Jean Yarbrough
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jean Yarbrough (1900–1975) was a film director.
After attending the University of the South, he entered the film business in 1922, first as a propman, but he steadily rose in the ranks to assistant director. Beginning with 1936, he was a bona fide director, first doing comedy and musical shorts for RKO, but in 1938, he already directed his first feature, Rebellious Daughters. His big time however came in the 1940s, when he directed films that are even today fondly remembered such as The Devil Bat, King of the Zombies, She-Wolf of London, or any number of Abbott and Costello and Bowery Boys comedies. In the 1950s, when the traditional B-movie was on the decline, he had few problems switching to television and directed episodes for many TV-series throughout the 1950s and 1960s, including producing and directing The Abbott and Costello Show. Yarbrough's last film though, Hillbillys in a Haunted House from 1967, an ill-conceived mix of comedy, horror and country music, was a sad swan song to his career though. He was born 1900 in Marianna, Arkansas, and died in 1975.
[edit] Reference
- Jean Yarbrough biography on (re)Search my Trash