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Alexander Korda



Alexander Korda (September 16, 1893 - January 23, 1956) was a film director and film producer, a leading figure in the British film industry and the founder of London Films. Korda was born in Hungary, where he worked as a journalist before going into films as a producer. He also worked in Vienna, Berlin, Paris and Hollywood, becoming director of United Artists. It was in Britain, however, that he made the biggest impression, and in 1932 he founded London Films and the studios at Denham which eventually became a part of the Rank Organisation. His films were lavish and (after the advent of colour) visually striking. They included ''The Private Life of Henry VIII'' (1932) and ''Rembrandt'' (1936), both of which starred Charles Laughton, who was also to have appeared in the ill-fated ''I, Claudius''. In 1942, Korda became the first film director ever to be knighted. Among his greatest successes as producer were ''The Four Feathers'', (1937), ''The Thief of Bagdad'' (1940) and ''The Third Man'' (1949). ''The Red Shoes'' was also originally meant to be a Korda film and was meant as a vehicle for his future wife Merle Oberon. It became a J. Arthur Rank film and was eventually made by Michael Latham Powell and Emeric Pressburger instead. 1893 births 1956 deaths Hungarian film directors Hungarian film producers British film directors British film producers


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