- of 5
Collections
Subjects: Directors
246 Results
- 1Al Adamson scripts1968 - 1995 (inclusive)
2.5 linear ft. of papers
Al Adamson (1929-1995) was a writer, actor, producer, and director specializing in low-budget exploitation movies. - 2Al Rogell papers1939 - 1968 (inclusive)
0.2 linear ft. of papers
Albert S. Rogell (1901-1988) was an American director, producer, and screenwriter active in film beginning in the mid-1910s. - 3Alexander and Hilary Mackendrick papers1950 - 1990 (inclusive)
13 linear ft. of papers
1.34 linear ft. of photos
2654 item(s) of artworks - 4Alexander Mackendrick journal1993 - 1994 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers - 5Alfred Hitchcock papers1821 - 1979 (inclusive)
66 linear ft. of papers
5.8 linear ft. of photos
3 item(s) of posters
166 item(s) of artworks
Alfred Hitchcock was a British director, producer, and screenwriter whose film career spanned 1919 to 1976. He emigrated to the United States in 1939. Nominated by the Academy five times in the directing category, he was presented the 1967 Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. - 6Alice Guy Blaché memoirs manuscript1986 - 1986 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers
Alice Guy Blaché was a French-born filmmaker active from 1896 to 1920. As the first female filmmaker in the world, she directed more than 400 films and wrote and produced many of those films as well. - 7Allan Dwan papers1920 - 1981 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers - 8Allan Dwan scrapbook1919 - 1919 (inclusive)
1 item(s) of papers - 9Andrew Davis papers1974 - 2006 (inclusive)
56 linear ft. of papers
4 item(s) of posters - 10Andrew L. Stone papers1927 - 1972 (inclusive)
48 linear ft. of papers - 11Andrew Marton papers1920 - 1987 (inclusive)
36 linear ft. of papers
Andrew Marton was a Hungarian-born director active in film from 1922 to 1977. Working in the silent era and into sound, on both American and European productions, his career spanned more than fifty years and took him to four continents. He worked for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1940s and 1950s, and Columbia, Paramount, and Twentieth Century-Fox in the 1960s and 1970s. He is perhaps best known for directing the chariot sequence in BEN-HUR (1959). - 12Arthur Hiller papers1960 - 1998 (inclusive)
116 linear ft. of papers
6.5 linear ft. of photos
19 item(s) of posters
108 item(s) of artworks - 13Arthur Lubin scripts1933 - 1965 (inclusive)
5.5 linear ft. of papers
Arthur Lubin was an American director active in film from 1933 to 1971. He began as an actor in plays and films and segued into casting and directing. Lubin worked in television beginning in the late 1950s. - 14Arthur Marks papers1960 - 1980 (inclusive)
3 item(s) of posters
1 item(s) of artworks
41 linear ft. of papers - 15Barbara Roisman Cooper collection of Ronald Neame research interviews1998 - 2001 (inclusive)
1 linear ft. of papers
Barbara Roisman Cooper is an American freelance writer specializing in celebrity profiles. She took up writing after retiring as a television production manager and teacher of English and film studies. - 16Betty Kaplan material1985 - 1998 (inclusive)
1 linear ft. of papers - 17Bill Krohn and Jonathan Rosenbaum manuscript on Joe Dante1999 - 1999 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers - 18Billy Wilder papers1935 - 1976 (inclusive)
3 linear ft. of papers
Billy Wilder was an Austrian-born director, screenwriter, and producer most active in film from the 1930s through 1970s. After beginning his film career in Germany, he came to the U.S. in 1934. From 1938 to 1950, he collaborated with screenwriter and producer Charles Brackett. Four of Wilder’s six Academy Awards are for writing and directing THE LOST WEEKEND (1945) and THE APARTMENT (1960), and he was the recipient of the 1987 Irving G. Thalberg memorial award. - 19Bryan Forbes papers1954 - 1991 (inclusive)
22 linear ft. of papers
4 item(s) of artworks - 20Bud Barsky papers1918 - 1940 (inclusive)
13 linear ft. of papers
Irving J. "Bud" Barsky was a producer, director, executive, and screenwriter. Born in Odessa, Ukraine, Barsky was active in Hollywood as an independent producer in the 1920s and 1930s. - 21Bud Yorkin papers1982 - 1986 (inclusive)
5 linear ft. of papers
2.5 linear ft. of photos
Bud Yorkin was an American director and producer who worked on several television comedies and variety shows in the 1950s. In 1959, he teamed up with Norman Lear to form Tandem Productions and made his feature directing debut four years later with the Neil Simon adaptation COME BLOW YOUR HORN (1963). He is most notably known for his work as a television producer, working on several family sitcoms in the 1970s. - 22Buster Keaton papers1900 - 1999 (inclusive)
0.4 linear ft. of papers
2 linear ft. of photos
Buster Keaton was an American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter active in film from 1917 to the mid-1960s. The Academy presented him with a 1959 Honorary Award. - 23Byron Haskin material1950 - 1984 (inclusive)
4 linear ft. of papers
Byron Conrad Haskin was an American film and television director. He is remembered for directing 1953's THE WAR OF THE WORLDS, one of many films where he teamed with producer George Pal. - 24Carol Eve Rossen research material
6 linear ft. of papers - 25Cecil B. DeMille collection1916 - 1980 (inclusive)
1.8 linear ft. of papers
5 item(s) of artworks
Cecil B. DeMille was an American director, producer, and screenwriter active in film between 1913 and 1958. In 1913 he formed a partnership with Jesse Lasky and Samuel Goldfish (later Goldwyn) called the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company. The company soon merged with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company and ultimately became Paramount Pictures, where DeMille became a leading producer. - 26Cecil B. DeMille letter1956 - 1956 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers
Cecil B. DeMille was an American director, producer, and screenwriter active in film between 1913 and 1958. In 1913 he formed a partnership with Jesse Lasky and Samuel Goldfish (later Goldwyn) called the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company. The company soon merged with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company and ultimately became Paramount Pictures, where DeMille became a leading producer. - 27Cecil B. DeMille photographs1890 - 1959 (inclusive)
64 linear ft. of photos
Cecil B. DeMille was an American director, producer, and screenwriter active in film between 1913 and 1958. In 1913 he formed a partnership with Jesse Lasky and Samuel Goldfish (later Goldwyn) called the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company. The company soon merged with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Film Company and ultimately became Paramount Pictures, where DeMille became a leading producer. - 28Charles Barton material1916 - 1981 (inclusive)
2 folder(s) of papers
Charles Barton was an American director active in film from the 1920s to 1950s, and in television during the 1960s. He received an Academy Award for best assistant director for 1932/1933. - 29Charles Barton papers
2 linear ft. of papers
Charles Barton was an American director active in film from the 1920s to 1950s, and in television during the 1960s. He received an Academy Award for best assistant director for 1932/1933. - 30Charles Brabin papers1904 - 1940 (inclusive)
1.1 linear ft. of papers
Charles J. Brabin was a British-born director, screenwriter, and producer whose film career spanned 1908 to the mid-1930s. He came to New York in the early 1900s. Brabin joined the Edison Company around 1908, acting first and then directing. Brabin directed Theda Bara in KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN (1919) and LA BELLE RUSSE (1919), and the two were married in 1921. DRIVEN (1923), STELLA MARIS (1925), and THE MASK OF FU MANCHU (1932) were among the films directed and occasionally scripted by Brabin. - 31Charles Haas papers1937 - 1968 (inclusive)
8.8 linear ft. of papers
Charles Haas was an American director, producer, and writer active from 1946 to 1967. As a director, his work included documentaries, industrial films, training films for the United States Army Signal Corps during World War II, and many television series. His film work includes GIRLS TOWN and THE BEAT GENERATION, which he directed, and MOONRISE, which he wrote and produced. - 32Charles Shyer production material1984 - 2001 (inclusive)
1 linear ft. of papers - 33China Kong and Donald Cammell papers
12 linear ft. of papers - 34Clarence Brown fan letters1935 - 1935 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers - 35Collection of Charles Chaplin photographs1915 - 1967 (bulk)
2 linear ft. of photos - 36Craig Hutchinson papers1889 - 1976 (inclusive)
2 linear ft. of papers
Craig Hutchinson was an American writer, director and producer active in film from the mid-1910s to 1935. He started as a columnist, writing "Flashes from Filmland" for the "Los Angeles Evening Herald" newspaper. He worked for Mack Sennett as a writer and member of the story department for more than ten years. He then became president of his own company, Craig Hutchinson Productions, and directed many two-reel short films that were among the first to use Technicolor. He was married to former wardrobe mistress and dancer Celia Ruiz, known as Beatrice Hutchinson. - 37Curtis Hanson papers1972 - 2012 (bulk)
31 linear ft. of papers - 38Curtis Harrington papers1875 - 2008 (inclusive)
30 linear ft. of papers
Curtis Harrington was an American experimental filmmaker, director, producer, and screenwriter. In the 1940s and 1950s, he emerged as a filmmaker when he wrote and directed several experimental avante garde shorts. He served as the executive assistant to Jerry Wald from 1956 to 1961 and as an associate producer at 20th Century-Fox. Curtis largely discarded the "experimental" tradition in his feature work which specialized in low-budget horror pictures. - 39D. Ross Lederman papers1927 - 1960 (inclusive)
1 linear ft. of papers - 40D. W. Griffith letter to Bobby North1934 - 1934 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers - 41Damien Chazelle papers2013 - 2016 (inclusive)
0.2 linear ft. of papers
Damien Chazelle is an American filmmaker active since 2008. He has been twice nominated for an Academy Award for Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay for WHIPLASH and Best Original Screenplay for LA LA LAND. He received the Academy Award for Best Achievement in Directing for LA LA LAND, making him the youngest director to win the award. Additionally, he co-wrote the screenplay for 10 CLOVERFIELD LANE and produced and directed FIRST MAN. - 42Daniel Mann papers1919 - 1992 (inclusive)
18 linear ft. of papers
2 linear ft. of photos
4 item(s) of posters
Daniel Mann was an American director active in film from 1952 to 1978. Mann arrived in Hollywood in the early 1950s. His directing credits include COME BACK, LITTLE SHEBA (1952), THE ROSE TATTOO (1955), and BUTTERFIELD 8 (1960). - 43David Butler papers1910 - 1944 (inclusive)
0.8 linear ft. of papers
0.5 linear ft. of photos
1 item(s) of artworks - 44David Miller papers1935 - 1979 (inclusive)
5 linear ft. of papers
3 linear ft. of photos
David Miller was an American director and film editor active from 1935 to 1976. His directing credits include SUDDEN FEAR (1952) and LONELY ARE THE BRAVE (1962). - 45David Weddle collection
4 linear ft. of papers
David Weddle is an American television writer and author of "If They Move...Kill ’em! : The Life and Times of Sam Peckinpah" (1994). - 46Don McGuire papers1940 - 1998 (inclusive)
7.5 linear ft. of papers
Don McGuire was an American screenwriter, director, and actor. He began his career in film as an actor in the mid-1940s and was active as a writer and director from the 1950s to the 1980s. McGuire received an Academy Award nomination in the writing category for TOOTSIE (1982). - 47Donald Davis and Dorothy Mathews family papers1887 - 1973 (inclusive)
2 linear ft. of papers - 48Edgar G. Ulmer papers1927 - 2007 (inclusive)
8.3 linear ft. of papers
18 item(s) of posters
2 item(s) of artworks
Edgar G. Ulmer was an Austrian-born director active in film from 1929 to 1965. He arrived in the United States in 1923, and worked in both the U.S. and Germany throughout the 1920s before settling in Hollywood in 1930. - 49Edgar G. Ulmer story material1938 - 1966 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers
Edgar G. Ulmer was an Austrian-born director active in film from 1929 to 1965. He arrived in the United States in 1923, and worked in both the U.S. and Germany throughout the 1920s before settling in Hollywood in 1930. - 50Edward Buzzell scrapbooks1923 - 1983 (inclusive)
1 folder(s) of papers
2 item(s) of papers
- of 5