- Oscar Apfel
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Oscar Apfel Born January 17, 1878
Cleveland, Ohio, USADied March 21, 1938 (aged 60)
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USAOther names Oscar C. Apfel Occupation Actor, film director Years active 1913 - 1938 Oscar C. Apfel (January 17, 1878 – March 21, 1938) was an American film actor, director, screenwriter and producer. He appeared in 167 films between 1913 and 1939, and also directed 94 films between 1911 and 1927.
Biography
Born in Cleveland, Ohio where he secured his first professional engagement in 1900. He spent eleven years on the stage on Broadway then joined the Edison Company. Apfel first directed for the Edison Company (Thomas A. Edison, Inc.) in 1911-12, where he made the innovative short film The Passer-By (1912). In 1913, he became one of two main directors for the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company, the other being Cecil B. DeMille.
Apfel's directorial collaboration with DeMille was a crucial element in the development of DeMille's filmmaking technique. Apfel is often creditied as being one of the first men (along with DeMille) to bring Hollywood, then known as Hollywoodland, to the world stage. Legend has it that the two filmmakers were scouting for a location to shoot The Squaw Man (1914) in Flagstaff, Arizona. However, the conspicuously snow-capped mountains contradicted the picture's sweltering western setting. So they climbed aboard a train and headed west. Eventually they found themselves in a sleepy district of Los Angeles named Hollywoodland. The all year-round sunshine and cheap land made it an ideal place to shoot films.
In late 1914, Apfel left the Lasky Company and directed for various companies into the 1920s, gradually returning to acting.
On March 21, 1938, Apfel died in Hollywood, California from a heart attack.
Selected filmography
- The Squaw Man (1914)
- Brewster's Millions (1914)
- The Master Mind (1914)
- The Only Son (1914)
- The Man on the Box (1914)
- The Call of the North (1914)
- The Ghost Breaker (1914)
- After Five (1915)
- Ravished Armenia (1919)
- Bulldog Drummond (1922)
- The Lion's Mouse (1923)
- Helping Grandma (1931)
- Five Star Final (1931)
- Impatient Maiden (1932)
- Business and Pleasure (1932)
- High Pressure (1932)
- One Man's Journey (1933)
- The Old Fashioned Way (1934) [not credited]
- Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935)
- Romance in Manhattan (1935)
External links
- Oscar Apfel at the Internet Movie Database
- Oscar Apfel at AllRovi
Categories:- Deaths from myocardial infarction
- American film actors
- American silent film actors
- American film directors
- American film producers
- American screenwriters
- Actors from Ohio
- People from Cleveland, Ohio
- 1878 births
- 1938 deaths
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