Barney Mcgill


Biography

Filmography

 

Cinematography (Feature Film)

Phantom Submarine (1940)
Photography
Girls Under 21 (1940)
Photography
The Lone Wolf Keeps a Date (1940)
Photography
The Cisco Kid and the Lady (1939)
Director of Photography
Battle of Broadway (1938)
Photography
Sharpshooters (1938)
Photography
Road Demon (1938)
Background Photographer
Crack-Up (1937)
Photography
Nancy Steele Is Missing! (1937)
Photography
Off to the Races (1937)
Photography
Lancer Spy (1937)
Photography
Midnight Taxi (1937)
Photography
She Had to Eat (1937)
Photography
The Country Beyond (1936)
Photography
Song and Dance Man (1936)
Photography
High Tension (1936)
Photography
Laughing at Trouble (1936)
Photography
The First Baby (1936)
Photography
Thank You, Jeeves! (1936)
Photography
My Marriage (1936)
Photography
Everybody's Old Man (1936)
Photography
Charlie Chan in Shanghai (1935)
Photography
The President Vanishes (1935)
Photography
Redheads on Parade (1935)
Photography
Brewster's Millions (1935)
Photography
Folies Bergère de Paris (1935)
Photography
L'homme des Folies Bergère (1935)
Opérateur [Photographer]
I Believed in You (1934)
Photography
Born to Be Bad (1934)
Photography
Murder in Trinidad (1934)
Photography
The Last Gentleman (1934)
Photography
Hard to Handle (1933)
Photography
The Bowery (1933)
Photography
Captured! (1933)
Photography
Broadway Thru a Keyhole (1933)
Photography
Employee's Entrance (1933)
Photography
The Mayor of Hell (1933)
Photography
The Keyhole (1933)
Photography
Bureau of Missing Persons (1933)
Photography
Cabin in the Cotton (1932)
Photography
The Mouthpiece (1932)
Photography
Miss Pinkerton (1932)
Photography
Alias the Doctor (1932)
Photography
Week-end Marriage (1932)
Photography
Under Eighteen (1932)
Photography
20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932)
Photography
Beauty and the Boss (1932)
Photography
The Cisco Kid (1931)
Photography
The Mad Genius (1931)
Photography
Night Nurse (1931)
Photography
Other Men's Women (1931)
Photography
Svengali (1931)
Photography
My Past (1931)
Photography
The Doorway to Hell (1930)
Photography
Mammy (1930)
Director of Photography
Three Faces East (1930)
Camera
Noah's Ark (1929)
Director of Photography
Evidence (1929)
Director of Photography
The Hottentot (1929)
Director of Photography
Skin Deep (1929)
Director of Photography
Stark Mad (1929)
Camera
Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929)
Director of Photography
The Desert Song (1929)
Director of Photography
The Show of Shows (1929)
Director of Photography
The Crimson City (1928)
Director of Photography
The House of Scandal (1928)
Director of Photography
Across the Atlantic (1928)
Director of Photography
Conquest (1928)
Director of Photography
State Street Sadie (1928)
Director of Photography
The Home Towners (1928)
Director of Photography
Jaws of Steel (1927)
Director of Photography
Husbands for Rent (1927)
Director of Photography
Good Time Charley (1927)
Camera
Casey at the Bat (1927)
Director of Photography
The College Widow (1927)
Camera
What Price Glory (1927)
Director of Photography
The Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary (1927)
Director of Photography
A Trip to Chinatown (1926)
Director of Photography
Keep Smiling (1925)
Director of Photography
A Self-Made Failure (1924)
Director of Photography
My Lady Friends (1921)
Director of Photography
Devil Mccare (1919)
Camera
Breezy Jim (1919)
Camera

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Other Men's Women (1931) -- (Movie Clip) I Had One Last Night It’s not clear until the end what director William A. Wellman is up to with his opening scene, as kooky railroad employee Bill (Grant Withers) stops in for a provocative chat with a waitress (Lillian Worth), in Other Men’s Women, 1931, with Mary Astor, James Cagney and Joan Blondell.
Hard To Handle (1933) -- (Movie Clip) It Ain't Humanely Possible Joining director Mervyn LeRoy’s breakneck opening, Allen Jenkins the MC at an outrageous Hollywood dance marathon, the last two couples standing are (second-billed) Mary Brian with Matt McHugh and Sterling Holloway with Mary Doran, before we meet the promoter, above-the-title billed James Cagney as Lefty, in Warner Bros.’ Hard To Handle, 1933.
Hard To Handle (1933) -- (Movie Clip) The Public Is Like A Cow All pace in the first scene for star James Cagney as Hollywood PR man Lefty, backstage at his dance marathon contest, scheming with his pretty distracted partner Mac (John Sheehan), in Hard To Handle, 1933, story by Houston Branch, screenplay by Bob Lord and Wilson Mizner.
Hard To Handle (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Your Mother Doesn't Own A Gun, Does She? Hollywood widow landlady Ruth Donnelly is looking to scam a furniture buyer (William H. Strauss) while her daughter Ruth (Mary Brian) is still soaking her feet, after winning a dance marathon, with some help from her promoter boyfriend Lefty (James Cagney), who was himself robbed of the prize she was supposed to get, in Hard To Handle, 1933.
Employees' Entrance (1933) -- (Movie Clip) All I Want Is You Good clean fun in Warner Bros.’ (First National's) otherwise plenty provocative pre-Code Employees’ Entrance, 1933, as department store middle-manager Wallace Ford, in his first scene, can’t help noticing the knockout new model (Loretta Young), with clever popular song references.
Employees' Entrance (1933) -- (Movie Clip) I Didn't Know You With All Your Clothes On Tough-guy department store exec Anderson (Warren William) has summoned dress-model Polly (Alice White), who touch on their shared history as he dispatches her to entrap his unwitting older rival Ross (Albert Gran), in Employees’ Entrance, 1933.
Employees' Entrance (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Smash Or Be Smashed After a prologue establishing a roughly 50-year history of department store profits, and mentions of a cut-throat executive named Anderson, we meet Warren William, intimidating his chairman (Hale Hamilton), Ross (Albert Gran) et al, in Warner Bros.’ Employees’ Entrance, 1933.
Employees' Entrance (1933) -- (Movie Clip) How Would You Like A Wax Banana? Threatening to fire most everybody (excepting Ruth Donnelly, his assistant), hard-headed department store executive Anderson (Warren William) has a random meet-cute with wannabe employee Madeline (Loretta Young), even if it plays like they might be lovers already, in the steamy pre-Code Employees’ Entrance, 1933.
Night Nurse (1931) -- (Movie Clip) Slip Off Your Dress Savvy Maloney (Joan Blondell) is impressed to learn that new hire Lora (Barbara Stanwyck) wasn't working an angle with the chief surgeon, intern Eagan (Edward Nugent) on hand for the first of director William A. Wellman's many disrobing scenes, in the pre-Code drama Night Nurse, 1931,
Night Nurse (1931) -- (Movie Clip) A Lady Needs A Little Assistance First night at a dodgy after-hours gig, Lora (Barbara Stanwyck) gets assaulted twice, by a sloppy drunk (Walter McGrail) who seeks her help with the plastered mother (Blanche Frederici) of her charges, then by Nick (Clark Gable, his first scene), who's clearly not just the chauffeur, in William A. Wellman's Night Nurse, 1931.
Mayor Of Hell, The (1933) -- (Movie Clip) You're In Reform School Now We’ve followed Frankie Darro (as Jimmy) and company through committing crimes and being convicted, and now they meet Dudley Digges as the reform school warden, and Madge Evans as Dorothy, the relatively kind nurse, in Warner Bros.’ The Mayor Of Hell,1933, starring James Cagney.
Mayor Of Hell, The (1933) -- (Movie Clip) You'd Better Take A Vacation Cruel reform school chief Thompson (Dudley Digges) doesn’t yet know that Patsy (James Cagney), the gangster who got a plum job as a do-nothing commissioner, has gotten himself put in charge, out of concern for kids like Jimmy (Frankie Darro), in Warner Bros.’ The Mayor Of Hell, 1933.

Bibliography