Roy Del Ruth was born on Oct. 18, 1895, in Philadelphia, PA. He began his Hollywood career as a writer for
Mack Sennett in 1915. He began directing in 1919 for Sennett with the two-reeler
Hungry Lions and Tender Hearts (1920). In the early 1920s he moved over to features
with such efforts as
Asleep at the Switch (1923),
The Hollywood Kid (1924),
Eve's Lover (1925) and The Little Irish Girl (1926)_. Following several more titles, many of which were later lost in
a film vault fire, he directed
The First Auto (1927), a charming look
at the introduction of the first automobile to a small rural town. The
film featured several elaborate sound effects for the time and was
considered lost until it was restored years later. Del Ruth went on to
direct a number of films before having the distinction of directing the
musical
The Desert Song (1929), the first color film ever released by
Warner Bros. That same year he directed
Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929), Warner's second two-strip Technicolor, all-talking
feature that also became a big box-office hit for the director. Having
successfully segued into the talkie era, Del Ruth directed two more
two-strip color musicals,
Hold Everything (1930) and
The Life of the Party (1930), before directing
James Cagney and
Joan Blondell in the
cheerfully amoral gangster film
Blonde Crazy (1931). That same year he directed the first of three adaptation of
Dashiell Hammett's famed
novel,
The Maltese Falcon (1931). In that one
Ricardo Cortez portrayed the
roguish private eye Sam Spade, whose investigation of a murder case entwines him
in a plot involving a number of unsavory types searching for a fabled,
jewel-encrusted falcon. While the plot basically mirrors the 1941
remake (
The Maltese Falcon (1941), this pre-Code version featured several instances of sexual
innuendo, including
Bebe Daniels bathing in the nude, overt references
to homosexuality and even one instance of cursing.
Del Ruth
reunited with James Cagney for the crime drama
Taxi (1931) and helmed the well-regarded show-biz comedy
Blessed Event (1932). He went
on to pilot a number of above average-pictures such as
The Little Giant (1933) starring
Edward G. Robinson,
Lady Killer (1933) with Cagney again,
Bureau of Missing Persons (1933) featuring
Bette Davis,
Upperworld (1934) with
Ginger Rogers and the musical comedy
Kid Millions (1934) starring
Eddie Cantor. He next directed
Ronald Colman
in his second and final appearance as Bulldog Drummond in the detective
mystery
Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back (1934) and steered the
backstage showbiz musical
Broadway Melody of 1936 (1935), starring
Jack Benny and
Eleanor PowellAfter returning to the realm of crime for
It Had to Happen (1936) with
George Raft and
Rosalind Russell, Del Ruth
directed
James Stewart in one of the actor's few musicals,
Born to Dance (1936). He followed up with
Broadway Melody of 1938 (1937) before guiding ice skating star
Sonja Henie through
My Lucky Star (1938) and
Happy Landing (1938).
Del Ruth continued churning
out product for the studios, helming competent films like
The Star Maker (1939),
Here I Am a Stranger (1939),
He Married His Wife (1940) and
Topper Returns (1941). After working solo on
The Chocolate Soldier (1941),
Maisie Gets Her Man (1942),
Du Barry Was a Lady (1943) and
Broadway Rhythm (1944). It may be interesting to
note that Del Ruth was the second highest paid director in Hollywood
from the period 1932-41, according to Box Office and Exhibitor
magazine.
Del Ruth was one of seven directors on the successful
Ziegfeld Follies (1945), which featured an all-star cast of
Fred Astaire,
Lucille Ball,
Fanny Brice,
Judy Garland,
Gene Kelly,
Lena Horne,
Red Skelton and
William Powell. From there he helmed the
cheerfully ambitious Christmas-themed
It Happened on Fifth Avenue (1947), an
appealing entertainment that was compared to
It's a Wonderful Life (1946), but did not have that film's generational resonance. Still, the musical comedy starring
Don DeFore and
Ann Harding was still a touching
film that managed to delight. Del Ruth next directed
The Babe Ruth Story (1948), with
William Bendix badly miscast as baseball legend
Babe Ruth. Bending historical truths
lest he offend Ruth's legacy, Del Ruth's biopic was rushed through
production amidst news of the ailing Ruth's declining health. Even Del
Ruth remained unsatisfied with the results.
He directed George Raft
again in the film-noir crime drama
Red Light (1949),
Milton Berle and
Virginia Mayo in the comedy
Always Leave Them Laughing (1949) and
James Cagney in the vibrant
The West Point Story (1950). Following a
pair of mediocre
Doris Day musicals,
Starlift (1951) and
On Moonlight Bay (1951), Del Ruth's career began to slow to basically
one project a year, with
Stop, You're Killing Me (1952) and the James
Cagney military musical
About Face (1952). He went on to direct
Jane Powell and
Gordon MacRae in
Three Sailors and a Girl (1953), then
took a short excursion into the new 3D process with the horror film
Phantom of the Rue Morgue (1954) with
Karl Malden.
Away from the
director's chair for the next five years, Del Ruth returned to helm the low-budget horror picture
The Alligator People (1959), a bizarre tale about
humans being partially transformed into alligators in the Deep South, a picture that would seem more suited to
Roger Corman than Del Ruth. His ended his career with the misfire
Why Must I Die? (1960), apparently made to cash in on the success of the better known
Susan Hayward film
I Want to Live! (1958).
Roy Del Ruth died a year later on April 27, 1961, at 67 years old from a
heart attack.