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Arthur Lubin

Arthur Lubin

Born: 1898-07-25 • Los Angeles, California, USA

Arthur Lubin (July 25, 1898 – May 12, 1995) was an American film director and producer who directed several Abbott & Costello films and created the TV series Mr. Ed.

Arthur Lubin was born Arthur William Lubovsky in Los Angeles, California in 1898. Lubin created his own film and music studio, Lubin Studios, in the 1920s, where he acted in silent films in the later half of the decade. Lubin directed the Abbott and Costello movies Buck Privates (1941), In the Navy (1941), Hold That Ghost (1941), Keep 'Em Flying (1942) and Ride 'Em Cowboy (1942). His most successful film at the box office was probably Phantom of the Opera (1943). Another may be Rhubarb (1951) about a cat that inherits a baseball team by proxy.

Lubin also directed the "Francis the Talking Mule" series and brought the idea to TV as the series Mr. Ed. He was the first producer to give a contract to Clint Eastwood. Lubin also directed episodic TV shows like Bronco (1958), Maverick (1959), Bonanza (1960), Mister Ed (1961) and The Addams Family (1965). Lubin's last work was the TV series called Little Lulu (1978).

Lubin's career ended in the late 1970s, and he lived the rest of his life with his life partner Frank Burford[citation needed] and died in Glendale, California of an unspecified cause on May 12, 1995 at age 96.

Filmography
Times Square poster
Times Square
1929
Eyes of the Underworld poster
Eyes of the Underworld
1929 • Gang Leader
No Image
The Bushranger
1928 • Arthur
The Wedding March poster
The Wedding March
1928 • Mountain Guide
Afraid to Love poster
Afraid to Love
1927 • Rafael
Millionaires poster
Millionaires
1926 • Lew
Bardelys the Magnificent poster
Bardelys the Magnificent
1926 • King Louis XIII
No Image
His People
1925 • Morris Cominsky