Andrew L. Stone


Director
Andrew L. Stone

About

Also Known As
Andrew Stone
Birth Place
Oakland, California, USA
Born
July 16, 1902
Died
June 09, 1999

Family & Companions

Virginia Stone
Wife
Producer, editor. Born c. 1926; married in 1946.

Biography

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Great Waltz (1972)
Director
Song of Norway (1970)
Director
The Secret of My Success (1965)
Director
Never Put It in Writing (1964)
Director
The Password Is Courage (1962)
Director
Ring of Fire (1961)
Director
The Last Voyage (1960)
Director
Cry Terror! (1958)
Director
The Decks Ran Red (1958)
Director
Julie (1956)
Director
The Night Holds Terror (1955)
Director
A Blueprint for Murder (1953)
Director
Confidence Girl (1952)
Director
The Steel Trap (1952)
Director
Highway 301 (1950)
Director
The Countess of Monte Cristo (1948)
Director
Fun on a Weekend (1947)
Director
The Bachelor's Daughters (1946)
Director
Bedside Manner (1945)
Director
Sensations of 1945 (1944)
Director
Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
Director
Stormy Weather (1943)
Director
There's Magic in Music (1941)
Director
The Great Victor Herbert (1939)
Director
Say It in French (1938)
Director
Stolen Heaven (1938)
Director
The Girl Said No (1937)
Director
Hell's Headquarters (1932)
Director
Sombras de gloria (1930)
Dirección [Dir]

Cast (Feature Film)

Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius (1989)

Writer (Feature Film)

The Great Waltz (1972)
Screenwriter
Song of Norway (1970)
Screenwriter
The Secret of My Success (1965)
Screenwriter
Never Put It in Writing (1964)
Screenwriter
The Password Is Courage (1962)
Screenwriter
Ring of Fire (1961)
Screenwriter
The Last Voyage (1960)
Writer
The Decks Ran Red (1958)
Writer
Cry Terror! (1958)
Writer
Julie (1956)
Writer
The Night Holds Terror (1955)
Writer
A Blueprint for Murder (1953)
Writer
Confidence Girl (1952)
Writer
The Steel Trap (1952)
Writer
Highway 301 (1950)
Writer
Fun on a Weekend (1947)
Original Screenplay
The Bachelor's Daughters (1946)
Original Screenplay
Sensations of 1945 (1944)
Original Story
Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
Original Story
There's Magic in Music (1941)
Story
The Great Victor Herbert (1939)
Story
Stolen Heaven (1938)
Story
The Girl Said No (1937)
Story

Producer (Feature Film)

The Great Waltz (1972)
Producer
Song of Norway (1970)
Producer
The Secret of My Success (1965)
Producer
Never Put It in Writing (1964)
Producer
The Password Is Courage (1962)
Producer
The Decks Ran Red (1958)
Executive Producer
Cry Terror! (1958)
Executive Producer
The Night Holds Terror (1955)
Producer
Confidence Girl (1952)
Producer
Fun on a Weekend (1947)
Pres and prod
The Bachelor's Daughters (1946)
Presented By
The Bachelor's Daughters (1946)
Producer
Bedside Manner (1945)
Producer
Sensations of 1945 (1944)
Producer
Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
Producer
There's Magic in Music (1941)
Producer
The Great Victor Herbert (1939)
Producer
Say It in French (1938)
Producer

Production Companies (Feature Film)

Song of Norway (1970)
Company
Ring of Fire (1961)
Company
The Last Voyage (1960)
Company
Sensations of 1945 (1944)
Company

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Cry Terror! (1958) -- (Movie Clip) That Makes Him The Patsy James Mason as electronics expert Jim has hurried to his suburban home to explain to his wife (Inger Stevens) that he’s realized he was tricked into making a bomb used in a sensational hijack threat, and as the perpetrator Hoplin (Rod Steiger) appears, his play is not yet clear, in Cry Terror!, 1958 from independent and thriller specialist Andrew L. Stone.
Julie (1956) -- (Movie Clip) That Doesn't Prove Anything Doris Day (title character), on the grounds of the Pebble Beach golf club as it appeared at the time, talks with concerned friend Cliff (Barry Sullivan) about the possibility that her new husband (Louis Jourdan) may have been involved in her previous husband's presumed suicide, in Julie, 1956.
Julie (1956) -- (Movie Clip) Sick With Fright Now convinced that her husband Lyle (Louis Jourdan) murdered her previous husband and means to kill her, Doris Day (title character) contrives an escape from their isolated Carmel seaside home, complete with anxious narration, in Julie, 1956.
Julie (1956) -- (Movie Clip) I Only Meant To Frighten You As Doris Day's theme song fades out, her title character unwillingly collects her husband Lyle (Louis Jourdan), following an incident we have not seen, shot at the Pebble Beach Links golf club, scolding him for his erratic behavior, and finds out there's more to come in Julie, 1956.
Blueprint For Murder, A (1953) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Touch My Feet! The opening from independent writer, producer and director Andrew L. Stone finds Joseph Cotten racing to the bedside of a niece, meeting Jean Peters as the stepmother, the widow of his late brother then, when the emergency subsides, with his nephew (Freddy Ridgeway), in A Blueprint For Murder, 1953, distributed by 20th Century-Fox.
Blueprint For Murder, A (1953) -- (Movie Clip) It All Adds Up Delicate business as Jean Peters, as young stepmother Lynn Cameron, is grilled by police detectives (Jack Kruschen, Barney Phillips and Charles Tannen) who have reluctantly concluded she poisoned her stepdaughter, and her brother-in-law Cam (Joseph Cotten) dares not let on that he agrees, in Andrew L. Stone’s A Blueprint For Murder, 1953.
Blueprint For Murder, A (1953) -- (Movie Clip) The Same Kind Of Convulsions This is how we learn that the young niece of Joseph Cotten, as visiting businessman “Cam” Cameron, died the evening before after a second unexplained seizure, as we meet his friends, Gary Merrill and Catherine McLeod, as lawyer Fred and freelance reporter Maggie, discussing her father’s earlier death, in A Blueprint For Murder, 1953.
Last Voyage, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Fire In The Engine Room Opening narration, the real name of the ship rented (and partially sunk) by Andrew and Virginia Stone, who produced together, as he wrote and directed and she edited, was the Ile de France, as we meet George Sanders as the captain, Joel Marston his 3rd officer, and briefly Woody Strode and Edmond O’Brien, in The Last Voyage, 1960.
Last Voyage, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) Get Me A Crowbar! The first encounter for the captain (George Sanders), whose priority so far has been to preserve calm despite the fire on board, with the Hendersons (Robert Stack, Dorothy Malone and Tammy Marihugh as Jill), then Woody Strode, Jack Kruschen and Richard Norris in the engine room, in independent producer Andrew L. Stone’s The Last Voyage, 1960.
Last Voyage, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) There's No Danger Resourceful father Henderson (Robert Stack) assures his wife (Dorothy Malone) and their already rescued daughter (Tammy Marihugh) that he’ll be able to find a torch to free her from the wreckage, encountering Edmond O’Brien and Woody Strode tending to other emergencies, in director Andrew L. Stone’s luxury-liner disaster drama, The Last Voyage, 1960.
Last Voyage, The (1960) -- (Movie Clip) That's My Brave Girl! With mom (Dorothy Malone) pinned in the wreckage of their cabin after an on-board explosion, pleasure cruiser Henderson (Robert Stack) must rescue his daughter Jill (Tammy Marihugh) from certain death, while the ship’s captain (George Sanders) on the bridge attempts to organize, in the early disaster epic The Last Voyage, 1960.
Decks Ran Red, The -- (Movie Clip) Does It Bother The Captain? Worried first-time captain Rumill (James Mason) gets dominated by cook's wife Mahia (Dorothy Dandridge), while conspiring crewmen Scott (Broderick Crawford) and Leroy (Stuart Whitman) intimidate their stooge Mace (David Cross), in Andrew L. Stone's The Decks Ran Red, 1958.

Companions

Virginia Stone
Wife
Producer, editor. Born c. 1926; married in 1946.

Bibliography