Robert Parrish

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1916-01-04

Deathday 1995-12-04 (79 years old)

Place of Birth Columbus, Georgia, USA

Robert Parrish

Biography

Robert R. Parrish (born 4 January 1916, Columbus, Georgia – 4 December 1995, Southampton, New York) was an American actor, film editor, film director, and writer. He received an Academy Award for Film Editing for the 1947 film, Body and Soul. Parrish was the son of factory cashier Gordon R. Parrish and Laura R. Parrish. In the mid-1920s, the family moved from Georgia to Los Angeles and Parrish and his sisters Beverly and Helen began obtaining work as actors soon thereafter. Parrish made his film debut in the 1927 Our Gang short Olympic Games. (Their mother, Laura R. Parrish, was an actress as well and appeared in a few films of the 1940s.) He appeared in the anti-war classic All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) and Charles Chaplin's City Lights (1931), and in several films for John Ford. Ford then enlisted him as an assistant editor in 1936 on Mary of Scotland, and as a sound editor on Young Mr Lincoln (1939). Parrish worked as an assistant editor and sound editor on other Ford movies as Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) and The Grapes of Wrath (1940). Parrish and Ford were in the United States Navy during the Second World War, and worked on documentary and training films including The Battle of Midway (1942). In 1947 he won an Oscar for his debut as a feature film editor on Robert Rossen's high tempo boxing drama Body and Soul; the award was shared with Francis Lyon. Parrish was later nominated for another Rossen film – the political drama All the King’s Men (1949); he shared the nomination with Al Clark. Parrish went on to contribute his technical talents to a host of highly regarded films and made a promising directorial debut in 1951 with the gripping revenge melodrama, Cry Danger. His subsequent output met with varying success. The Purple Plain (1954) was nominated for "Best British film" at the 8th British Academy Film Awards. One of the most notorious of his films was the James Bond Parody Casino Royale (1967), in which he was one of the film's five directors. His last film, on which he shared co-director credit with Bertrand Tavernier, was Mississippi Blues (1983). Parrish wrote two memoirs, Growing Up in Hollywood (1976) and its sequel Hollywood Doesn't Live Here Anymore (1988). Of the first, Kevin Brownlow wrote, "His stories about these pictures were marvellous in themselves, and he often came at them sideways, so not only the punchline but the situation took you by surprise. We all entreated him to write them down and in 1976 he did so, producing one of the most enchanting - and hilarious - books about the picture business ever written. It was called Growing Up in Hollywood and it ought to be reprinted in this centenary year." Summing up Parrish's career, Allen Grant Richards wrote, "Other than his excellent editing work and early directing, Parrish may be most remembered as storyteller from his two books of Hollywood memoirs."

Known For

Director

2002
The Twilight Zone

as Director

1984
Mississippi Blues

as Director

1974
1971
A Town Called Hell

as Director

1969
Doppelgänger

as Director

1968
Duffy

as Director

1967
Casino Royale

as Director

1967
The Bobo

as Director

1965
Up from the Beach

as Director

1963
1959
1959
Johnny Staccato

as Director

1959
The Twilight Zone

as Director

1958
Saddle the Wind

as Director

1957
Fire Down Below

as Director

1955
Lucy Gallant

as Director

1954
The Purple Plain

as Director

1953
Rough Shoot

as Director

1952
Assignment: Paris

as Director

1952
My Pal Gus

as Director

1952
1951
Cry Danger

as Director

1951
The Mob

as Director

Actor

2010
1990
Blue Bayou

as Tony

1938
Mr. Doodle Kicks Off

as 2nd Sophomore

1935
The Informer

as Young Soldier

1933
Doctor Bull

as Teenager

1931
City Lights

as Newsboy (uncredited)

1931
Scandal Sheet

as Copy Boy

1930
1930
The Big Trail

as Pioneer Boy (uncredited)

1930
Up the River

as Boy (uncredited)

1930
All Quiet on the Western Front

as Schoolboy (uncredited)

1930
Anna Christie

as Boy at Coney Island (uncredited)

1928
1927
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans

as Boy (uncredited)

Editor

1950
No Sad Songs for Me

as Editorial Consultant

1949
Caught

as Editor

1949
All the King's Men

as Editorial Consultant

1948
No Minor Vices

as Editor

1947
A Double Life

as Editor

1947
Body and Soul

as Editor

1945
1943
December 7th

as Editor

1942

Sound

1940
The Grapes of Wrath

as Sound Effects Editor

1939
Stagecoach

as Sound Effects Editor

Producer

1963