Stuart Armstrong Walker (March 4, 1888 – March 13, 1941) was an American director and producer in theatre and motion pictures.

Biography

Walker reading the stage adaptation of Booth Tarkington's Seventeen with actress Lillian Ross, who played the role of Jane in the Broadway production (1918)

Stuart Walker was born March 4, 1888, in Augusta, Kentucky, the son of Cliff Stuart Walker and Matilda Taliaferro Armstrong Walker. After attending public school in Cincinnati and graduating from the University of Cincinnati, he went to work for David Belasco and made his debut as an actor in 1909. He became a play reader for Belasco, and directed plays including The Governor's Lady (1912). In 1914 Walker joined Jessie Bonstelle as a director in Detroit and Buffalo.

In 1915, Walker organized the Portmanteau Theatre, an independent repertory theatre company. He produced seasons in Baltimore, Chicago, Cincinnati, Dayton, Indianapolis, Louisville and New York City. He staged the first dramatization of Booth Tarkington's bestselling novel Seventeen, presented on Broadway in 1918 starring Gregory Kelly and his future wife, newcomer Ruth Gordon.

Walker's repertory company was active throughout the 1920s. Its credits include the first American performance of Alberto Casella's supernatural drama Death Takes a Holiday, adapted by Walter Ferris, in 1929.

In 1930, Walker became a screenwriter in Hollywood, and served as dialogue director on films including Brothers and The Last of the Lone Wolf. He directed his first feature film the following year, and in 1936 he became a producer for Paramount Pictures.

Walker died March 13, 1941, at his home in Beverly Hills, California, following a heart attack.

Filmography

Director

Douglass Montgomery, Claude Rains and David Manners in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935)
Signed drawing of Stuart Walker by Manuel Rosenberg for the Cincinnati Post 1926
YearTitleNotes
1931The Secret Call
1931The False Madonna
1932The Misleading Lady
1932Evenings for Sale
1932Tonight Is Ours
1933The Eagle and the Hawk
1933White Woman
1934Romance in the Rain
1934Great Expectations
1935The Mystery of Edwin Drood
1935Werewolf of London
1935Manhattan Moon

Producer

YearTitleNotes
1937Bulldog Drummond EscapesAssociate producer, uncredited
1937Wild MoneyUncredited
1937Sophie Lang Goes WestUncredited
1937Bulldog Drummond Comes BackUncredited
1938Bulldog Drummond's RevengeUncredited
1938Bulldog Drummond's PerilUncredited
1938Hunted MenAssociate producer, uncredited
1938Prison FarmAssociate producer, uncredited
1938Sons of the LegionAssociate producer, uncredited
1938Arrest Bulldog Drummond
1939DisbarredAssociate producer
1939King of ChinatownAssociate producer, uncredited
1939Bulldog Drummond's BrideAssociate producer
1940Emergency SquadAssociate producer, uncredited
1940SeventeenAssociate producer, uncredited; screenwriter
1940Opened by MistakeAssociate producer, uncredited

External links