Paul Sloane
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Paul Sloane | |
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Born | |
Died | November 15, 1963 | (aged 70)
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Paul Sloane (April 19, 1893 – November 15, 1963) was an American screenwriter and film director.
Biography
[edit]Born in New York City in 1893, Sloane directed 26 films from 1925 to 1952, and wrote or co-wrote 35 films. His movies include Hearts in Dixie (1929) with Stepin Fetchit, The Woman Accused (1933) with Cary Grant, The Texans (1938) with Joan Bennett, Randolph Scott and Walter Brennan, and Geronimo (1939) with Preston Foster, Ellen Drew, Andy Devine, and Chief Thundercloud.
He died in 1963 in Santa Monica, California.
Partial filmography
[edit]Screenwriter
[edit]- The Cossack Whip (1916)
- The Lady of the Photograph (1917)
- The Tiger's Cub (1920)
- The Dead Line (1920)
- Beyond Price (1921)
- A Stage Romance (1922)
- The Town That Forgot God (1922)
- Who Are My Parents? (1922)
- If Winter Comes (1923)
- Homeward Bound (1923)
Director
[edit]- Too Many Kisses (1925)
- The Shock Punch (1925)
- Made for Love (1926)
- Eve's Leaves (1926)
- Corporal Kate (1926)
- Turkish Delight (1927)
- The Blue Danube (1928)
- Hearts in Dixie (1929)
- The Cuckoos (1930)
- Half Shot at Sunrise (1930)
- War Correspondent (1932)
- The Woman Accused (1933)
- Lone Cowboy (1933)
- Straight Is the Way (1934)
- Here Comes the Band (1935)
- The Texans (1938)
- Geronimo (1939)
- The Sun Sets at Dawn (1950), screenwriter and director
External links
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Sloane.
- Paul Sloane at IMDb