Oscar Apfel


Oscar C. Apfel was an American film actor, director, screenwriter, and producer. He appeared in more than 160 films between 1913 and 1939, and also directed 94 films between 1911 and 1927.

Biography

Apfel was born in Cleveland, Ohio. After a number of years in commerce, he decided to adopt the stage as a profession. He secured his first professional engagement in 1900, in his hometown. He rose rapidly and soon held a position as director and producer, and was at the time noted as being the youngest stage director in America. He spent 11 years on the stage on Broadway, then joined the Edison Manufacturing Company. Apfel first directed for Thomas A. Edison, Inc. in 1911–12, where he made the innovative short film The Passer-By. He also did some experimental work at Edison's laboratory in Orange, on the Edison Talking Pictures devices.

Lasky

When Apfel left the Edison company, he joined Reliance-Majestic Studios, remaining with them 18 months. In 1913, he became one of two main directors for the Jesse Laskyn Feature Play Company, the other being Cecil B. DeMille. All the first Lasky pictures were produced under his direction. Among these were the notable successes The Squaw Man, Brewster's Millions, The Master Mind, The Only Son, The Ghost Breaker, The Man on the Box, The Circus Man, and Cameo Kirby.
Apfel's directorial collaboration with DeMille was a crucial element in the development of DeMille's filmmaking technique.

Fox

In late 1914, Apfel left the Lasky Company and directed for various companies into the 1920s. His first move was to the producing staff of the William Fox Corporation, where he directed a series of pictures in which William Farnum starred. Some of these were A Soldier's Oath, Fighting Blood, The End of the Trail, The Battle of Hearts, and A Man of Sorrow.

Paralta

For the Paralta Company, where Apfel went after leaving the Fox Corporation, he produced Peter Kyne's A Man's a Man and The Turn of a Card in which J. Warren Kerrigan starred.

Armenian relief

Ravished Armenia, a public-awareness picture for the Armenian Relief Committee, was Apfel's work. This production commanded wide attention and attracted great crowds at the special showings, which took place at the Plaza and other prominent hotels. The sympathetic interest evoked by its revelations helped in materially adding to the large sums that were subscribed to this cause.
A series of pictures for the World Film Corporation, starring Kitty Gordon, Montague Love, June Elvidge, Louise Huff, and Evelyn Greeley, was also among Apfel's successful productions.

Final years

After many years as a director, he gradually returned to acting. On March 21, 1938, Apfel died in Hollywood from a heart attack.

Selected filmography

Actor

The Texan as Thacker Abraham Lincoln as Secretary of War Stanton The Spoilers as A. Struve Liliom as Stefen Kadar The Virtuous Sin as Maj. Ivanoff Huckleberry Finn as The KingFive Star Final as Bernard Hinchecliffe Sidewalks of New York as Judge The Yellow Ticket as British Embassy Butler The Woman from Monte Carlo as Dr. Rabeouf Speak Easily as Lawyer's Representative A Successful Calamity as President of the United States Make Me a Star as Henshaw False Faces as FinebergHigh Pressure as Mr. HackettCall Her Savage as Doctor Treating Crosby Rasputin and the Empress as Undetermined Secondary Role Employees' Entrance as Board of Directors Member #5 Gabriel Over the White House as German Delegate to Debt Conference The Story of Temple Drake as District Attorney Storm at Daybreak as Counselor Velasch Tugboat Annie as Reynolds One Man's Journey as John Radford The Bowery as Ivan Rummel The World Changes as Mr. Morley The House of Rothschild as Prussian Officer Whirlpool as Newspaper Editor Manhattan Melodrama as Speaker of Assembly The Old Fashioned Way as Mr. Livingston Bordertown as Judge Rufus Barnswell Romance in Manhattan as The Judge Dante's Inferno as Mr. Williams Man on the Flying Trapeze as President Malloy O'Shaughnessy's Boy as Martha's Lawyer Sutter's Gold as Bartender Hearts in Bondage as Capt. Gilman San Francisco as Founders' Club Member Crack-Up as Alfred Knuxton The Toast of New York as Wallack Fifty Roads to Town as SmorgenConquest as Count Potocka Angel of Mercy as Red Cross Representative

Director

The Bells The Squaw Man The [Master Mind (1914 film)|The Master Mind] The Man on the Box After Five The Little Gypsy The Battle of Hearts The Hidden Children The Turn of a Card The Rough Neck Ravished Armenia Phil for Short Ten Nights in a Bar Room Bulldog Drummond The Sporting Chance The Thoroughbred The Last Alarm