Actor
Ranald MacDougall
Born 1915 · Schenectady, New York, USA
Ranald MacDougall (March 10, 1915 – December 12, 1973) was an American screenwriter who scripted such films as Mildred Pierce (1945), The Unsuspected (1947), June Bride (1948), and The Naked Jungle (1954), and shared screenwriting credit for 1963's Cleopatra. He also directed a number of films, including 1957's Man on Fire with Bing Crosby and 1959's The World, the Flesh and the Devil, both of which featured actress Inger Stevens. Born in Schenectady, New York, MacDougall came from an impoverished working-class family. His father was a crane operator and union organizer, whose frequent strikes forced MacDougall to leave school before finishing the eighth grade to help support the family. He held a variety of odd jobs and during the Great Depression found work as an usher at Radio City Music Hall. He saw greater potential across the street in Rockefeller Center, where he was hired as a page, working alongside Gregory Peck. As a page MacDougall had the opportunity to closely observe the radio industry, and in his spare time he wrote and submitted scripts to his boss under pseudonyms, and was finally hired as a staff writer for NBC Radio despite being underage at the time.
Directed
Writing

Cleopatra
Screenplay · 1963

Mildred Pierce
Screenplay · 1945

We're No Angels
Original Film Writer · 1989

We're No Angels
Screenplay · 1955

The Breaking Point
Writer · 1950

Objective, Burma!
Screenplay · 1945

Possessed
Screenplay · 1947

The Naked Jungle
Screenplay · 1954

Dark of the Sun
Screenplay · 1968

The World, the Flesh and the Devil
Screenplay · 1959

The Mountain
Screenplay · 1956

The Unsuspected
Screenplay · 1947




