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John Brahm

John Brahm
John Brahm.jpg
Born Hans Brahm
(1893-08-17)August 17, 1893
Hamburg, German Empire
Died October 13, 1982(1982-10-13) (aged 89)
Malibu, California, U.S.
Occupation Film director, television director

John Brahm (August 17, 1893 – October 13, 1982) was a film and television director. His films include The Undying Monster (1942), The Lodger (1944), Hangover Square (1945), The Locket (1946), The Brasher Doubloon (1947), and the 3D horror film, The Mad Magician (1954).

Brahm was born Hans Brahm in Hamburg, the son of actor Ludwig Brahm and the nephew of theatrical impresario Otto Brahm.

He started his career in the theatre as an actor. After World War I he shuttled between Vienna, Berlin and Paris, eventually becoming a director, and was appointed resident director for acting troupes at the Deutsches Theater and the Lessing Theater, both in Berlin.

With the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany, Brahm left the country, first moving to England. After working as a movie production supervisor he got a chance to direct his first film Broken Blossoms in 1936, a remake of D.W. Griffith's 1919 film by the same name.

He moved to the US the next year where he began his Hollywood career at Columbia Pictures and eventually moved to 20th Century-Fox. He directed the ill-fated Let Us Live, the true story of two men wrongly convicted of murder who were almost executed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Authorities there were embarrassed by the incident and put pressure on the studio to cancel the film. The studio made the film nonetheless, but quietly, with a small budget.


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