Léo Joannon
Léo Joannon | |
---|---|
Born |
France | 21 August 1904
Died |
28 March 1969 64) Neuilly-sur-Seine, France | (aged
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1930–1967 |
Léo Joannon (21 August 1904 – 28 March 1969) was a French writer and film director. Born in Aix-en-Provence,[1] Joannon was originally a law student who became a novelist and journalist before entering the film industry in the 1920s as a cameraman.[2]
Joannon first attracted international attention in early 1939 during the production of S.O.S. Mediterranean, when his attempts to include shots of a German naval ship docked in the port of Tangier created a diplomatic incident between the pre-World War II French and German governments. The film later won the Grand Prix du Cinema Français.[3]
Joannon is best known to international audiences as the director of the comedy film Atoll K (1951), which was the final motion picture starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy. Among his other films were Le Defroque (1954) and Fort du Fou/Outpost in Indochina (1962).[2]
Joannon died in Neuilly-sur-Seine.
Selected filmography
- Five Anxious Days (1928)
- The Voice of Happiness (1931)
- Suzanne (1932)
- 600,000 Francs a Month (1933)
- Excursion Train (1936)
- The Emigrant (1940)
See also
- Amour de poche (1957)