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Daniel Birt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daniel Birt
Born(1907-06-23)23 June 1907
Died15 May 1955(1955-05-15) (aged 47)
London, England
Occupation(s)Film director and editor
Years active1932 – 1955

Daniel Birt (23 June 1907 – 15 May 1955) was an English film director and editor.[1]

Career

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Birt began his career as an editor in 1932 with an assistant credit on The Lucky Number and went on to edit 12 films during the 1930s.[1] World War II brought a career hiatus and Birt didn't return to the film industry until the late 1940s.

Having worked as supervising editor on Green Fingers and The Ghosts of Berkeley Square, he was given his first directorial assignment in 1947 - The Three Weird Sisters, a pseudo-Gothic tale set in a decaying Welsh mansion.[2] This was followed in 1948 by No Room at the Inn (co-scripted, like the previous film, by Dylan Thomas), a powerful and unsparing film dealing with child cruelty in an evacuee household during the war.[3]

Birt directed a further ten films in the crime/thriller genre, mostly second features,[4] before his early death, aged 47, in May 1955. He also directed three episodes of the first series of the ITV television drama The Adventures of Robin Hood, which were broadcast posthumously in late 1955. Birt's final film, the Anglo-Danish co-production Laughing in the Sunshine, was also released after his death, entering UK general release on 2 January 1956.[5]

Selected filmography

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Editor

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Director

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Producer

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Daniel Birt". Archived from the original on 5 May 2016.
  2. ^ Jonathan Rigby, English Gothic: A Century of Horror Cinema (3rd edition), pages 37/38, Reynolds & Hearn 2004
  3. ^ "No Room at the Inn (1948) - Daniel Birt - Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related - AllMovie".
  4. ^ Steve Chibnall, Brian McFarlane, The British 'B' Film, page 149, BFI/Palgrave Macmillan 2009
  5. ^ F Maurice Speed, Film Review 1956-1957, page 85, Macdonald & Co 1956
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