Joseph Pevney
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Birthplace:
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Joseph Pevney may not be the first name that one thinks of in terms of record-breaking movies, but the actor-turned-director -- who had a pretty considerable stage career before turning exclusively to the movies in the second half of the 1940s -- was responsible for some of the highest-grossing movies in the first four decades of Universal Pictures; and between and around them, he was one of the most reliable filmmakers in Hollywood, a touch he didn't lose when he jumped to television in the second half of the 1960s. He was a director with a widely recognized knack for making something substantial out of very little script, which proved a priceless gift on both the large and small screens. Joseph Pevney was born in Manhattan in 1911, the son of a watchmaker and amateur songwriter. He was a natural performer and made his debut at age 12, in 1924, as a boy soprano, in vaudeville. In those days, kid acts had a novelty value, but among the practitioners were a few genuine prodigies who had what it took to extend their career into adulthood -- Alfred Newman was one on the piano, and Joe Pevney was one as an actor. He hated vaudeville and intended to become a doctor, even becoming a pre-med student at New York University, but by then he couldn't escape the lure of the theater. He was soon devoting his energy to directing varsity dramatics and before graduation ever became an issue, he was an assistant stage manager and bit player on Broadway. His first professional appearance on stage as a serious actor was in Johnny Johnson, and he subsequently appeared in such major plays as The World We Make, Key Largo, Golden Boy, and Native Son. Pevney juggled his acting and directing work throughout the 1930s, and it was while directing in a summer theater in Iveryton, CT, in 1939 that he first met Mitzi Green, an actress who'd been working from an even earlier age and had lately made her Broadway debut. They were married in 1942 and had two children who they raised in a successful bi-coastal life, keeping a home in the San Fernando Valley and one in Flushing, Queens. Pevney's career was interrupted by World War II, which took him to Europe as a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army Signal Corps. He was also in the 1944 revival of Counselor at Law on Broadway starring Paul Muni, playing Harry Becker, the injured, wild-eyed communist agitator (played by Vincent Sherman in the movie). His last major stage appearance was in Home of the Brave, in which he played Coney. Pevney made his big-screen debut in 1946, in Edwin L. Marin's crime thriller Nocturne starring George Raft and Lynn Bari, and the following year played a major co-starring role with John Garfield and Lilli Palmer in Robert Rossen's Body and Soul (1947). He was in a couple of more very good movies, including Jules Dassin's Thieves' Highway (1949) and his own Outside the Wall (1950), before he gave up acting permanently in favor of directing. He was signed up at Universal and proved to be a dual-threat director, very good with actors -- obviously as a result of his years of experience on stage -- and yet was also well able to set up and bring off an action scene on budget and excitingly. Pevney worked with such future stars as Rock Hudson (whom he initially did not want) in the movie The Iron Man, Mamie van Doren, and Frank Sinatra when he was still trying to prove that he could be a serious actor, and did well with and by all of them. He was equally good at drama, comedy, thrillers, and costume epics, but he seemed to have special success -- in terms of the acting that resulted -- working with Tony Curtis (in Six Bridges to Cross) and Jeff Chandler. He and Chandler, with George Nader and Richard Boone in supporting roles, proved an unbeatable combination in Away All Boats, which became the highest grossing movie in the history of the studio up to that time. He followed that grim, intense war drama up barely a year later with a gentle, lyrical, romantic, and seductive Tammy and the Bachelor
Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
No Score Yet | Undercover Girl |
|
— | 2013 |
No Score Yet | Contract for Life: The S.A.D.D. Story |
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— | 1985 |
No Score Yet | Mysterious Island of Beautiful Women |
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— | 1979 |
No Score Yet | The Night of the Grizzly |
|
— | 1966 |
No Score Yet | The Plunderers |
|
— | 1960 |
No Score Yet | Cash McCall |
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— | 1960 |
No Score Yet | The Crowded Sky |
|
— | 1960 |
No Score Yet | Torpedo Run |
|
— | 1958 |
No Score Yet | Appointment with a Shadow |
|
— | 1957 |
89% | Man of a Thousand Faces |
|
— | 1957 |
No Score Yet | Tammy and the Bachelor |
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— | 1957 |
No Score Yet | Istanbul |
|
— | 1957 |
No Score Yet | Away All Boats |
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— | 1956 |
No Score Yet | Female on the Beach |
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— | 1955 |
No Score Yet | Foxfire |
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— | 1955 |
No Score Yet | Six Bridges to Cross |
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— | 1955 |
No Score Yet | 3 Ring Circus (Jerrico, the Wonder Clown) |
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— | 1954 |
No Score Yet | It Happens Every Thursday |
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— | 1953 |
No Score Yet | Meet Danny Wilson |
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— | 1952 |
No Score Yet | Flesh and Fury |
|
— | 1952 |
No Score Yet | The Strange Door |
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— | 1951 |
No Score Yet | Shakedown |
|
— | 1950 |
100% | Thieves' Highway |
|
— | 1949 |
100% | The Street with No Name |
|
— | 1948 |
92% | Body and Soul |
|
— | 1947 |
No Score Yet | Nocturne |
|
— | 1946 |
TV
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|
No Score Yet |
Little House on the Prairie
1974-1983
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No Score Yet |
The Incredible Hulk
1978-1982
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|
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No Score Yet |
The Rockford Files
1974-1980
|
|
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No Score Yet |
Fantasy Island
1978-1984
|
|
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No Score Yet |
Marcus Welby, M.D.
1969-1976
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|
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No Score Yet |
Bonanza
1959-1973
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No Score Yet |
Cade's County
1971-1972
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No Score Yet |
The High Chaparral
1967-1971
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80% |
Star Trek
1966-1969
|
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No Score Yet |
Mission: Impossible
1966-1973
|
|
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No Score Yet |
The Fugitive
1963-1967
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83% |
The Munsters
1964-1966
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No Score Yet |
Bewitched
1964-1972
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No Score Yet |
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
1962-1965
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No Score Yet |
Ben Casey
1961-1966
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Quotes from Joseph Pevney's Characters
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