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William Keighley
★ Directing

William Keighley

1889 – 1984 · Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA · Active 1926–1953

​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. William Jackson Keighley  (August 4, 1889, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - June 24, 1984, New York, New York) was an American stage actor and Hollywood film director. After graduating from the Ludlum School of Dramatic Art, Keighley began acting at the age of 23. By the 1910s and 1920s, he was acting and directing on Broadway. With the advent of talking pictures, he relocated to Hollywood. He eventually signed with Warner Bros., where he proved adept at directing in a wide variety of genres. He was the initial director of The Adventures of Robin Hood, sta...

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Each Dawn I Die

Each Dawn I Die

1939 ★ 6.9
Director

Frank Ross (Cagney) is a crusading reporter for a big-city newspaper on the trail of a crooked district attorney, Jesse Hanley, who is running for election as governor of the state. At the Banton Construction Co., Ross sees Hanley and his accomplice Grayce (Jory) burning books and ledgers to thwart a possible investigation brought about by the paper that Ross works for. His editor Patterson backs Ross in getting Hanley but the D.A. decides to get rid of him, so frames him. Knocked out and covered in whiskey, he is put in a runaway car which collides with another, killing 3 young people and is thrown in prison for one to twenty years on a charge of automotive manslaughter. He meets a gangster, Stacey (Raft), who, as there is no death penalty in that state, is in for 199 years. They work in the twine-making room together and Stacey falls into Ross's debt when Ross doesn't implicate Stacey for a fellow inmate's stabbing that he thinks Stacey committed. Meanwhile, Ross's reporter friends outside are trying to help him win vindication by finding the real culprits but they are having no success. Stacey agrees to help Ross prove that he was framed if Ross helps him escape from a courthouse. They arrange that Stacey be named by Ross as guilty for killing of Limpy, another inmate and hated stool pigeon. Ross goes along with the plot, including a promise to tell no one about it, but antagonizes Stacey by tipping off his old newspaper, so that the court room is full of reporters. Stacey escapes by leaping from a window but makes no effort to find the real culprits who were responsible for Ross's predicament. Ross, meanwhile, is implicated in the escape and after being beaten up by brutal guards, spends five months in "the hole" refusing to betray Stacey. This is solitary confinement where prisoners are handcuffed to the bars in the dark and fed bread and water once a day. Ross, who has become a bad character, is promised a chance at parole by the warden (Bancroft) if he reforms, but Hanley has become governor and appointed Grayce to head the parole board. Grayce turns Ross down, meaning he must wait another five years before he can try again for parole. Stacey is shamed by Ross's reporter girlfriend, Joyce (Jane Bryan), into carrying out his promise. He finds the man who "fingered" Ross and gets from him the name of the man who framed him: "Polecat", who just happens to be a jailhouse informant widely disliked in the same prison. Stacey, impressed with Ross being a "square guy," decides to go back to prison to force Polecat to confess. Stacey instigates a prison breakout as part of his plan and orders the prisoners to bring along Polecat. A vicious prison guard is killed and the warden and some of his men held as hostages, but the National Guard have been sent for and block the escape with machine guns, gas and hand grenades. Freed from the hole as part of the escape, Stacey forces Polecat to confess to framing Ross with the warden and his men as witnesses to vindicate Ross. All of the escaping convicts are killed, including the badly wounded Stacey, who forces Polecat to go with him and be killed so that he cannot recant his confession. Governor Hanley and Grayce are indicted for murder and Ross is freed. 

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Career Highlights Top 6 by popularity · TMDB

Filmography

48 credits
1930s 2 credits
1933
Ladies They Talk About as Man Getting a Shoeshine (uncredited)
Movie ★ 6.1
1931
Resurrection as Captain Schoenbock
Movie ★ 6.0
Crew Credits
1950s 4 credits
1953
Movie ★ 5.5
1951
Movie ★ 6.5
1950
Movie ★ 5.7
1950
Rebecca Director
Movie
1940s 10 credits
1948
Movie ★ 6.3
1947
Honeymoon Director
Movie ★ 6.4
1944
Movie ★ 5.3
1942
Movie ★ 6.3
1941
Movie ★ 6.9
1941
Movie ★ 7.0
1941
Movie ★ 6.2
1940
Movie ★ 5.7
1940
Torrid Zone Director
Movie ★ 6.8
1940
Movie ★ 5.0
1930s 31 credits
1939
Movie ★ 6.8
1939
Movie ★ 3.3
1938
Movie ★ 7.5
1938
Brother Rat Director
Movie ★ 5.0
1938
Movie ★ 5.6
1938
Movie ★ 6.0
1937
Movie ★ 6.8
1937
Movie ★ 4.2
1937
Movie ★ 6.5
1936
Movie ★ 6.6
1936
Movie ★ 6.3
1936
Movie ★ 4.0
1935
'G' Men Director
Movie ★ 6.6
1935
Movie ★ 4.4
1935
Movie ★ 6.2
1935
Movie ★ 6.0
1935
Movie ★ 5.2
1934
Dr. Monica Director
Movie ★ 4.3
1934
Babbitt Director
Movie ★ 6.0
1934
Movie ★ 3.5
1934
Movie ★ 5.7
1934
Movie ★ 4.6
1934
Movie ★ 4.2
1933
Movie ★ 6.1
1933
Movie ★ 6.8
1933
Movie ★ 5.9
1933
Picture Snatcher Dialogue Coach
Movie ★ 6.8
1932
Movie ★ 6.2
1932
The Cabin in the Cotton Assistant Director
Movie ★ 6.3
1932
Jewel Robbery Assistant Director
Movie ★ 6.5
1932
Scarlet Dawn Assistant Director
Movie ★ 6.5
1920s 1 credit
1926
The Third Degree Dialogue Coach
Movie