Edward Buzzell
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Edward Buzzell (November 13, 1900 - January 11, 1985) was an American film director whose credits for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer included Honolulu (1939), the Marx Brothers films At the Circus (1939) and Go West (1940), the musicals Best Foot Forward (1943) with Lucille Ball and Neptune's Daughter (1949) with Esther Williams, and Easy to Wed, starring Van Johnson, Williams, and Ball.
Buzzell was born in Brooklyn. He appeared on Broadway, and was hired to star in the 1929 film version of George M. Cohan's Little Johnny Jones with Alice Day. Buzzell appeared in a few Vitaphone shorts, and the two-strip Technicolor short The Devil's Cabaret (1930) as Satan's assistant. He wrote a few screenplays in the early 1930s and later produced The Milton Berle Show which premiered on television in 1948.
Buzzell married actress Ona Munson in 1927, and they divorced in the early 30s. He later married actress Lorraine Miller. He died in Los Angeles at the age of 84.
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The Devil's Cabaret

Little Johnny Jones
The Royal Four-Flusher
Midnight Life

Go West

At the Circus

The Get-Away

Song of the Thin Man

Best Foot Forward

Neptune's Daughter

Ship Ahoy

Honolulu

Easy to Wed

Virtue

Child of Manhattan

The Youngest Profession

A Woman of Distinction

Fast Company

Mary Had a Little...

The Girl Friend

Keep Your Powder Dry

Three Married Men

Paradise for Three

The Big Timer

Ann Carver's Profession

Three Wise Fools

Married Bachelor

Cross Country Cruise

Emergency Wedding

Confidentially Connie

The Luckiest Girl in the World

Ain't Misbehavin'

Transient Lady

Transient Lady

Little Johnny Jones
Love, Honor and Oh, Baby!
Love, Honor and Oh, Baby!

The Omaha Trail

As Good as Married

The Human Side

The Human Side

Hollywood Speaks

Ain't Misbehavin'
