- George Melford
Infobox actor
name = George Melford
imagesize = 165px
caption = in fy|1920
birthdate =19 February 1877
birthplace =Rochester, New York U.S.
deathdate =25 April fy|1961 (aged 84)
deathplace =Hollywood, California U.S.
occupation = actor, director
yearsactive = fy|1909–fy|1960
spouse = Louise MarslandGeorge H. Melford (
19 February 1877–25 April fy|1961) was an American stage andfilm actor andfilm director .Career
Born in
Rochester, New York in 1877, as George Henry Knauff, son of German immigrant Henrietta Knauff, the name Melford was an adopted stage name. George Knauff Melford had four sisters: Mary Knauff (Mrs. Godfrey Willis Wainwright); Henrietta Knauff; Alice Irene Knauff (Mrs. Edmond Francois Bernoudy) - all ofLos Angeles, CA and Mrs. Frederick Kells/Keils of Ottawa, Canada. Melford graduated fromMcGill University inMontreal, Canada . He was an accomplished stage actor working inCincinnati, Ohio before joining theKalem Company motion picture business inNew York City in 1909. Hired bySidney Olcott forcharacter actor roles, in the fall of 1910 he was sent to work with a film crew on the West Coast. In 1911, withRobert Vignola , he co-directedRuth Roland in his first short film titled "Arizona Bill" based on a script he had written. From there, Melford went on to direct another thirty films for Kalem Studios until 1915 when he was hired byJesse L. Lasky to direct feature-length films for his Feature Play Company. That same year, Melford became one of the founding members of theMotion Picture Directors Association .In 1916, George Melford directed "
To Have and to Hold "," a film based on theMary Johnston novel that had been the bestselling novel in the United States for the year 1900. In 1921, he directed what is probably his most famoussilent film "The Sheik", starringRudolph Valentino .Melford remained with Lasky's company for ten years then joined
Universal Studios where he directed his firsttalkie in 1929. The following year, because he could speak the language, he co-directed fourSpanish language films including the 1931 acclaimed Spanish version of "Drácula". Melford filmed it simultaneously with the English version on the same sets at night using a different cast and crew.His last major work as a director came in 1937 when he and
Harry L. Fraser co-directedColumbia Pictures ' first serial, a 15 episode, five hour longadventure film titled "Jungle Menace" and starring Frank Buck. At age sixty, theworkaholic Melford needed to slow down and decided to give up the stressful job of directing to take on simplecharacter actor roles. However, in 1946 Harry L. Fraser convinced him to co-direct "Jungle Terror"," a feature-lengthsequel to their successful "Jungle Menace" serial.George Melford married Louise Marsland (daughter of Clarence Marsland of Ossining, New York and Mary LaFrance of Brooklyn, New York) in 1904. Louise brought into the marriage her son from a previous marriage to Albert W. LeRoy of Brooklyn, New York (Louise was a widow), named Judson Calkins LeRoy, born 11/03/1900, New York City. Judson took the name Melford from his adoptive father. As Judson Melford, he appeared with his father in several films between 1911 and 1913, including "On the Warpath" (1911). A minor child celebrity, a cigarette collectors card of Judson was issued as part of the 96 card Major Drapkin, Cinematograph Actors series in 1913. George Melford subsequently had an affair with actress Jacqueline Logan and after a scandalous divorce trial reported in the newspapers, Louise was granted a divorce on January 10, 1924. Although Melford was reported to have begged Louise subsequently to take him back, she refused. Louise died on November 15, 1941 and is buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Judson dropped the name Melford and later worked for thirty years as an electrician for Paramount Studios using his real name of LeRoy, dying childless in Santa Clara, CA in 1978. Judson is buried in Santa Paula Cemetery. Melford's next marriage, which lasted two years, was to actress Diana Miller who died of
tuberculosis on December 19, 1927, at the age of 25.Melford loved the film business, and although financially independent, he never stopped working. Having directed more than one hundred and thirty films, he continued to work in small character roles. In the 1940s, Melford was part of
Preston Sturges ' unofficial "stock company" of character actors, appearing in six films written and directed by Sturges. [Melford appeared in "The Great McGinty ", "The Lady Eve ", "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek ", "Hail the Conquering Hero ", "Unfaithfully Yours ", "The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend ", Sturges' last American film. Earlier, he had also appeared in "Remember the Night ", which Sturges wrote.] He also made a notable appearance in the 1956 epic "The Ten Commandments". He appeared in his last film in 1960 at the age of eighty-three, passing away in Hollywood on25 April fy|1961 of heart failure. He is interred inValhalla Memorial Park Cemetery inNorth Hollywood, Los Angeles, California .elected filmography
* "
Arizona Bill " (1911)
* "The Boer War " (1914)
* "Young Romance " (1915)
* "To Have and to Hold " (1916)
* "Nan of Music Mountain " (1917)
* "The Sea Wolf " (1920)
* "The Round-Up " (1920)
* "Behold My Wife " (1920)
* "The Sheik" (1921)
* "Burning Sands" (1922)
* "Going Crooked " (1926)
* "La Voluntad del muerto " (The Cat and the Canary) (1930)
* "Drácula" (1931)
* "The Viking " (1931)
* "The Penal Code " (1933)
* "Jungle Menace " (serial) (1937)
* "Jungle Terror " (1946)Notes
External links
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