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IMDbPro

Fred M. Wilcox(1907-1964)

  • Director
  • Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Fred McLeod Wilcox was born in Tazewell, VA, on December 22, 1906, one of six children born to James Wilcox, a Kentucky optometrist and drugstore owner, who was married six times (twice to one woman). His six children were from his first wife.

Wilcox's six siblings (his father adopted his niece after the death of his sister in 1912) included actress Ruth Selwyn (born Ruth Wilcox), who was married to producer / director / writer / playwright Edgar Selwyn, one of the founders of Goldwyn Pictures, and former showgirl Pansy Wilcox Schenck (Pansy Schenck), who was married to Loew's Inc. President Nicholas M. Schenck, one of the pioneers of the film industry. Pansy Schenck was the mother-in-law of actor Helmut Dantine, with whom Wilcox worked on a film in India in 1962.

A graduate of the University of Kentucky, Wilcox began his film-industry career at MGM in its New York publicity department. He became an assistant to King Vidor in 1929, and worked on the great director's masterpiece, Hallelujah (1929). Subsequently he worked as a director shooting screen tests of new talent, then served an apprenticeship as an assistant director on three of his brother-in-law Edgar Selwyn's pictures. He also was an assistant- and second-unit director on two more films before moving to the short subjects unit in 1938.

After working his way up through the MGM shorts department, he got his shot as a feature director in 1943 with Lassie Come Home (1943), a classic family film that was enshrined on the National Film Preservation Board's National Film Registry in 1993. He also helmed the two sequels, Courage of Lassie (1946) and Hills of Home (1948). He had a sure hand with child actors, directing Margaret O'Brien in one of her most well-received pictures, The Secret Garden (1949). After directing some pictures for the studio's "B" unit, he made one more memorable film--the classic sci-fi epic Forbidden Planet (1956)--before leaving MGM in 1957 to become an independent producer/director. However, he only made one more film, a miscegenation tale called I Passed for White (1960), which he directed, produced and co-wrote. It starred James Franciscus and is most notable as the first American film for which five-time Oscar winner John Williams wrote the score.

Fred Wilcox died on September 23, 1964, in Beverly Hills, CA, survived by his son, Ron.
BornDecember 22, 1907
DiedSeptember 23, 1964(56)
BornDecember 22, 1907
DiedSeptember 23, 1964(56)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Add photos, demo reels
  • Awards
    • 1 nomination total

Known for

Forbidden Planet (1956)
Forbidden Planet
7.5
  • Director(as Fred McLeod Wilcox)
  • 1956
Roddy McDowall and Pal in Lassie Come Home (1943)
Lassie Come Home
7.1
  • Director
  • 1943
I Passed for White (1960)
I Passed for White
6.2
  • Director
  • 1960
Code Two (1953)
Code Two
6.1
  • Director
  • 1953

Credits

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IMDbPro

Director



  • I Passed for White (1960)
    I Passed for White
    6.2
    • Director
    • 1960
  • Forbidden Planet (1956)
    Forbidden Planet
    7.5
    • Director (as Fred McLeod Wilcox)
    • 1956
  • Shelley Winters and Keenan Wynn in Tennessee Champ (1954)
    Tennessee Champ
    5.6
    • Director
    • 1954
  • Code Two (1953)
    Code Two
    6.1
    • Director
    • 1953
  • Nancy Reagan and James Whitmore in Shadow in the Sky (1952)
    Shadow in the Sky
    6.5
    • Director
    • 1952
  • The Secret Garden (1949)
    The Secret Garden
    7.5
    • Director
    • 1949
  • Janet Leigh, Tom Drake, Edmund Gwenn, and Pal in Hills of Home (1948)
    Hills of Home
    6.6
    • Director
    • 1948
  • Ann E. Todd, Jane Powell, Elinor Donahue, José Iturbi, and Jeanette MacDonald in Three Daring Daughters (1948)
    Three Daring Daughters
    6.2
    • Director
    • 1948
  • Courage of Lassie (1946)
    Courage of Lassie
    6.2
    • Director
    • 1946
  • Roddy McDowall and Pal in Lassie Come Home (1943)
    Lassie Come Home
    7.1
    • Director
    • 1943
  • Joaquin Murrieta (1938)
    Joaquin Murrieta
    6.0
    Short
    • Director (as Fred Wilcox)
    • 1938

Second Unit or Assistant Director



  • Mary Astor, Robert Young, Frank Morgan, and Edna May Oliver in Paradise for Three (1938)
    Paradise for Three
    7.0
    • second unit director: Austria (uncredited)
    • 1938
  • The Mystery of Mr. X (1934)
    The Mystery of Mr. X
    6.9
    • assistant director (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • Herbert Marshall and Elizabeth Allan in The Solitaire Man (1933)
    The Solitaire Man
    6.3
    • assistant director (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • Lee Tracy in Turn Back the Clock (1933)
    Turn Back the Clock
    6.7
    • assistant director (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • Phillips Holmes, Lewis Stone, and Diana Wynyard in Men Must Fight (1933)
    Men Must Fight
    6.1
    • assistant director (uncredited)
    • 1933

Writer



  • I Passed for White (1960)
    I Passed for White
    6.2
    • screenplay
    • 1960

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Fred McLeod Wilcox
  • Born
    • December 22, 1907
    • Tazewell, Virginia, USA
  • Died
    • September 23, 1964
    • Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • Relatives
    • Pansy Schenck(Sibling)

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    He worked with his nephew-in-law, producer Nicholas Nayfack, on Forbidden Planet (1956) and was planning to direct a big-budget MGM sequel, to be titled "Robot Planet", when Nayfack died unexpectedly in 1958.

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