producer, known for Half Past Midnight (1948), Desire in the Dust (1960) and Night of the Lepus (1972). He died on 11 February 1996 in Santa Monica, California, USA.

  3. William F. Claxton (born October 22, 1914 - died February 11, 1996) was a California born director, producer and film editor who both directed and produced many episodes of Little House on the Prairie from Season 1 through season 7. William started out as a film editor with Edward Small...

  4. Feb 11, 1996 · William F. Claxton is known as an Director, Editor, Producer, Supervising Editor, and Creator. Some of his work includes Little House on the Prairie, Dallas, Highway to Heaven, Night of the Lepus, Fame, The High Chaparral, Law of the Lawless, and The Quiet Gun.

  5. William F. Claxton (born October 22, 1914 - died February 11, 1996) was a California born director who directed many episodes of Bonanza and Little House on the Prairie, of which he also served aa an executive producer. He also served as co-executive producer of the 1988 NBC-TV movie Bonanza...

  6. William F. Claxton. Credits (text only) Hide Director (66 credits) 1960 The Unfinished Task (TV Movie) ( completed ) 1988 Bonanza: The Next Generation (TV Movie) 1986 Our House (TV Series) (1 episode) - Green Christmas (1986) 1986 Bridges to Cross (TV Series) (1 episode) - Keeper of the Flame (1986) 1985 The Canterville Ghost (TV Movie)

  7. Biography by AllMovie. American director William F. Claxton started out as a film editor with Edward Small Productions in 1940. Claxton's first directorial effort was 1951's All That I Can Have. He spent much of the 1950s with 20th Century-Fox's Regal Pictures subsidiary, turning out such worthwhile medium-budget efforts as God is My Partner ...

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