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  1. May 21, 2002 · Hawks, Howard. Howard Winchester Hawks. b. May 30 1896, Goshen, Indiana. d. December 26 1977, Palm Springs, California. Howard Hawks was born into a wealthy and well-connected Midwestern family who migrated to Southern California in the halcyon days of the early 1900s. He attended Throop Polytechnic Institute (which later became the California ...

  2. Recognition as an influential artist would come later, but it would come to him before his death. He was born Howard Winchester Hawks in Goshen, Indiana, on Decoration Day, May 30, 1896, the first child of Franklin Winchester Hawks and his wife, the former Helen Brown Howard.

  3. Aug 7, 2023 · Howard Hawks was a versatile director who excelled in multiple genres, including westerns, film noirs, and screwball comedies. Hawks was known for his ability to create strong, independent female characters, leading to the term "Hawksian woman."

  4. May 29, 2018 · Howard Winchester Hawks. Howard Hawks (1896-1977) was perhaps the greatest director of American genre films. He made films in almost every American genre, and his films could well serve as among the very best examples and artistic embodiments of the type: gangster, private eye, western, screwball comedy, newspaper reporter, prison picture, science fiction, musical, racecar drivers, and pilots.

  5. Birthday: May 30, 1896. Birthplace: Goshen, Indiana, USA. Viewed as a competent director of successful genre pictures at the height of his career, Howard Hawks later came to be recognized as one ...

  6. The Hawks followed C.W. to Wisconsin in 1998, where Frank joined the family business, before they ultimately relocated to the more temperate climes of Pasadena, CA when Howard was 14 years old. His family's affluence guaranteed him admittance to the exclusive preparatory school, Philips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, and later to Cornell University, where he majored in mechanical engineering.

  7. May 26, 2024 · Howard Hawks - 1930s Films, Comedy, Adventure: Until the mid-1930s Hawks was known primarily as a director of dramas and action films. However, working with a script by Hecht and Charles MacArthur, he crafted Twentieth Century (1934) into an enduring screwball comedy, establishing (along with Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night [1934]) the genre’s conventions: seemingly mismatched lovers ...