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more popular moments in the first “Golden Age of Television”. |
more popular moments in the first “Golden Age of Television”. |
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− | Horn was born in Bangor, Maine. He started directing in 1959-1962 for ''Alfred Hitchcock Presents'' and ''The Alfred Hitchcock Hour'', and was soon among a stable of directors working on such popular prime-time programs as ''The Untouchables'', ''Route 66'', and ''The Fugitive''. |
+ | Horn was born in Bangor, Maine. He started directing in 1959-1962 for ''Alfred Hitchcock Presents'' and ''The Alfred Hitchcock Hour'', and was soon among a stable of directors working on such popular prime-time programs as ''The Untouchables'', ''Route 66'', and ''The Fugitive''. |
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− | <nowiki> </nowiki>including five in the first season. His “Operation Rogosh” (1966), the |
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+ | [[Category:Directors]] |
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− | series’ 3rd episode, ties among IMDB voters for the most popular |
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− | first-season show, and most of his other efforts get high marks. In one |
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− | of Horn’s second-season episodes, “Trek”, Peter Graves appeared for the first time as “Mr. Phelps”. |
Latest revision as of 04:42, 20 November 2019
Leonard J. Horn (August 1, 1926 – May 25, 1975) was a director of US prime time television programs in the 1960s and 1970s, and helped shape a number of “classic” adventure and sci-fi series, including The Outer Limits, Mission: Impossible, Mannix, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, and Wonder Woman. Contemporary fan-sites such as the viewer polling pages of the Internet Movie Database (hereafter IMDB) and TV.com show Horn’s work to have stood the test of time; many of the 94 episodes he directed for 34 prime-time television series rank among the more popular moments in the first “Golden Age of Television”.
Horn was born in Bangor, Maine. He started directing in 1959-1962 for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and was soon among a stable of directors working on such popular prime-time programs as The Untouchables, Route 66, and The Fugitive.