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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Paul_FejosPaul Fejos - Wikipedia

    Pál Fejős (24 January 1897 – 23 April 1963), known professionally as Paul Fejos, was a Hungarian-American director of feature films and documentaries who worked in a number of countries including the United States. He also studied medicine in his youth and became a prominent anthropologist later in life.

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  3. Aug 31, 2012 · Fejos himself, despite being heralded by the magazine Close-Up in 1928 as a newcomer on par with the established Ernst Lubitsch, Murnau, Paul Leni, and Henry King, was virtually forgotten after he left America in 1931, having survived barely three years there as a director.

  4. anthropologist motion picture director. Paul Fejos was a Hungarian-born director of feature films and documentaries who worked in a number of countries including the United States. Background. He was born in Budapest, Hungary, the son of Desire Emery Fejos, an aristocrat, and of Aurora Novelly.

  5. cal work for Los Angeles hospitals followed, though he apparently also wrote some scripts for Holly-wood Westerns. Fejos's own story of what happened next tended to vary from telling to telling-he was a great raconteur who could not help embellishing, and even inventing, whole episodes of his life for the entertainment of his listeners.

  6. distributor. Fejos began screening the film to local tastemakers, beginning with the high-minded local critics Welford Beaton (The Film Spectator) and Tamar Lane (The Film Mercury). They in turn put Chaplin onto the film, and helped arrange a preview screening at the Beverly Theater in Los Angeles,

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  8. Aug 21, 2013 · Paul Fejos’ Lonesome (1928) For several years now, there have been dire predictions of the inevitable demise of movies on disk. In a world rapidly assigning more reality to the digital “cloud” than to actual physical objects, disks are supposedly quaintly old-fashioned.

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