
Director
Richard Quine
Born 1920 · Detroit, Michigan, USA
Richard Quine (November 12, 1920 – June 10, 1989) was an American stage, film, and radio actor and film director. Quine was born in Detroit. He made his Broadway debut in the Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein II musical Very Warm for May in 1939 and appeared in My Sister Eileen the following year. His screen acting credits include The World Moves On (1934), Jane Eyre (1934), Babes on Broadway (1941), My Sister Eileen (1942), and Words and Music (1948), among others. At MGM he became friends with Mickey Rooney and later directed several of Rooney's films. During World War II, Quine served in the United States Coast Guard, He married actress Susan Peters in November 1943. After the war, he tried directing, first as co-producer and co-director on Leather Gloves (1948), with William Asher, before his first solo effort on the musical The Sunny Side of the Street (1951). His directing credits include Pushover (1954), My Sister Eileen (1955), Operation Mad Ball (1957), Bell, Book and Candle (1958), Strangers When We Meet (1960), and The World of Suzie Wong (1960). He also produced such films as the comedy Paris, When It Sizzles (1964) with Audrey Hepburn and William Holden, How to Murder Your Wife (1965) with Jack Lemmon, Synanon (1966), and Hotel (1967). By the late 1960s, his output fell, and in the 1970s, Quine made only a few disappointing films. Turning to television, he had in the 1954-1955 season created with Blake Edwards the first Mickey Rooney series, The Mickey Rooney Show: Hey, Mulligan, which aired on NBC. Quine later directed three episodes of Peter Falk's Columbo, including Dagger Of The Mind, an episode set in Britain which some UK fans of that series regard as an embarrassment. He also worked on, another, much less successful NBC Mystery Movie series, McCoy starring Tony Curtis. His final work was on The Prisoner of Zenda (1979) with Peter Sellers, although he was briefly part of the crew for another Sellers film, The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu (1980), for which he received no credit. His first wife, whom he married on 11 July 1943, was actress Susan Peters, who was crippled from the waist down on a hunting trip with Quine in 1945 when her 22-caliber rifle accidentally discharged. The bullet lodged in her spine. On 17 April 1946, the couple adopted an infant, whom they named Timothy Richard Quine. They divorced in 1948, and she died of the effects of anorexia nervosa in 1952, at age 31. Quine was later engaged to Kim Novak, but the two did not marry. He also married actresses Barbara Bushman (with whom he had two daughters, Katherine and Victoria), Fran Jeffries, and Diana Balfour. After an extended period of depression and poor health, Quine committed suicide by shooting himself in Los Angeles on June 10, 1989. A rifle injury eerily reminiscent of his first wife's hunting accident. Description above from the Wikipedia article Richard Quine, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directed

Columbo
Director · 1971

Bell, Book and Candle
Director · 1958

Paris When It Sizzles
Director · 1964

How to Murder Your Wife
Director · 1965

Sex and the Single Girl
Director · 1964

Pushover
Director · 1954

The Notorious Landlady
Director · 1962

It Happened to Jane
Director · 1959

The World of Suzie Wong
Director · 1960

Strangers When We Meet
Director · 1960

My Sister Eileen
Director · 1955

The Solid Gold Cadillac
Director · 1956

Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder
Director · 1952

The Awful Sleuth
Director · 1951

Operation Mad Ball
Director · 1957

So This Is Paris
Director · 1954

Drive a Crooked Road
Director · 1954

The Prisoner of Zenda
Director · 1979
Acting

Cavalcade
Undetermined Secondary Role (uncredited) · 1933

For Me and My Gal
Danny Hayden (uncredited) · 1942

My Sister Eileen
Frank Lippincott · 1942

Counsellor at Law
Richard Dwight Jr. · 1933

Babes on Broadway
Morton Hammond · 1941

The Wackiest Ship in the Army
Narrator (uncredited) · 1960

Command Decision
Maj. George Rockton · 1948

King of the Underworld
Medical Student (uncredited) · 1939

Stand by for Action
Ensign Lindsay · 1942

Twiggy
(archival footage) · 2025

Words and Music
Ben Feiner Jr. · 1948

The Cockeyed Miracle
Howard Bankson · 1946

The Clay Pigeon
Ted Niles · 1949

Dinky
Jackie Shaw · 1935

A Dog of Flanders
Pieter Vanderkloot · 1935

Rookie Fireman
Johnny Truitt · 1950

No Sad Songs for Me
Brownie · 1950

Tish
Theodore 'Ted' Bowser · 1942

Dr. Gillespie's New Assistant
Dr. Dennis Lindsey · 1942

We've Never Been Licked
Brad Craig · 1943

Jane Eyre
John Reed · 1934

The Flying Missile
Amn. Hank Weber · 1950

Little Men
Ned · 1934

The World Changes
Young Richard (uncredited) · 1933




