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  1. Jack Conway (parfois crédité John Conway) est un réalisateur, acteur et producteur américain né le 17 juillet 1887 à Graceville dans le Minnesota et mort le 11 octobre 1952 à Los Angeles dans le quartier de Pacific Palisades en Californie (États-Unis).

    • 11 octobre 1952 (à 65 ans)Los Angeles
    • Américaine
    • 17 juillet 1887Graceville, Minnesota
    • Hugh Ryan Conway
  2. Jack Conway was an American film director, producer and actor who worked in Hollywood from 1909 to 1948. He directed many popular and acclaimed films, such as A Tale of Two Cities, Libeled Lady and Boom Town, but never received an Oscar nomination.

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0176699Jack Conway - IMDb

    Jack Conway (1887-1952) was a Hollywood filmmaker who worked for MGM and directed stars like Clark Gable and Charles Laughton. He also acted in silent films and was a stage actor before joining the movie industry.

    • January 1, 1
    • Graceville, Minnesota, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Pacific Palisades, California, USA
  4. Acteur de théâtre et de cinéma, Conway se laisse orienter par D. W. Griffith vers l'écriture. En 1913, il devient cinéaste avec The Old Armchair.

    • Réalisateur/Metteur en Scène
    • 17 juillet 1887Graceville, Minnesota, USA
    • 11 octobre 1952
    • Jack Conway
    • Overview
    • Early work
    • Heyday of the 1930s
    • The 1940s

    Jack Conway , (born July 17, 1887, Graceville, Minnesota, U.S.—died October 11, 1952, Pacific Palisades, California), American filmmaker who worked primarily for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), where he became known as a reliable and efficient director.

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

    Conway was a high-school dropout and worked as a railroad labourer before pursuing an acting career. In 1908 he appeared in the first of more than 80 short movies, and he later acted in several feature-length films, including Macbeth (1916). During this time, Conway also began directing, and his first assignment was the short film Her Indian Hero (1912).

    In 1913 Conway directed his first feature-length film, The Old Armchair, and by 1917 he was making as many as eight movies a year. Conway worked for a number of studios before joining MGM in 1926. His early notable credits included Brown of Harvard (1926), a well-reviewed film about college life; Bringing Up Father (1928); and While the City Sleeps (1928), a gangster drama starring Lon Chaney. In 1928 Conway made MGM’s first sound picture, Alias Jimmy Valentine, with William Haines and Lionel Barrymore. The following year he directed Joan Crawford in Our Modern Maidens, the actress’s last silent film, and Untamed (1929), her first talkie.

    Conway began to hit his stride in 1932, making Arsène Lupin, with Lionel and John Barrymore, and But the Flesh Is Weak, with Montgomery. The hit comedy Red-Headed Woman (1932), featuring a provocative pre-Code script by Anita Loos, established Jean Harlow as a star. Conway again worked with the actress on the popular The Girl from Missouri (1934). His success continued with Viva Villa! (1934), starring Wallace Beery as the legendary revolutionary Pancho Villa. Conway inherited the biopic after Howard Hawks was fired, and both the film and Ben Hecht’s screenplay were nominated for Academy Awards. The Gay Bride (1934) was a disappointment, despite the presence of Carole Lombard, but the comedy One New York Night (1935) received generally positive reviews.

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    In 1935 Conway made arguably his finest film, A Tale of Two Cities, an adaptation of Charles Dickens’s classic novel. The lavish David O. Selznick production featured Ronald Colman as the heroic Sydney Carton, Basil Rathbone as the aristocrat Marquis St. Evrémonde, and Blanche Yurka as the villainous Madame Defarge. Libeled Lady (1936) was one of the best comedies of the decade, a cleverly plotted romp with Harlow, Spencer Tracy, William Powell, and Myrna Loy all in peak form. It received an Oscar nomination for best picture, and Conway was praised for his agile direction.

    In 1940 Conway had a major box-office success with the lively Boom Town, which chronicles two oilmen (Gable and Tracy) as they compete in business and romance; Lamarr and Claudette Colbert also starred in the drama. Conway had another hit with Love Crazy (1941), a deft comedy about a couple (Powell and Loy) whose marriage becomes strained after the wife’s mother comes for a visit. Honky Tonk (1941) cast Gable as a gambler romancing a judge’s daughter (Lana Turner), and Powell and Lamarr played newlyweds whose marriage is threatened by a blackmailer in the suspenseful Crossroads (1942). After the forgettable Assignment in Brittany (1943), Conway helmed Dragon Seed (1944), an adaptation of Pearl S. Buck’s novel, with Katharine Hepburn miscast as the Chinese heroine repelling Japanese invaders.

    High Barbaree paired Van Johnson and June Allyson in a standard wartime romance, but The Hucksters (both 1947) was a satirical drama in which Gable starred as a no-nonsense advertising executive, with Deborah Kerr as his object of desire and Sydney Greenstreet as a loathsome client. Finally, there was Julia Misbehaves (1948), a playful comedy with Pidgeon and Greer Garson as the bickering parents of a bride-to-be (Elizabeth Taylor). Conway, who suffered from illness in the last years of his life, subsequently retired from directing.

    • Michael Barson
  5. Découvrez tous les films de la filmographie de Jack Conway. De ses débuts jusqu'à la fin de ses 23 ans de carrière.

  6. Jack Conway was a competent and efficient director who worked under the studio system of MGM. He directed four Oscar nominees, including A Tale of Two Cities and Libeled Lady, and starred in one of the earliest Hollywood movies.