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  1. Occupation. Screenwriter. producer. writer. Pincus Jacob Wolfson (May 22, 1903 – April 16, 1979s) was an American pharmacist, novelist, screenwriter, film producer, and film director.

  2. Mad Love (also released as The Hands of Orlac) is a 1935 American body horror film, an adaptation of Maurice Renard 's novel The Hands of Orlac. It was directed by German -émigré film maker Karl Freund, and stars Peter Lorre as Dr. Gogol, Frances Drake as Yvonne Orlac and Colin Clive as Stephen Orlac. The plot revolves around Doctor Gogol's ...

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  4. The coat of arms of Leonard Wolfson, Baron Wolfson. The Wolfson family is a British Jewish family known for its business, philanthropic, and political activities. The family owes its initial fame to Sir Isaac Wolfson, who built the Great Universal Stores retail empire and created the Wolfson Foundation. [1]

  5. www.imdb.com › name › nm0938439P.J. Wolfson - IMDb

    P.J. Wolfson was born on 22 May 1903 in New York City, New York, USA. He was a producer and writer, known for Boy Slaves (1939), The Devil Is Driving (1932) and Saigon (1947). He died on 16 April 1979 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.

    • Producer, Writer, Director
    • May 22, 1903
    • P.J. Wolfson
    • April 16, 1979
  6. P.J. Wolfson. A pulp Emile Zola, a noir Frank Norris, P.J. Wolfson wrote tough, pitiless melodramas of human corruption in the bleak urban jungle of depression-era America. Wolfson's brief career as a novelist, before Hollywood lured him away forever, produced four works, at least two of them - "Bodies Are Dust" (1931) and "Is My Flesh of Brass ...

    • (4)
    • January 1, 1979
    • January 1, 1903
  7. P. J. Wolfson: Running time: ca. 26 mins: Production company: Louis F. Edelman Enterprises: Original release; Network: NBC: Release: September 21, 1959 () – January 25, 1960 ()

  8. A pulp Emile Zola, a noir Frank Norris, P.J. Wolfson wrote tough, pitiless melodramas of human corruption in the bleak urban jungle of depression-era America. Wolfson's brief career as a novelist, before Hollywood lured him away forever, produced four works, at least two of them - "Bodies Are Dust" (1931) and "Is My Flesh of Brass?" (1934 ...

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