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Maurice Elvey(1887-1967)

  • Director
  • Producer
  • Writer
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Maurice Elvey
Maurice Elvey was born in Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England, the oldest son of William Clarence Folkard, an inspecting engineer, and Sarah Anna Seward Folkard (formerly Pearce). He never had a formal education, and was working on the streets of London by the age of nine after having run away from home. For a time he worked as a page boy in the Hyde Park Hotel, and a lucky encounter with a wealthy American set him on the road to a career in first the theatre and then in films. It was while in New York when working as a stage producer that he saw his first film, The Flying Dutchman (1923). This made such an impression on him that when he came back to England he was determined to produce and direct films; thus began a career spanning 44 years, during which time he made over 300 feature films and innumerable shorts. Amongst the "firsts" that Maurice Elvey can claim as a director are: Gaumont's first talking film (High Treason (1929)) and the first British colour film Sons of the Sea (1939)). Carol Reed and David Lean began their distinguished careers in film by working for him, and he directed Gracie Fields in her first movie, Sally in Our Alley (1931). Maurice Elvey was the older brother of Fred V. Merrick, and during the 1920s and 1930s they worked on a number of films together. In May 1996 the world premiere of a long-lost film about David Lloyd George, directed by Elvey, took place in Cardiff more than 70 years later than scheduled. The three-hour film was suppressed on the eve of its release under circumstances that have still not been fully explained. The film was acclaimed by cinema historians as a milestone in film making, and it is believed that had it been released in 1918, as originally planned, it may well have changed the course of British cinema.

Maurice Elvey was married three times. His first marriage took place on 31st December 1910 to Adeline Maud Charlton Preston (aka actress 'Philippa Preston'. This marriage ended in divorce. He then married Florence Hill Clarke (a sculptor) on 2nd February 1916. This marriage, too, ended in divorce. On 13th January 1923 he married Isabella Reed (aka actress Isobel Elsom), but this marriage also ended in divorce. As Elvey's niece and god-daughter I was privileged to unveil a plaque in April 1997 at the Green Dragon Museum, Stockton-on-Tees as part of the Centenary of Cinema Celebrations.
BornNovember 11, 1887
DiedAugust 28, 1967(79)
BornNovember 11, 1887
DiedAugust 28, 1967(79)
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Known for

The Glad Eye
  • Director
  • 1927
Fine Feathers
  • Director
  • 1915
The Phantom Fiend (1932)
The Phantom Fiend
5.6
  • Director
  • 1932
Fanny Hawthorne (1927)
Fanny Hawthorne
7.3
  • Director
  • 1927

Credits

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IMDbPro

Director

  • White Hunter (1957)
    White Hunter
  • Terror! Theatre (1957)
    Terror! Theatre
  • Adrienne Corri, Lisa Gastoni, and Thorley Walters in Second Fiddle (1957)
    Second Fiddle
  • Stars in Your Eyes (1956)
    Stars in Your Eyes
  • Dry Rot (1956)
    Dry Rot
  • Johnny Brandon, Vera Day, Fred Emney, Davy Kaye, Freddie Mills, and Cardew Robinson in Fun at St Fanny's (1955)
    Fun at St Fanny's
  • Room in the House
  • You Lucky People! (1955)
    You Lucky People!
  • The Harassed Hero (1954)
    The Harassed Hero
  • Wishing Well (1954)
    Wishing Well
  • Petula Clark and Wilfred Pickles in The Gay Dog (1954)
    The Gay Dog
  • What Every Woman Wants (1954)
    What Every Woman Wants
  • Diana Dors in Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary (1953)
    Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary
  • House of Blackmail (1953)
    House of Blackmail
  • Diana Dors in The Great Game (1953)
    The Great Game

Producer

  • Beware of Pity (1946)
    Beware of Pity
  • Medal for the General (1944)
    Medal for the General
  • Sword of Honour
  • Madeleine Carroll in School for Scandal (1930)
    School for Scandal
  • A Sister to Assist 'Er
  • Smashing Through
  • What Money Can Buy
  • Palais de danse (1928)
    Palais de danse
  • The Physician
  • Sailors Don't Care (1928)
    Sailors Don't Care
  • The Arcadians
  • Gladys Jennings, Desmond Roberts, and John Stuart in A Woman in Pawn (1927)
    A Woman in Pawn
  • The Flight Commander (1927)
    The Flight Commander
  • A Sister to Assist 'Er
  • The Glad Eye

Writer

  • Stars in Your Eyes (1956)
    Stars in Your Eyes
  • Tom Conway, Eunice Gayson, and Elizabeth Sellars in The Last Man to Hang (1956)
    The Last Man to Hang
  • Johnny Brandon, Vera Day, Fred Emney, Davy Kaye, Freddie Mills, and Cardew Robinson in Fun at St Fanny's (1955)
    Fun at St Fanny's
  • Sons of the Sea (1939)
    Sons of the Sea
  • Margaret Lockwood in Melody and Romance (1937)
    Melody and Romance
  • Laurence Olivier and Nora Swinburne in Potiphar's Wife (1931)
    Potiphar's Wife
  • The Glad Eye
  • Isobel Elsom and Eille Norwood in The Sign of Four (1923)
    The Sign of Four
  • Esther
  • Desperation
  • Fine Feathers
  • A Will of Her Own
  • Maria Marten, or: The Murder in the Red Barn

Personal details

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    • November 11, 1887
    • Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England, UK
    • August 28, 1967
    • Brighton, East Sussex, England, UK(undisclosed)
    • Isobel ElsomJanuary 13, 1923 - ? (divorced)
  • Other works
    Stage: Appeared (Broadway debut) in "The Scarlet Pimpernel" on Broadway. Written by Baroness Emmuska Orczy and Montagu Barstow. Directed by Fred Terry. Knickerbocker Theatre: 24 Oct 1910-Nov 1910 (closing date unknown/40 performances). Cast: J. Carter-Edwards, Malcolm Cherry, Guy Cunningham, J.L. Dale, George Dudley, Walter Edwin, Frederick Groves, Horace Hodges, Alfred Kendrick, Philip Merivale [Broadway debut], Julia Neilson (as "Marguerite"), E. Eastern Pickering, Fred Terry (as "Sir Percy Blakeney"), H.H. Wright, Norman Yates. Produced by Klaw & Erlanger.
  • Publicity listings
    • 6 Articles

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    He directed Basil Rathbones first two films, The Fruitful Vine (1921) and Innocent (1921).

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