Julien Josephson


Biography

Filmography

 

Writer (Feature Film)

Happy Land (1943)
Screenwriter
The Great Gildersleeve (1942)
Screenwriter
The Rains Came (1939)
Screenwriter
Stanley and Livingstone (1939)
Screenwriter
Suez (1938)
Screenwriter
Wee Willie Winkie (1937)
Screenwriter
Heidi (1937)
Screenwriter
Redheads on Parade (1935)
Contract Writer
Chance at Heaven (1933)
Screenwriter
State Fair (1933)
Contract Writer
The Expert (1932)
Adapted and dial
The Man Who Played God (1932)
Adaptation
A Successful Calamity (1932)
Adapted and dial
Misbehaving Ladies (1931)
Screenplay version
Alexander Hamilton (1931)
Adaptation
Kiss Me Again (1931)
Screenplay version
The Millionaire (1931)
Screenwriter
Hell Bound (1931)
Cont and dial
The Green Goddess (1930)
Screenwriter
The Green Goddess (1930)
Dial
The Green Goddess (1930)
Art titles
The Climax (1930)
Adaptation
The Climax (1930)
Scen
Disraeli (1929)
Scen
Disraeli (1929)
Dial
A Ship Comes In (1928)
Original story and scen
The Red Mark (1928)
Adaptation
The Red Mark (1928)
Cont
Do Your Duty (1928)
Story
The Whirlwind of Youth (1927)
Screenwriter
The Eagle of the Sea (1926)
Screenwriter
The Bat (1926)
Scen
It Must Be Love (1926)
Adaptation
Forever After (1926)
Adaptation
His Majesty, Bunker Bean (1925)
Scen
Rose of the World (1925)
Scen
My Wife and I (1925)
Adaptation
How Baxter Butted In (1925)
Adaptation
Lady Windermere's Fan (1925)
Adaptation
The Narrow Street (1924)
Scen
Daddies (1924)
Scen
The Tenth Woman (1924)
Scen
The Printer's Devil (1923)
Scen
Brass (1923)
Scen
The Country Kid (1923)
Story
Main Street (1923)
Adaptation
All the Brothers Were Valiant (1923)
Scen
All the Brothers Were Valiant (1923)
Adaptation
Brass (1923)
Adaptation
The Printer's Devil (1923)
Story
The Man Unconquerable (1922)
Scen
His Back Against the Wall (1922)
Scen
Hungry Hearts (1922)
Scen
The Man with Two Mothers (1922)
Scen
Head over Heels (1922)
Scen
Watch Your Step (1922)
Scen
Watch Your Step (1922)
Story
Extra Extra (1922)
Story
The Cowboy and the Lady (1922)
Adaptation
The Old Homestead (1922)
Scen
Dangerous Curve Ahead (1921)
Cont
Paris Green (1920)
Story
The Jailbird (1920)
Scen
Homespun Folks (1920)
Story
The Jailbird (1920)
Story
Homespun Folks (1920)
Scen
Bill Henry (1919)
Scen
Red Hot Dollars (1919)
Scen
Crooked Straight (1919)
Story
Greased Lightning (1919)
Story
Hay Foot, Straw Foot (1919)
Story
Red Hot Dollars (1919)
Story
The Egg Crate Wallop (1919)
Story
The Midnight Patrol (1918)
Scen
String Beans (1918)
Scen
Fuss and Feathers (1918)
Scen
The Biggest Show on Earth (1918)
Picturized by
Playing the Game (1918)
Story
String Beans (1918)
Story
Fuss and Feathers (1918)
Story
The Hired Man (1918)
Scen
Mountain Dew (1917)
Scen

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Great Gildersleeve, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) That Female Man Trap! Title character (Harold Peavy) is hiding in the basement (visited by Lillian Randolph as Birdie) to avoid aggressive spinster Amelia (Mary Field), who’s made an unwelcome house call on singing pupil Leroy (Freddie Mercer, a highly trained singer, doing his own vocal, on an aria often sung by Enrico Caruso), who’s sort-of rescued by sister Margie (Nancy Gates) and her band, early in the first feature in the RKO series, The Great Gildersleeve, 1942.
Great Gildersleeve, The (1942) -- (Movie Clip) Biggest Man In Summerfield The orphan kids (Nancy Gates and Freddie Mercer as niece and nephew Margie and Leroy) don’t want to be separated by Judge Hooker (Charles Arnt) from their uncle, the title character (Harold Peary) so they decide to mount an aimless campaign, using his own hobby printing press, on his behalf, in the first movie in the RKO series based on the NBC radio sit-com, The Great Gildersleeve, 1942.
Wee Willie Winkie (1937) -- (Movie Clip) May Allah Bless And Protect Thee Through trickery Sgt. MacDuff (Victor McLaglen) has obtained a uniform for protegè Priscilla (Shirley Temple), commencing drills when she sees the chance to return a necklace she found to the now-imprisoned local chieftain Khan (Cesar Romero), in John Ford’s Wee Willie Winkie, 1937.
Wee Willie Winkie (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Where Are All The Indians? Director John Ford’s opening, Shirley Temple as Priscilla and June Lang her widowed mother, in India to join her father-in-law at his post, received by Victor McLaglen, as MacDuff (in a story based loosely on Kipling, in the British army, two years before Gunga Din), in Wee Willie Winkie, 1937.
Heidi (1937) -- (Movie Clip) That Old Heathen! Opening scene, Aunt Dete (Mady Christians) arrives at Dorflo with Shirley Temple (title character), who has trouble with a yodel and a goat, then meets Peter (Delmar Watson) in Heidi, 1937.
Heidi (1937) -- (Movie Clip) It's Tme You Learned Shirley Temple (title character) saying her prayers, then arising with surly grandfather (Jean Hersholt) and learning to milk a goat, early in Paramount's Heidi, 1937.
Heidi (1937) -- (Movie Clip) In Our Little Wooden Shoes The only true musical number, Shirley Temple (title character) reading with grandfather (Jean Hersholt) then imagining to In Our Little Wooden Shoes by Lew Pollack and Sidney D. Mitchell, in Heidi, 1937.
Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Cast Iron Petticoat From the opening scene, Brit artist Ransome (George Brent) and local doctor Major Safti (Tyrone Power) discuss the former's inertia and the state of contemporary India, a missionary mother and daughter (Marjorie Rambeau, Brenda Joyce) visiting, in The Rains Came, 1939, co-starring Myrna Loy.
Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Have You Become Fond Of Money? Ransome (George Brent), an idle British painter long resident in a fictional Indian state, chats with Lady Edwina (Myrna Loy), after having discovered to their mutual surprise that she, the wife of a visiting lord, is also his old flame, in The Rains Came, 1939, also starring Tyrone Power.
Rains Came, The (1939) -- (Movie Clip) Sentimental Nonsense Idealistic Indian military doctor Major Safti (Tyrone Power) is giving Lady Edwina (Myrna Loy), the bored wife of a visiting British nobleman, a tour of local attractions, in The Rains Came, 1939, from the novel by the acclaimed American author Louis Bromfield.
Wee Willie Winkie (1937) -- (Movie Clip) Didn't You Ever Ride A Buffalo? Priscilla (Shirley Temple) and her widowed mom (June Lang) wait to meet her father-in-law the colonel (C. Aubrey Smith), who also has business with Lt. Brandes (Michael Whalen) and their escort Sgt. MacDuff (Victor McLaglen), at his British army outpost in India, early in Wee Willie Winkie, 1937.
Wee Willie Winkie (1937) -- (Movie Clip) An Old Scotch Rhyme Just an impressive single take and complete scene by director John Ford, Victor McLaglen as Sergeant MacDuff, and Shirley Temple as young Priscilla, newly arrived at a British base in northern India where her grandfather is in command, in Wee Willie Winkie, 1937.

Bibliography