
Director
Rowland Brown
Born 1900 · Canton, Ohio, U.S.
Rowland Brown (November 6, 1900 – May 6, 1963), born Chauncey Rowland Brown in Canton, Ohio, was an American screenwriter and film director, whose career as a director ended in the early 1930s after he started many more films than he finished. He walked out of State's Attorney (1932), starring John Barrymore. He was abruptly replaced as director of The Scarlet Pimpernel. As a writer, he was credited with twenty or so films including two Academy Award nominations, one in the 11th Academy Awards for Best Original Story Angels with Dirty Faces and another in the 4th Academy Awards for Doorway to Hell.
Writing

Angels with Dirty Faces
Story · 1938

Kansas City Confidential
Story · 1952

What Price Hollywood?
Writer · 1932

Fugitives
Writer · 1929

Widow's Might
Writer · 1935

Johnny Apollo
Screenplay · 1940

The Doorway to Hell
Story · 1930

Quick Millions
Screenplay · 1931

Nocturne
Story · 1946

The Devil Is a Sissy
Story · 1936

Blood Money
Writer · 1933

Hell's Highway
Writer · 1932