Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Claude Binyon (October 17, 1905 Chicago, Illinois – February 14, 1978 Glendale, California) was a screenwriter and director. His genres were comedy, musicals, and romances. As a Chicago -based journalist for the Examiner newspaper, he became city editor of the show business trade magazine Variety in the late 1920s.

  2. Claude Binyon (October 17, 1905 Chicago, Illinois – February 14, 1978 Glendale, California) was a screenwriter and director. His genres were comedy, musicals, and romances. On set of I Met Him in Paris (1937), L-R: Claude Binyon (screenwriter), Wesley Ruggles (director), Claudette Colbert, Robert Young, and Melvyn Douglas.

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0083125Claude Binyon - IMDb

    Claude Binyon. Writer: North to Alaska. A writer with powerful leanings towards wit and satire, Claude Binyon started out as a reporter for the Chicago Examiner. Unsuited to being a straight newspaperman, he was quickly fired.

  4. Claude Binyon. Writer: North to Alaska. A writer with powerful leanings towards wit and satire, Claude Binyon started out as a reporter for the Chicago Examiner. Unsuited to being a straight newspaperman, he was quickly fired.

  5. Claude Binyon, Jr. (13 July 1930 – 27 January 2007; age 76) was an assistant director for Star Trek: The Original Series during its third season. He was a member of both the Director's Guild of America (DGA) and the Producer's Guild of America.

  6. Claude Binyon is known as an Screenplay, Writer, Director, Story, Script Consultant, Adaptation, and Additional Dialogue. Some of his work includes Holiday Inn, North to Alaska, Pepe, If I Had a Million, Arizona, Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys!, True Confession, and This Is the Army.

  7. The Saxon Charm is a 1948 American film noir drama film written and directed by Claude Binyon based on the novel of the same name by Frederic Wakeman Sr. and starring Robert Montgomery, Susan Hayward, John Payne and Audrey Totter.