Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 10 de abr. de 1981 · Norman Taurog, the film director who won an Academy Award for ''Skippy,'' died yesterday at Eisenhower Medical Center, near his retirement home in Palm Desert. He was 82 years old.

  2. Norman Taurog. Highest Rated: 100% If I Had a Million (1932) Lowest Rated: Not Available. Birthday: Feb 23, 1899. Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, USA. Archetypal "contract," studio director who ...

  3. Director Norman Taurog, Elvis and Juliet Prowse on the set of G.I. Blues . An on-set report on G.I. Blues, by Murray Schumach for the New York Times, portrays Taurog more sympathetically, saying he had a "reputation for knowing how to work with child actors and young actors".The director tells Schumach: "Presley is a natural for the movies.

  4. Biography. Archetypal "contract," studio director who entered films as an actor, began making comedy shorts, and moved up to features in 1929. Working most often for MGM and Paramount, Taurog specialized in comedies and other light entertainments, though he made several dramas as well, such as "The Beginning or the End" (1947), about the birth ...

  5. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Norman Rae Taurog (February 23, 1899 - April 7, 1981) was an American film director and screenwriter. Between 1920 and 1968, Taurog directed over 140 films, and directed Elvis Presley in more movies than any other director (nine, starting with G.I. Blues (1960)). He won the 1931 Academy Award for Best Director for the film Skippy and still holds the ...

  6. Norman Taurog (1899 - 1981) fue un director y guionista de Estados Unidos conocido por Forja de hombres, Si yo tuviera un millón, Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer, Amor en Hawai, La ciudad de los muchachos, El joven Edison, Chicas! Chicas! Chicas!, La nueva melodía de Broadway, ¡Qué par de golfantes! y Viviendo su vida

  7. Chicago-born Norman Taurog was performing on stage from his early childhood, long before he began work as a child actor in movies. He entered films at age 14 with Thomas Ince's studios, and turned to directing comedy in 1919 with Larry Semon.