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  1. Norman Zenos McLeod (Grayling, Míchigan, 20 de septiembre de 1898 - Hollywood, California, 27 de enero de 1964) fue un director de cine, historietista y escritor estadounidense. Está considerado uno de los grandes directores de cine cómico de la historia del cine, trabajando con gente como W.C. Fields , los Hermanos Marx , Cary Grant ...

    • Norman Zenos McLeod
  2. Spouse. Evelyn Ward. Norman Zenos McLeod (September 20, 1898 – January 27, 1964) was an American film director. McLeod's most acclaimed work was made in collaboration with major comic performers of the 1930s, and included such films as the first original Marx Brothers comedies Monkey Business (1931) and Horse Feathers (1932), the ...

    • Film director
    • Norman Zenos McLeod, September 20, 1898, Grayling, Michigan, U.S.
  3. Norman Z. McLeod (1895-1964) Director. Additional Crew. Writer. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Norman Z. McLeod was one of Hollywood's leading early comedy directors. Born in Grayling, Michigan, he came from a family that had no. connections to show business (his father was a clergyman). He was.

    • January 1, 1
    • Grayling, Michigan, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Hollywood, California, USA
    • Overview
    • Early work
    • Marx Brothers and W.C. Fields
    • Middle years
    • Danny Kaye and Bob Hope

    Norman Z. McLeod (born September 20, 1895, Grayling, Michigan, U.S.—died January 27, 1964, Los Angeles, California) American film director who was best known for his comedies, especially those with the Marx Brothers, W.C. Fields, and Bob Hope.

    (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.)

    After studying at the University of Washington, McLeod served as a fighter pilot during World War I. He broke into the film industry as an animator—eventually working on nearly 50 comedy shorts—and as a gagman, developing skills that would serve him well on the many comedies that he would direct over the course of 30 years. His big break came when ...

    McLeod codirected his first sound pictures—Along Came Youth (1930) and Finn and Hattie (1931)—before going solo with Monkey Business (1931), a classic Marx Brothers farce. Much of the activity was improvised by the Marxes, who for the first time were not adapting one of their stage vehicles. McLeod reteamed with the brothers on Horse Feathers (1932), which was arguably funnier than Monkey Business. It follows the efforts of a college president (Groucho Marx) to assemble a winning football team. Both comedies were hugely popular and are considered among the Marxes’ greatest films.

    McLeod then worked on If I Had a Million (1932), a comedy about a dying millionaire who decides to leave his money to strangers. It featured an all-star cast—which included W.C. Fields, Gary Cooper, George Raft, and Charles Laughton—in an eight-episode anthology, two episodes of which McLeod directed (uncredited).

    In 1933 McLeod helmed Alice in Wonderland, an elaborate adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s classic novels. The film was a box-office disappointment despite featuring a number of notable actors—Cary Grant as the Mock Turtle, Cooper as the White Knight, Fields as Humpty Dumpty, and Edward Everett Horton as the Mad Hatter. Many Happy Returns (1934) was a weak George Burns–Gracie Allen vehicle, in which Allen starred as a scatterbrained heiress whose father tries to bribe a man (Burns) to marry her. McLeod rebounded with It’s a Gift (1934), which is considered one of Fields’s masterpieces. The comedian starred as a hapless grocer who decides to move his family to California, where he plans on growing oranges.

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    In 1935 McLeod reteamed with Burns and Allen on Here Comes Cookie, and it fared little better than their previous effort; Allen played a flighty heiress who turns her father’s Fifth Avenue mansion into a boardinghouse for unemployed vaudeville performers. Better was Early to Bed (1936), which featured the team of Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland; Ruggles played a sleepwalker who becomes embroiled with gangsters but gets out of trouble with the help of his wife (Boland). In 1936 McLeod was loaned to Columbia, where he made Pennies from Heaven, a sentimental musical that was memorable largely for its Oscar-nominated song and the musical skills of Louis Armstrong. Mind Your Own Business (1936), another Ruggles showcase, concluded McLeod’s Paramount career on a relatively low note.

    Moving to MGM, McLeod was handed Topper (1937) as his first project. The screwball comedy, which was adapted from the Thorne Smith novel, is widely considered a classic, with Grant and Constance Bennett as a fun-loving society couple who die in a car accident and return as ghosts. Thinking they need to perform a good deed in order to go to heaven, the two advise a friend (Roland Young) on how to improve his life.

    Merrily We Live (1938) may have been a blatant reworking of Gregory La Cava’s My Man Godfrey (1936), but the entertaining comedy was a box-office hit; Bennett gave another notable performance, portraying a spoiled socialite who learns about life’s true values from a new butler (Brian Aherne). There Goes My Heart (1938) was just as bold about recycling Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night (1934); Virginia Bruce starred as a runaway heiress, and Fredric March was the reporter who falls in love with her. Topper Takes a Trip (1939) was the sequel to McLeod’s earlier success. Although Grant was absent—he appeared only in clips from the original—the film was still popular with moviegoers.

    Little Men (1940), a too-earnest adaptation of Louisa May Alcott’s novel, and the courtroom thriller The Trial of Mary Dugan (1941) demonstrated why McLeod was best known as a director of comedies. With Lady Be Good (1941), he returned to the more comfortable territory of musical comedy. It featured such top-name performers as Eleanor Powell, Ann Sothern, Red Skelton, and Robert Young, and Busby Berkeley staged the impressive dance numbers. Next was Jackass Mail (1942), a humorous western starring Wallace Beery and Marjorie Main. McLeod then directed a series of forgettable musicals—Panama Hattie (1942), The Powers Girl (1943), and Swing Shift Maisie (1943)—that finished his career at MGM.

    At RKO McLeod made two of Danny Kaye’s better pictures: The Kid from Brooklyn (1946), a comedy about a milkman who accidentally becomes a professional boxer, and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947), an adaptation of James Thurber’s short story about a daydreaming wallflower. Both films were box-office hits.

    McLeod then moved to Paramount, where he directed Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and Dorothy Lamour in Road to Rio (1947), a popular installment in the Road series. It was the first of several films that McLeod and Hope made together. They next collaborated on the comedy western The Paleface (1948), with Jane Russell. After the Fred Astaire–Betty Hutton musical Let’s Dance (1950), McLeod reunited with Hope for My Favorite Spy (1951), a surprisingly nimble Cold War spoof, with Hedy Lamarr as the love interest.

    • Michael Barson
  4. Norman Zenos McLeod (Grayling, Míchigan, 20 de septiembre de 1898 - Hollywood, California, 27 de enero de 1964) fue un director de cine, historietista y escritor estadounidense. Quick facts: Norman Z. McLeod, Información personal, Nombr...

  5. Norman Z. McLeod (1898 - 1964) fue un director y guionista de Estados Unidos conocido por Plumas de caballo, Pistoleros de agua dulce, La vida secreta de Walter Mitty, Si yo tuviera un millón, Alicia en el país de las maravillas, Una pareja invisible, Rostro pálido, El asombro de Brooklyn, It's a Gift y Alias Jesse James.

  6. Overview. Born. September 20, 1895 · Grayling, Michigan, USA. Died. January 27, 1964 · Hollywood, California, USA (stroke) Birth name. Norman Zenos McLeod. Height. 6′ (1.83 m) Mini Bio. Norman Z. McLeod was one of Hollywood's leading early comedy directors.