Felix E. Feist
{{short description|American film director}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2015}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Felix E. Feist
| image = Felixe E. Feist.jpg
| image_size = 200
| caption = Feist c. 1940
| birthname = Felix Ellison Feist
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1910|02|28}}
| birth_place = New York City, United States
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1965|09|02|1910|02|28}}
| death_place = Encino, California, United States
| occupation = Director, writer
| education = Columbia University, New York
| years_active = 1930–1965
| spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|Dorothy Hart Jacobs|1933|reason=divorce}}|{{marriage|Lisa Howard|reason=divorce}}|{{marriage|Lulu Allen|1955}}}}
| children = 6, including Raymond E. Feist
| father = Felix F. Feist
| relatives = Leo Feist (uncle)
}}
Felix Ellison Feist ({{IPAc-en|f|aɪ|s|t}}; February 28, 1910 – September 2, 1965) was an American film and television director and writer born in New York City. He is probably best remembered for Deluge (1933), for writing and directing the film noirs The Devil Thumbs a Ride (1947) and The Threat (1949), and for helming the second screen version of the Curt Siodmak sci-fi tale Donovan's Brain (1953), which starred Nancy Davis before she became known as Nancy Reagan.
He directed Judy Garland and Deanna Durbin in their first significant screen appearances, in the 1936 short film Every Sunday.{{cite book|last1=Dixon|first1=Wheeler Winston|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sU_6AAAAQBAJ&q=Felix+E.+Feist+death&pg=PA100|title=Death of the Moguls: The End of Classical Hollywood|date=2012|publisher=Rutgers University Press|isbn=978-0813553788|page=100}}
Life
Feist was the son of a MGM sales executive, Felix F. Feist (1884–1936), and nephew of a publishing house magnate, Leo Feist. He was educated at Columbia University. In the late 1920s he found work as a newsreel cameraman, and he was on staff at MGM from 1929 to 1932, directing screen tests and producing one-reel travelogues.{{cite book |last1=Quinlan |first1=David |title=The Illustrated Guide to Film Directors |date=1983 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |page=91 |isbn=0389204080 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ELC0sUmbpwUC&q=Felix+E.+Feist&pg=PP274 |access-date=1 March 2020}}
In 1931, Feist married Dorothy Hart Jacobs.{{Cite web|title=FamilySearch.org|url=https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/L2GT-D9B/felix-ellison-feist-1910-1965|access-date=2021-09-05|website=ancestors.familysearch.org}} The two met in New York, NY, and traveled to Los Angeles together where Feist began his career with MGM. They had two daughters, Marjory and Jacqueline Ellison.
His second marriage was to Lisa Howard, a pioneering female journalist and television news anchor, who briefly had an acting career. She appeared in a few of his films such as The Man Who Cheated Himself, Guilty of Treason, and Donovan's Brain. They had a daughter, Fritzi.
In 1955, he married Lulu Estelle "Barbara" Allen, whose son, Raymond, he adopted. Raymond became a fantasy author.{{Cite web|title=Barbara A. Feist 1916-2010 {{!}} The Official Raymond E. Feist Website|url=http://www.crydee.com/raymond-feist/blog/11313/barbara-a-feist-1916-2010|access-date=2021-09-05|website=www.crydee.com}}
Feist died of cancer on September 2, 1965, at the age of 55. In his obituary, it was reported that he had three sons and three daughters.{{Cite news|date=1965-09-03|title=Obituary for Felix E. Feist (Aged 55)|pages=2|work=Oakland Tribune|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/38792466/obituary-for-felix-e-feist-aged-55/|access-date=2021-09-05}}
Filmography
class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" width="33"|Year ! rowspan="2" width="475"|Film ! colspan="5"|Functioned as |
width=65 |Director
! width=65 |Producer ! width=65 |Screenwriter ! width=65 |Music ! width=65 |Actor |
---|
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1930 | align="left"| The Sea Bat | | | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[I]}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1932 | align="left"| Football Footwork | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1933 | align="left"| Deluge | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1934 | align="left"| My Grandfather's Clock | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[II]}} | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[III]}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Strikes and Spares | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| MGM's March on in 1934-35 with Metro Goldwyn Mayer: Convention of the Century | | | | | {{Yes}} |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1935 | align="left"| Football Teamwork | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=6| 1936 | align="left"| Every Sunday | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Hollywood Extra! | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Hollywood - The Second Step | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| How to Train a Dog | | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[IV]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| How to Vote | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| How to Be a Detective | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=4| 1937 | align="left"| The Romance of Digestion | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[V]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Give Till It Hurts | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Decathlon Champion: The Story of Glenn Morris | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| What Do You Think? | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=2| 1938 | align="left"| The Magician's Daughter | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[VI]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Follow the Arrow | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=7| 1939 | align="left"| Double Diving | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Happily Buried | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[IV]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Prophet Without Honor | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Radio Hams | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Take a Cue | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Set 'em Up | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Let's Talk Turkey | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1940 | align="left"| Pound Foolish | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Golden Gloves | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Dreams | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=2| 1943 | align="left"| All by Myself | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1944 | align="left"| Pardon My Rhythm | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| This Is the Life | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Reckless Age | {{Yes}} | {{Yes}} | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1945 | align="left"| George White's Scandals | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1947 | align="left"| The Devil Thumbs a Ride | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[IV]}} | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1948 | align="left"| The Winner's Circle | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1949 | align="left"| The Threat | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1950 | align="left"| Guilty of Treason | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| The Golden Gloves Story | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[II]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| The Man Who Cheated Himself | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1951 | align="left"| Fixin' Fool | | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[IV]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Tomorrow Is Another Day | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| The Basketball Fix | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=4| 1952 | align="left"| The Big Trees | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| This Woman Is Dangerous | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Babes in Bagdad | | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[VII]}} | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Battles of Chief Pontiac | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=2| 1953 | align="left"| The Man Behind the Gun | {{Yes}} | | | | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Donovan's Brain | {{Yes}} | | {{Yes}}{{ref|Performer|[II]}} | | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1955 | align="left"| Pirates of Tripoli | {{Yes}} | | | | |
{{note|Performer|}} I Credited for the lyrics of "Lo-Lo"
{{note|Performer|}} II Credited for the screenplay
{{note|Performer|}} III Credited as a composer
{{note|Performer|}} IV Credited as a writer
{{note|Performer|}} V Uncredited
{{note|Performer|}} VI Credited for the story
{{note|Performer|}} VII Credited for the original screenplay
Television
class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" width="33"|Year ! colspan=2 width="250"|Title ! colspan="2"|Credited as |
Series
! Episode ! width=65 |Director ! width=65 |Producer |
---|
align="center"
|rowspan=2| 1953 | align="left"| The Revlon Mirror Theater | align="left"| "Lullaby" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| General Electric Theater | align="left"| "The Eye of the Beholder" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1956 | align="left"| Star Stage | align="left"| "The Mountain That Moved" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Telephone Time | align="left"| "The Man in the Black Robe" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| The Jane Wyman Show | align="left"| "Father Forgets” | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1956–1957 | align="left"| Zane Grey Theater | align="left"| 5 episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1957 | align="left"| Highway Patrol | align="left"| "Gem Robbery" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Dr. Christian | align="left"| "Amnesia" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Tombstone Territory | align="left"| unknown episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=3| 1958 | align="left"| Sea Hunt | align="left"| "Sixty Feet Below" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Harbourmaster | align="left"| "Strangers in Town" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| The Texan | align="left"| unknown episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1958–1959 | align="left"| The Californians | align="left"| 5 episodes directed, 3 episodes produced | {{Yes}} | {{Yes}} |
align="center"
|rowspan=2| 1959 | align="left"| The Deputy | align="left"| "Back to Glory" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
| align="left"| Riverboat | align="left"| 2 episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1960 | align="left"| Bonanza | align="left"| "Blood on the Land" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1960–1961 | align="left"| Adventures in Paradise | align="left"| 17 episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1961–1962 | align="left"| Follow the Sun | align="left"| 2 episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1962 | align="left"| Bus Stop | align="left"| "Verdict of 12" | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1964 | align="left"| Peyton Place | align="left"| unknown episodes | | {{Yes}} |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1964–1965 | align="left"| Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea | align="left"| 6 episodes | {{Yes}} | |
align="center"
|rowspan=1| 1965 | align="left"| The Outer Limits | align="left"| "The Probe" | {{Yes}} | |
References
{{Reflist}}
Bibliography
{{Refbegin}}
- {{Cite web|url=http://allmovie.com/artist/felix-e-feist-89501/filmography|title=Felix E. Feist > Filmography|publisher=Allmovie|access-date=December 22, 2009}}
{{Refend}}
External links
- {{IMDb name|0270765}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Felix E. Feist}}
Category:Film directors from New York City
Category:American television directors
Category:American male screenwriters