Richard Lyford Explained

Birth Date:7 October 1917
Death Place:North Hollywood, Los Angeles
Occupation:Filmmaker

Richard Hoover Lyford (born 7 October 1917; died November 4, 1985, North Hollywood, Los Angeles) was an American filmmaker.

He directed avant-garde films in Seattle, Washington in his early career, including As the Earth Turns. During the 1940s, he worked for Walt Disney.[1]

In 1950, he co-directed and edited , which won an Academy Award for documentary feature in 1950 and was preserved by the Academy Film Archive in 2005.[2] In 1951, he moved to Saudi Arabia to produce Island of Allah, a documentary on the history of the Arab people.[3]

In 1969, Richard Lyford returned to the Persian Gulf to produce Hamad and the Pirates, a 93-minute movie about a young Arab pearl diver.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rechtshaffen. Michael. Review: Unreleased 1938 silent sci-fi film ‘As the Earth Turns’ boasts analog ingenuity . Los Angeles Times. October 17, 2019. September 1, 2020.
  2. Web site: Preserved Projects. Academy Film Archive.
  3. Book: America's kingdom: mythmaking on the Saudi oil frontier . Robert Vitalis . 122 . Stanford University Press . 2007 . 978-0-8047-5446-0 . registration .