George P. Quigley

George P. Quigley

Known for: Directing

Biography

George P. Quigley was a director and producer of films in the United States and Cuba. The National Museum of African American History and Culture includes coverage of two films he directed and other sources identify several more. Quigley was the producer and director for three films produced by Century Productions during the period from mid 1946 to early 1948: Mistaken Identity, Murder with Music and Bob Howard's House Party. He was also involved with Super Sleuth produced by Consolidated National Films in 1944.He produced Sarumba, which was thought to be the first feature-length film produced in Havana by an American company. Five weeks of shooting for the film concluded in April 1947. Quigley used Havana's National Studio, finding that labor costs were about half of what they were in the United States. His report on the industry conditions in Havana was covered by Variety, and the U.S. consul planned to release a guidebook based on his experience. As of October that year, Century Productions planned to close a deal for the film, and planned to film a second movie in Havana. The film's release by Eagle-Lion Films was announced in October 1949. It was given a "B" rating by the National Legion of Decency, indicating that it was "morally objectionable in part." It received some less than favorable reviews. A theater in Albany, New York withdrew the film shortly after it was released, along with The Devil in the Flesh, a film protested by the National League of Decency.

Ratings

Average 5.35
Based on 181 movie and tv ratings over time
1941
1947
1950

Information

Known For
Directing

Gender
Male


This article uses material from Wikipedia.
  • George P. Quigley
    George P. Quigley
  • Filmography
  • Information
Social Media
X
Facebook
Pinterest
Telegram
Download
iOS Application
Made in Ukraine 🇺🇦
Copyright © MovieFit 2018 – 2024
All external content remains the property of its respective owner.