
Personal Info
Known For
Acting
Gender
Male
January 16, 1878
Died
March 21, 1938 (60 years old)
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Also Known As
- Oscar C. Apfel
Oscar Apfel
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oscar C. Apfel (January 17, 1878 – March 21, 1938) was an American film actor, director, screenwriter and producer. He appeared in 167 films between 1913 and 1939, and also directed 94 films between 1911 and 1927.
Apfel was born in Cleveland, Ohio. After a number of years in commerce, he decided to adopt the stage as a profession. He secured his first professional engagement in 1900, in his hometown. He rose rapidly and soon held a position as director and producer and was at the time noted as being the youngest stage director in America.[1] He spent eleven years on the stage on Broadway then joined the Edison Manufacturing Company. Apfel first directed for Thomas A. Edison, Inc. in 1911–12, where he made the innovative short film The Passer-By (1912). He also did some experimental work at Edison's laboratory in Orange, on the Edison Talking Pictures devices.
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After many years as a director, he gradually returned to acting. On March 21, 1938, Apfel died in Hollywood from a heart attack.
Known For
Acting

The Toast of New York
1937

Crack-Up
1936

I Dream Too Much
1935

Man on the Flying Trapeze
1935

Bordertown
1935

Romance in Manhattan
1935

The Old-Fashioned Way
1934

Manhattan Melodrama
1934

The House of Rothschild
1934

The Big Shakedown
1934

One Man's Journey
1933

The Story of Temple Drake
1933

Gabriel Over the White House
1933

Employees' Entrance
1933

Call Her Savage
1932

Hot Saturday
1932

Hell's Highway
1932

Skyscraper Souls
1932

Shopworn
1932

The Yellow Ticket
1931

Five Star Final
1931

Abraham Lincoln
1930

Liliom
1930

Conspiracy
1930







