Mini-Biography:
Leo McCarey was born under the given name Thomas Leo McCarey on October 3, 1898 in Los Angeles, California, USA, US. He was an American Director, Producer, known for Thundering Toupees (1929), Duck Soup (1933), Satan never sleeps (1961), Leo McCarey's first movie on record is from 1920. He was married to Stella Martin. Leo McCarey died on July 5, 1969 in Santa Monica, CA, USA. His last motion picture on file dates from 1961.
1961: Satan never sleeps (Director), with Martin Benson, William Holden, Weaver Lee,
1957: An affair to remember (Director), with Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr, Richard Denning,
1952: My Son John (Director), with Helen Hayes, Van Heflin, Robert Walker,
1948: Good Sam (Director), Directed by Sam Wood, with Ray Collins, Gary Cooper, Joan Lorring,
1945: The Bells of St Mary's (Director), with Bing Crosby, Ingrid Bergman, Henry Travers,
1942: Once upon a Honeymoon (Director), with John Banner, Albert Bassermann, Ferike Boros,
1940: My favorite Wife (Based on ), Directed by Garson Kanin, with Cary Grant, Irene Dunne, Randolph Scott,
1939: Love Affair (Director), with Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer, Maria Ouspenskaya,
1937: The awful truth (Director), with Ralph Bellamy, Cecil Cunningham, Alexander D'Arcy,
1936: The milky way (Director), Directed by Harold Young, with William Gargan, Harold Lloyd, Helen Mack,
1934: Six of a kind (Director), with Gracie Allen, Mary Boland, George Burns,
1934: Belle of the Nineties (Director), with Gene Austin, John Mack Brown, Katherine de Mille,
1933: Duck Soup (Director), with Edmund Breese, Louis Calhern, Davison Clark,
1932: The Kid from Spain (Director), Directed by Busby Berkeley, with Dorothy Coonan, Lyda Roberti, Eddie Cantor,
1931: Indiscreet (Director), with Gloria Swanson, Ben Lyon, Monroe Owsley,
1930: Let's Go Native (Director), with Jack Oakie, Jeanette MacDonald, Richard 'Skeets' Gallagher,
1929: Thundering Toupees (Based on ), with Vivien Oakland, Eddie Dunn, Mickey Daniels,
1929: Why Is a Plumber? (Director), with Adele Watson, Albert Conti, Eddie Dunn,
1929: Bacon Grabbers (Scenario), Directed by Lewis R. Foster, with Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Edgar Kennedy,
1929: Double Whoopee (Scenario), Directed by Lewis R. Foster, with Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Jean Harlow,
1929: Liberty (Criminals at large) (Director), with Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Tom Kennedy,
1929: The Unkissed Man (Director), with Edna Murphy, Eric Mayne, Marion Byron,
1928: Chasing Husbands (Scenario), Directed by James Parrott, with Iris Adrian, Gertrude Astor, Charley Chase,
1928: The Finishing Touch (Director), Directed by Clyde Bruckman, with Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, ,
1928: We Faw Down (Director),
1928: Came the Dawn (Director), Directed by Arch Heath, with Max Davidson, Gene Morgan, Polly Moran,
1928: The Boy Friend (Director), Directed by Fred Guiol, with Max Davidson, Bill Elliott, Marion Byron,
1927: Flaming Fathers (Director), with Max Davidson, Martha Sleeper, Tiny Sandford,
1927: Should Second Husbands Come First (Director), with Max Davidson, David Butler, Lillian Elliott,
1927: Call of the Cuckoo (Producer: production supervisor), Directed by Clyde Bruckman, with Max Davidson, Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy,
1927: Don't tell everything (Director), with Max Davidson, Walter 'Spec' O'Donnell, Jesse De Vorska,
1927: Jewish Prudence (Scenario), with Max Davidson, Johnny Fox, Martha Sleeper,
1927: Why Girls Say No (Director), with Max Davidson, Marjorie Daw, Creighton Hale,
1927: Should men walk home? (Director), with Mabel Normand, Creighton Hale, Eugene Pallette,
1927: Jewish Prudence (Director), with Max Davidson, Johnny Fox, Martha Sleeper,
1926: Dog shy (Director), with Charley Chase, Stuart Holmes, Mildred June,
1924: All wet (Cast), with Charley Chase, William Gillespie,
1920: The virgin of Stamboul (Assistant Director), Directed by Tod Browning, with Priscilla Dean, Wheeler Oakman, Wallace Beery,