Frank Tuttle (Frank Wright Tuttle)

Frank Tuttle

Frank Wright Tuttle (6 August 1892 – 6 January 1963) was a Hollywood film director and writer who directed films from 1922 (The Cradle Buster) to 1959 (Island of Lost Women). Frank Tuttle wrote “The Kentuckians” (1921) and directed “Roman Scandals” (1933), and “Charlie McCarthy, Detective” (1939). He was educated at Yale University, where he edited campus humor magazine The Yale Record. After graduation, he worked in New York City in the advertising department of the Metropolitan Music Bureau. He later moved to Hollywood, where he became a film director for Paramount. His films are largely in the comedy and film noir genres. In 1947, Frank Tuttle’s career ground to a temporary halt with the onset of the first of the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings on Communist infiltration of the movie industry. Tuttle had joined the Communist Party in 1937 in reaction to Hitler’s rise to power. Unable to find work in the United States, he moved to France, where he made Gunman in the Streets (1950) starring Simone Signoret and Dane Clark. He died in Hollywood on January 6, 1963.

 

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Born

  • August, 06, 1892
  • USA
  • New York, New York

Died

  • January, 06, 1963
  • USA
  • Hollywood, California

Cause of Death

  • heart attack

Cemetery

  • Westwood Memorial Park
  • Los Angeles, California
  • USA

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