
Personal Info
Known For
Directing
Gender
Male
September 4, 1887
Died
December 14, 1946 (59 years old)
Ireland, United Kingdom
Also Known As
- R. William Neill
Roy William Neill
Biography
Roy William Neill (4 September 1887 – 14 December 1946) was a film director best known today for directing several of the Sherlock Holmes films starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, made between 1943 and 1946 and released by Universal Studios.
With his father as the captain, Neill was born on a ship off the coast of Ireland named Roland de Gostrie. He began directing silent movies in 1917 and went on to helm 107 films, 40 of them silent. Although most of Neill's films were for the most part low-budget B-movies, he was known for directing films with meticulously lit scenes with carefully layered shadows that would become the style of film noir in the late 1940s. In fact, his last film, Black Angel (1946), is considered a film noir.
He was also credited in some works as R. William Neill, Roy W. Neill, and Roy Neill. Neill lived in the United States for most of his career and was a U.S. citizen. He did go to London from 1935 until 1940 where better opportunities existed for American directors. During this period, British film producer Edward Black hired Neill to direct The Lady Vanishes. However, due to delays in production, Black hired Alfred Hitchcock to direct instead.
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Neill died in London, England from a heart attack.
Known For
Directing

Black Angel
Director, Producer
1946

Dressed to Kill
Director, Producer
1946

Terror by Night
Director, Producer
1946

Pursuit to Algiers
Director, Producer
1945

The Woman in Green
Producer, Director
1945

The House of Fear
Director, Producer
1945

The Pearl of Death
Director, Producer
1944

The Scarlet Claw
Producer, Director, Screenplay
1944

The Spider Woman
Director, Producer
1943

Sherlock Holmes Faces Death
Director, Producer
1943

Sherlock Holmes in Washington
Director, Producer
1943

Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
Director
1943
