
Director
Bernard Vorhaus
Born 1904 · New York City, New York, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Bernard Vorhaus (25 December 1904 - 23 November 2000) was an American film director born in New York City. The Harvard University graduate, in addition to directing thirty-two films, was also the mentor to future film director David Lean, some of whose work as a film editor early in his career was on Vorhaus pictures. He worked steadily as a screenwriter in Hollywood while in his 20s but wanted to direct movies. He eventually decided to move to England and began directing B-movies or quota quickies, most notably The Last Journey (1935). After success in England, Vorhaus moved back to the U.S. and began working at Republic Pictures again directing B-movies. Vorhaus was blacklisted in 1951 at HUAC hearings. Vorhaus had already moved to Europe at that time and directed a few minor films while there. He finally returned to England and retired from the film business, founding a business specialising in house renovations. Vorhaus had two children, Gwyn and David, an electronic music pioneer who worked under the name White Noise. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bernard Vorhaus, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directed

Roman Holiday
Assistant Director · 1953

The Nun's Story
Assistant Director · 1959

The Barefoot Contessa
Assistant Director · 1954

War and Peace
Assistant Director · 1956

Solomon and Sheba
Assistant Director · 1959

The Amazing Mr. X
Director · 1948

Money for Speed
Director · 1933

Luxury Girls
Director · 1952
Learn and Live
Director · 1943

The Story of William Tell
First Assistant Director · 1953
Dark World
Director · 1935

The Ghost Camera
Director · 1933

Fisherman's Wharf
Director · 1939

The Last Journey
Director · 1935
On Thin Ice
Director · 1933

Tenth Avenue Kid
Director · 1938

Mr. District Attorney in the Carter Case
Director · 1941

Resisting Enemy Interrogation
Director · 1944



