Bernard Girard


Though little is written of director Bernard Girard's career before the making of Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round (1966), Girard had been in Hollywood since the early 1950s, first as a screenwriter (among his credits was the 1952 Joan Crawford vehicle This Woman is Dangerous) then as a TV producer/director. His true feature-film bow was 1957's Ride Out For Revenge, followed by the bleak juvenile delinquent flick The Party Crashers (1958): the latter film represented the cinematic swan songs of two of Hollywood's most tragic personalities, Frances Farmer and Bobby Driscoll. One of Girard's better pre-Dead Heat projects was A Public Affair (1962), a terse, low-budget indictment of big-city political corruption. After Dead Heat, Bernard Girard's screen credits dwindled, coming to an abrupt halt in 1975. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

  • Born:
    February 22, 1918 in Vallejo, California, USA
  • Died:
    December 30, 1997.
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Producer, Screenwriter
Family
  • Son: Chris Girard. survived him
  • Son: Michael Girard. survived him
  • Son: Peter Girard. survived him
Milestones
  • 1950 Debut as screenwriter
  • 1957 First film as director
  • 1958 Scripted and directed The Party Crashers
  • 1978 Directed Little Moon and Judd McGraw
  • Director on CBS series You Are There
  • Helmed CBS Western series Rawhide
  • Moved to Hollywood in the late 1940s
  • Served in the Army Air Corps

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.