- Source: Victor Heerman
Victor Eugene Heerman (August 27, 1893 – November 3, 1977) was an English-American film director, screenwriter, and film producer. After writing and directing short comedies for Mack Sennett, Heerman teamed with his wife Sarah Y. Mason to win the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay of Louisa May Alcott's novel Little Women in 1933. He is probably best-known to film buffs as director of the Marx Brothers' second film, Animal Crackers (1930). He and Mason were the first screenwriters involved in early, never-produced scripts commissioned for what would become MGM's Pride and Prejudice.
Life and career
= As director
== As writer
=References
External links
Victor Heerman at IMDb
Victor Heerman papers at the Margaret Herrick Library
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Don't Ever Marry
- Magnificent Obsession (film 1935)
- Little Women (film 1933)
- The Age of Innocence (film 1934)
- Paramount on Parade
- A Girl, a Guy and a Gob
- Golden Boy (film 1939)
- Stella Dallas (film 1937)
- Victor Heerman
- Little Women (1933 film)
- Break of Hearts
- Stars and bars
- Little Women (1949 film)
- Magnificent Obsession (1935 film)
- Confidence man
- Marx Brothers
- Animal Crackers (1930 film)
- Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay