Hugo Fregonese

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Director
Born:
April 8, 1908 in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Death:
January 17, 1987 in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Biography:Listed in one movie encyclopedia as an "American-born director", Hugo Fregonese was actually a native of Argentina, and spent much of his professional life in that nation's film industry. A former journalist, Fregonese came to the U.S. to attend Columbia University in 1935, whereupon he was hired by Hollywood as a technical adviser for films with Latin American themes. He made his directorial debut in 1943, by which time he'd gone back to Argentina, where he remained until resuming his Hollywood career in 1949. Many of Fregonese's American directorial efforts were westerns ("Apache Drums", "The Raid") and crime melodramas ("Black Tuesday", "Man in the Attic"); his best--and subtlest--film was the 1952 prison-reform seriocomedy "My Six Convicts". In the early 1960s, Fregonese churned out a brace of German-filmed westerns based on the Karl May character "Old Shatterhand"; he returned to Argentina for his... Full Biography
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