Biography
American director Harold Schuster went from small-part actor to assistant cameraman to film editor at Fox Studios, all within a single year (1927). While at Fox, Schuster worked on some of the firm's most celebrated achievements, notably
Sunrise (1927) and Zoo at Budapest (1933). In 1937, Schuster was sent to England by Fox for his first directorial job,
Wings of the Morning (1937). An Iowa native, Schuster was drawn to rural themes in his films, frequently scouting his own locations to achieved the desired photographic results. The director's most characteristic films (and his best) include
My Friend Flicka (1943),
So Dear to My Heart (1947) and
The Tender Years (1948), the latter highlighted by a rare non-comic performance by Joe E. Brown. With "urban" films, Schuster was less successful; perhaps his worst film was the cheapo boxing flick
Kid Monk Baroni (1950), later characterized by its star
Leonard Nimoy as "the sort of film that makes unknowns out of stars." After lensing several nondescript programmers in the '50s, Harold Schuster moved to television, where he conveyed his love of the Great Outdoors in series ranging from
Lassie to The Twilight Zone. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide