H. Bruce Humberstone
H. Bruce Humberstone | |
---|---|
Born |
Buffalo, New York, USA | November 18, 1901
Died |
October 11, 1984 82) Los Angeles, California, USA | (aged
Resting place | Hollywood Forever Cemetery |
Nationality | American |
Other names | Lucky Humberstone |
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1924–1966 |
Employer | 20th Century Fox |
Notable work |
Sun Valley Serenade I Wake Up Screaming To the Shores of Tripoli |
H. Bruce "Lucky" Humberstone (November 18, 1901 – October 11, 1984) was a movie actor (as a child), a script clerk, an assistant director, working with directors such as King Vidor, Edmund Goulding and Allan Dwan and, ultimately, a director.
One of twenty-eight founders of the Directors Guild of America, Humberstone worked on several silent movie films for 20th Century Fox. Humberstone did not specialize; he worked on comedies, dramas, and melodramas. Humberstone is best known today for the seminal Film noir I Wake Up Screaming (1941) and his work on some of the Charlie Chan films. In the 1950s, Humberstone worked mostly on TV.
He retired in 1966, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He died in 1984, aged 82, and was buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.[1]
Partial filmography as director
- The Crooked Circle (1932)
- If I Had a Million (1932) ("The Forger" segment)
- Goodbye Love (1933)
- The Dragon Murder Case (1934)
- Charlie Chan at the Race Track (1936)
- Charlie Chan at the Opera (1936)
- Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937)
- Charlie Chan in Honolulu (1938)
- Lucky Cisco Kid (1940)
- I Wake Up Screaming (1941)
- Sun Valley Serenade (1941)
- Iceland (1942)
- To the Shores of Tripoli (1942)
- Hello, Frisco, Hello (1943)
- Pin Up Girl (1944)
- Wonder Man (1945)
- Three Little Girls in Blue (1946)
- The Homestretch (1947)
- Fury at Furnace Creek (1948)
- Happy Go Lovely (1952) British
- Ten Wanted Men (1955)
- Tarzan and the Lost Safari (1957)
- Tarzan's Fight for Life (1958)
References
External links
|