Mark Sandrich Overview:

Director, Mark Sandrich, was born Mark Rex Goldstein on Oct 26, 1900 in New York City, NY. His best known films include Carefree, Shall We Dance, A Woman Rebels, Follow the Fleet, Top Hat, The Gay Divorcee, So Proudly We Hail and Holiday Inn. Sandrich died at the age of 44 on Mar 4, 1945 in Hollywood, CA and was laid to rest in Home of Peace Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, CA.

MINI BIO:

Mark Sandrich was a pipe-smoking director of comedies and musicals who worked out his pictures in fine detail and made all of the best Astaire-Rogers musicals of the 1930s. A man with an inventive and agile mind, Sandrich had trained as a physicist. At 22, he visited the set of a film being made by his glamorous cousin, Carmel Myers, solved a minor electrical problem there and found himself offered a job as electrics expert and assistant prop-man. Sandrich's warmly extroverted personalty adapted itself naturally to the film world and, by 1926, he was directing two-reeler shorts. After making a couple of features, Sandrich joined RKO in 1930.

Then came the opportunity to direct Fred Astaire's and Ginger Roger's first starring film, The Gay Divorcee. Sandrich became part of a hard-working, hard-thinking team that included Astaire, dance directors Hermes Pan and Dave Gould, cameraman David Abel, art director Carroll Clark and writer Dwight Taylor. It was Sandrich's idea that the musical numbers should flow from dialogue just as Astaire and Rogers flowed as a dance team, and he advanced the 'playback' (filming action, songs and dances to a pre-recored soundtrack) to help his players concentrate on the job in hand.

After a row over the penny pinching on Carefree, Sandrich left RKO and set up his own unit at Paramount, where he later reunited again with Astaire for the film Holiday Inn.

(Source: available at Amazon Quinlan's Film Directors).

HONORS and AWARDS:

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He was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures.

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Mini Tribute: at Work

By Annmarie Gatti on Oct 26, 2013 From Classic Movie Hub Blog

Born October 26, 1901 (?) Director ! Director began his film career working in the prop department, then moved on to directing shorts, and finally to directing feature length films. ?During his 20-year film career, he directed over 75 shorts and films but he is probably be... Read full article


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Mark Sandrich Facts
Died of a heart attack 9 days into directing Blue Skies (1946). He was replaced by Stuart Heisler, though Sandrich's footage is said to still remain in the completed film.

Father of Jay Sandrich

Cousin of producer/director Zion Myers and actress Carmel Myers

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