Directing
Harold Young
Born 1897-11-13 · Portland, Oregon, USA · Died 1972-03-03
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Harold Young (November 13, 1897 – March 3, 1972) was an American film director, editor, and occasional actor. Born in Portland, Oregon, Young was active as a film editor from 1923-1934, working first on a series of George O'Hara short subjects under the director Malcolm St. Clair. Young's best-known early directoral assignment is probably The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934), starring Leslie Howard and Merle Oberon, one example of his occasional work in Britain. He died on March 3, 1972 in Beverly Hills, California.
Known for

Kind Hearts and Coronets

The Three Caballeros

The Scarlet Pimpernel

The Private Life of Henry VIII

The Jungle Captive

I'll Remember April

The Mummy's Tomb

The Lie

Woman Trap

Without Regret

The Rise of Catherine the Great

The Frozen Ghost

Swing It Soldier

Let Them Live

I Escaped from the Gestapo

The Storm

Phantoms, Inc.

Sabotage

Juke Box Jenny

The Forgotten Woman

Bachelor Daddy

Carib Gold

Newsboys' Home

Service for Ladies

The Strong Man

Hero for a Day

The Girl from Maxim's

Hi'ya, Chum

My American Wife

The Lash

Code of the Streets

Machine Gun Mama

Her Private Life

Witchcraft

Dreaming Out Loud

Top Speed

The Reckless Hour

Spy Train

Bright Lights

There's One Born Every Minute