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  1. collections.new.oscars.org › Details › CollectionACADEMY COLLECTIONS | details

    Hal B. Wallis (1898-1986) was born Harold Brent Wallis in Chicago. He worked as a traveling salesman for an electric heating company before moving to Los Angeles in 1922, where he became manager of the Garrick Theatre.

  2. Hal B. Wallis (ou Harold Brent Wallis), né Aaron Blum Walinsky 3 ou Wolovitz 2 le 19 octobre 1898 (ou une date proche 6) à Chicago, dans l' Illinois, et mort le 5 octobre 1986 à Rancho Mirage, est un producteur de cinéma et acteur américain.

  3. Hal B. Wallis. Hal B. Wallis (n. 14 septembrie, 1899, Chicago - d. 5 octombrie, 1986, Rancho Mirage, California) a fost un producător american de filme, câștigător al premiului Oscar . Născut Harold Brent Wallis în Chicago, familia sa s-a mutat în 1922 în Los Angeles, California, unde a găsit de lucru în departamentul de publicitate ...

  4. Hal B. Wallis. Highest Rated: 100% One Foot in Heaven (1941) Lowest Rated: Not Available. Birthday: Sep 14, 1898. Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, USA. Hal Wallis' success attracted the notice of ...

  5. Hal B.Wallis was one of the most important movie producers from the Golden Age of Hollywood filmmaking of the 1930s and 1940s. On one classic Warner Bros. movie after another Hal B.Wallis' name is listed under the title: Warner's studio boss, Jack L. Warner, was the brother in charge of the west coast studio, but surely his right-hand man, Hal Wallis, did most of the day to day work producing.

  6. HAL WALLIS ON HIS ENGLISH ESTATE IN VAN NUYS 1939. Born 1898 in a Westside Chicago tenement to Jewish parents whose people were vaguely displaced between Poland (modern day Bulgaria), Lithuanian, and Russia by emigration, Aaron Blum Walinsky produced two academy award winning movies, 386-498 other films, and worked with the majority of A-list Golden and Silver Screen talent.

  7. 2 de may. de 2010 · Hal Wallis was so pleased with Elvis' acting in Loving You, that he decided to give Presley a greater challenge in his next Paramount film. The producer had the perfect vehicle. It was loosely adapted from Harold Robbins's 'A Stone for Danny Fisher', the movie rights to which Wallis had purchased for a mere $25,000.