
William Keighley
Directing · Born 1889-08-04 · age 94 at death · Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. William Jackson Keighley (August 4, 1889, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - June 24, 1984, New York, New York) was an American stage actor and Hollywood film director. After graduating from the Ludlum School of Dramatic Art, Keighley began acting at the age of 23. By the 1910s and 1920s, he was acting and directing on Broadway. With the advent of talking pictures, he relocated to Hollywood. He eventually signed with Warner Bros., where he proved adept at directing in a wide variety of genres. He was the initial director of The Adventures of Robin Hood, starring Errol Flynn, but was replaced by Michael Curtiz. During World War II, he supervised the U.S. Army Signal Corp's motion picture unit. He retired in 1953 and moved to Paris with his actress wife Genevieve Tobin. Description above from the Wikipedia article William Keighley, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Titles

The Adventures of Robin Hood

The Man Who Came to Dinner

'G' Men

Each Dawn I Die

Bullets or Ballots

The Street with No Name

Jewel Robbery

Ladies They Talk About

The Prince and the Pauper

The Bride Came C.O.D.

The Master of Ballantrae

The Fighting 69th

Picture Snatcher

The Cabin in the Cotton

George Washington Slept Here

Rocky Mountain

The Green Pastures

Mary Stevens, M.D.

Special Agent

Journal of a Crime

Torrid Zone

No Time for Comedy

Easy to Love

Varsity Show

Dr. Monica

The Match King

The Right to Live

Kansas City Princess

Four Mothers

Valley of the Giants

Honeymoon

Babbitt

Secrets of an Actress

Stars Over Broadway

God's Country and the Woman

Mary Jane's Pa

Close to My Heart
Target for Today

Big Hearted Herbert

Yes, My Darling Daughter

Scarlet Dawn

Brother Rat

The Singing Kid

Resurrection

The Third Degree

Rebecca