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  1. www.imdb.com › name › nm0507937Louis Lewyn - IMDb

    Louis Lewyn was born on 18 December 1891 in Houston, Texas, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Mary of the Movies (1923), The Voice of Hollywood No. 3 (1930) and Sky-Eye (1920). He was married to Marion Mack. He died on 24 May 1969 in Huntington Beach, California, USA.

    • Producer, Director, Writer
    • December 18, 1891
    • Louis Lewyn
    • May 24, 1969
  2. Louis Lewyn was born on December 18, 1891 in Houston, Texas, USA. He was a producer and director, known for Mary of the Movies (1923), The Voice of Hollywood No. 3 (1930) and Sky-Eye (1920). He was married to Marion Mack. He died on May 24, 1969 in Huntington Beach, California, USA.

    • December 18, 1891
    • May 24, 1969
  3. In 1949, after short-subject films declined in popularity, the former actress entered the real estate business and moved to booming Orange County. Louis Lewyn died in 1969.

  4. Nov 15, 1987 · It was then that she first took the name Marion Mack; it also was the first time she worked with her future husband, producer Louis Lewyn. “Mary of the Movies” was a success, and Mack went on...

  5. Louis Lewyn is known as an Director, Producer, Actor, and Story. Some of his work includes La Fiesta de Santa Barbara, Hollywood on Parade No. A-8, Hollywood on Parade No. A-1, Star Night at the Cocoanut Grove, The Voice of Hollywood, Rural Mexico, Hollywood on Parade No. B-1, and Hollywood on Parade No. A-6.

  6. Aug 14, 2020 · The make-believe television series was called The Voice of Hollywood and it was a series of theatrical short subjects produced by Louis Lewyn, who had co-created Screen Snapshots in the early 1920s. That series continued for decades, offering audiences a peek behind the scenes of movieland.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Louis_LewinLouis Lewin - Wikipedia

    Louis Lewin (9 November 1850 - 1 December 1929) was a German pharmacologist. In 1887 he received his first sample of the Peyote cactus from Dallas, Texas -based physician John Raleigh Briggs (1851-1907), and later published the first methodical analysis of it, causing a variant to be named Anhalonium lewinii in his honor.