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Arthur Ripley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arthur DeWitt Ripley (January 12, 1897 – February 13, 1961) was an American film screenwriter, editor, producer and director. In 1923, he joined the Mack Sennett studio as a comedy writer. In the 1920s, he worked closely with Frank Capra churning out screenplays for many movies. After breaking with Capra and the Sennett studio, Ripley again returned to being a gag-writer, screenwriter, and occasional director, making short films with such comedians as W. C. Fields and Edgar Kennedy. His directorial work in the 1940s, Voice in the Wind (1944) and The Chase (1946), were both critical successes, but neither film were boxoffice hits.
Ripley entered the world of academia, helping to establish the Film Center at U.C.L.A. while also working occasionally on TV. Ripley returned to directing one more time, at the request of Robert Mitchum, for Thunder Road (1958) before returning to U.C.L.A. and working until his death in 1961.
Como dirección
W.C. Fields: 6 Short Films
Camino de odio
Dark Stranger
Acosados
Voice in the Wind
Prisoner of Japan
Volvió el amor
Will Power
How to Train a Dog
How to Behave
Gasoloons
The Leather Necker
Edgar Hamlet
In Love at 40
In the Dog House
Counsel on De Fence
Shivers
The Barber Shop
The Pharmacist
The Wrestler's Bride
Heart Trouble
Hooked at the Altar
Alias Jimmy Valentine