John Paddy Carstairs
John Paddy Carstairs | |
---|---|
Born | John Keys 11 May 1910 |
Died | 12 December 1970 | (aged 60)
Occupation | film director |
John Paddy Carstairs (born John Keys; 11 May 1910, in London – 12 December 1970, in London) was a British film director (1933–62) and television director (1962–64), usually of light-hearted subject matter.[1] He was also a comic novelist and painter.[2]
Biography
The son of actor Nelson Keys, Carstairs changed his name in order to avoid the appearance of nepotism.[3] He directed 37 films in total. He had a long association with the character of Simon Templar (the character's creator, Leslie Charteris, dedicated the 1963 book, The Saint in the Sun to Carstairs). Aside from directing the 1939 Saint film, The Saint in London, he also directed two episodes of The Saint in the 1960s, making him the only individual (other than Charteris himself) to be connected to both the Hollywood film and British series of The Saint. Carstairs directed many British comedies including many of Norman Wisdom's films.[4]
Death
Carstairs died of heart attack on 12 December 1970, aged 60.
Select bibliography
- Honest Injun (1942)
- Gremlins in the Cabbage Patch (1944)
- Hadn't We the Gaiety (1945)
- Kaleidoscope and a Jaundiced Eye (1946)
- Solid! Said the Earl (1948)
Selected filmography
- A Honeymoon Adventure (1931, screenwriter)
- The Water Gipsies (1932, screenwriter)
- Nine till Six (1932, screenwriter)
- The Impassive Footman (1932, screenwriter)
- Love on the Spot (1932, screenwriter)
- It's a Boy (1933, screenwriter)
- Paris Plane (1933)
- Boomerang (1934)
- Gay Love (1934)
- It's a Cop (1934, screenwriter)
- Lost in the Legion (1934, screenwriter)
- Falling in Love (1935)
- While Parents Sleep (1935, screenwriter)
- Two's Company (1936, screenwriter)
- The Captain's Table (1936, screenwriter)
- Holiday's End (1937)
- Double Exposures (1937)
- Night Ride (1937)
- Missing, Believed Married (1937)
- Incident in Shanghai (1938)
- Lassie from Lancashire (1938)
- A Yank at Oxford (1938, screenwriter)
- The Saint in London (1939)
- The Lambeth Walk (1939, screenwriter)
- All Hands (1940)
- Meet Maxwell Archer (1940)
- Now You're Talking (1940)
- The Second Mr. Bush (1940)
- Dangerous Comment (1940)
- Telefootlers (1941)
- He Found a Star (1941)
- Spare a Copper (1941)
- Dancing with Crime (1947)
- Sleeping Car to Trieste (1948)
- Fools Rush In (1949)
- The Chiltern Hundreds (1949)
- Tony Draws a Horse (1950)
- Talk of a Million (1951)
- Made in Heaven (1952)
- Treasure Hunt (1952)
- Little Big Shot (1952, screenwriter)
- Top of the Form (1953)
- Trouble in Store (1953)
- Up to His Neck (1954)
- The Crowded Day (1954, story)
- One Good Turn (1955)
- Man of the Moment (1955)
- Jumping for Joy (1956)
- Up in the World (1956)
- Just My Luck (1957)
- The Big Money (1958)
- The Square Peg (1959)
- Tommy the Toreador (1959)
- And the Same to You (1960, screenwriter)
- Sands of the Desert (1960)
- A Weekend with Lulu (1961)
- The Devil's Agent (1962)
References
- ^ "John Paddy Carstairs". BFI.
- ^ "Austria Develops its Own School of Painting". The Times. 4 May 1960. p. 16.
At the same gallery that prolific writer and painter, Mr. John Paddy Carstairs, fills a large room with his gay Mediterranean scenes...
- ^ "Obituary - John Paddy Carstairs". The Herald. Glasgow. 14 December 1970. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
- ^ "BFI Screenonline: Carstairs, John Paddy (1910-1970) Biography". screenonline.org.uk.
External links
- Pages with script errors
- 1910 births
- 1970 deaths
- People educated at Alleyn Court School
- Writers from London
- 20th-century English painters
- English male painters
- English autobiographers
- English film directors
- English film producers
- German-language film directors
- Royal Navy personnel of World War II
- English male non-fiction writers
- 20th-century English male writers
- 20th-century English businesspeople
- 20th-century English male artists