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  1. Jan 28, 2019 · Most of Lupino’s movies were produced by The Filmakers (eccentrically spelled with one m), a company she started with her second husband, Collier Young.

    • Collier Young for The Filmakers1
    • Collier Young for The Filmakers2
    • Collier Young for The Filmakers3
    • Collier Young for The Filmakers4
    • Collier Young for The Filmakers5
  2. Jan 18, 2021 · After, The Judge, together with her second husband Collier Young (1908-1980 car accident), who she married in 1948, and who was a production executive at Columbia Picture, they formed The Filmakers production company.

  3. Jan 19, 2021 · In real life, it would appear she was separated from husband Collier Young but she got pregnant with her daughter shortly after the film’s release in May of 1951. The father of the child was actor Howard Duff (1913-90 heart attack) despite the fact she was still married to Young.

  4. Oct 1, 2018 · The film’s producer and screenwriter, Collier Young, was Lupino’s ex-husband, and at the time of filming was married to Fontaine. ↩

  5. Feb 2, 2018 · Suspended from studio contracts, Lupino turned her hand to directing, forming a production company known as The Filmakers [sic] with then-husband, writer-producer Collier Young. It’s impossible to underestimate Lupino’s achievements as director in the four years The Filmakers was in business.

  6. Lupino came to directing thanks to a production company she created with her husband Collier Young called The Filmakers. Young and Lupino divorced in 1951, but they remained business partners and had no problems working together as film production collaborators.

  7. Oct 1, 2018 · The company, also comprising Collier Young – Lupino’s husband at the time, who was working for Columbia Pictures as an executive assistant under Harry Cohen – and screenwriter Malvin Wald, changed its name to The Filmakers, surviving as a production entity from 1949 to 1954.