Rowland V. Lee(1891-1975)
- Regista
- Sceneggiatore
- Produttore
Rowland V. Lee è nato il 6 settembre 1891. Luogo di nascita: Usa. È conosciuto come regista e sceneggiatore. È celebre per aver partecipato a Il conte di Montecristo (1934), Mother Carey's Chickens (1938) e Il figlio di Frankenstein (1939). È stata sposato con Eleanor Worthington. Morì il 21 dicembre 1975. Luogo di morte: Usa.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
Regia
Sceneggiatura
- 1959
- 1935
- 1934
- 1933
- 1933
- Monte Carlo Madness
- dialogues
- 1932
- 1931
- 1931
- Amori di un'attrice
- writer
- 1928
- Mendicanti d'amore
- writer
- 1928
- 1927
- 1923
- A Self-Made Man
- scenario
- 1922
- What Ho, the Cook
- Sceneggiatura
- 1921
Produzione
- 1959
- 1944
- 1940
- 1939
- 1939
- 1939
- 1938
- 1930
- 1930
- 1929
- 1928
- Vita nuova
- produttore
- 1928
- 1928
- 1927
- As No Man Has Loved
- produttore
- 1925
- Nomi alternativi
- Roland V. Lee
- Data di nascita
- Data di morte
- 21 dicembre 1975
- Palm Desert, California, Stati Uniti(attacco cardiaco)
- Coniuge
- Eleanor Worthington6 novembre 1924 - 21 dicembre 1975 (morte del marito, 1 bambino)
- ParentiRobert N. Lee(Sibling)
- Altre opereStage: "Seven Chances". Written by Roi Cooper Megrue. George M. Cohan's Theatre (moved to the Belasco Theatre on 23 Oct 1916 to close): 8 Aug 1916- Dec 1916 (closing date unknown/151 performances). Cast: Marion Abbott, Charles Brokate, Emily Callaway, Alice Carroll, Frank Craven, Florence Deshon, Hayward Ginn, Otto Kruger, Rowland V. Lee [credited as Rowland Lee], Harry Leighton. Helen MacKellar, Carroll McComas, Anne Meredith, Lillian Spencer, Allen Thomas, Beverly West. Produced by David Belasco. NOTE: Filmed as Le sette probabilità (1925).
- Inserzioni pubblicitarie
- QuizHe had his own 214-acre movie ranch, located in the San Fernando Valley in California. He purchased the property in 1935 and called it Farm Lake Ranch, but the film industry always knew it as the Rowland V. Lee Ranch, with its pale brown hills of barley chaff and olive and eucalyptus trees and two scenic lakes, but for some reason it wasn't used much for westerns. For Non ti appartengo più (1946), Republic Pictures built an extensive farmhouse and barn set. It also constructed a stone and wood bridge over one of the lakes, which would usually be photographed as a river. The farmhouse set would be adapted and modified over the years. RKO used it as a period French farmhouse for its modest swashbuckler I figli dei moschettieri (1952). Its most famous use was as an Indiana Quaker family farm during the Civil War in Allied Artists' La legge del Signore (1956). To give it that "Indiana look", director William Wyler had cornfields planted, sycamore trees brought in and huge areas covered with green grass. The wooden farmhouse was also given a fake stone facade. You'll also see the ranch used to great effect in Alfred Hitchcock's L'altro uomo (1951) and in Charles Laughton's La morte corre sul fiume (1955). After Lee died in 1975, the ranch was developed into an expensive gated community called Hidden Lake Estates.
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