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  1. Richard Wallace (August 26, 1894 – November 3, 1951) was an American film director. He began working in the editing department at Mack Sennett Studios in the early 1920s. He later moved on to rival Hal Roach Studios where he began directing two-reel films, on some of which he collaborated with Stan Laurel .

  2. Richard Wallace. Director: Captain Caution. Richard Wallace was born in Sacramento, California, in 1894. At 14 years of age he got a job as a theater projectionist, a job he held for four years. He later traveled to Los Angeles to get into the film industry, and wound up as an editor for such studios as Triangle and Robertson-Cole.

    • Director, Writer, Producer
    • August 26, 1894
    • Richard Wallace
    • November 3, 1951
  3. Richard Wallace. Director: Captain Caution. Richard Wallace was born in Sacramento, California, in 1894. At 14 years of age he got a job as a theater projectionist, a job he held for four years. He later traveled to Los Angeles to get into the film industry, and wound up as an editor for such studios as Triangle and Robertson-Cole. His career was interrupted by service in the US Army Signal...

    • August 26, 1894
    • November 3, 1951
  4. About Us. The Wallace Collection is a national museum housing unsurpassed masterpieces of painting, sculpture, furniture, arms and armour, and porcelain. Built over the 18th and 19th centuries by the Marquesses of Hertford and Sir Richard Wallace, it is one of the finest and most celebrated collections in the world.

  5. Wallace, believed to be the illegitimate son of Richard Seymour-Conway, 4th Marquess of Hertford, inherited most of the collection on his father’s death in 1870.

  6. Richard Wallace is known as an Director, Actor, and Producer. Some of his work includes Sinbad the Sailor, Framed, The Young in Heart, The Fallen Sparrow, Bombardier, Wedding Present, A Night to Remember, and The Little Minister.

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  8. Jul 25, 2019 · The sections that complete part one explore Richard Wallace’s role in the collecting of the 4th Marquess throughout the 1850s and 1860s. Previous scholarly publications, such as Peter Hughes’s Catalogue of the Furniture in the Wallace Collection – to cite just one example – have tended to concentrate on distinguishing between the collecting tastes and practices of Hertford and Wallace.