William K. Howard
William K. Howard (June 16, 1899 in St. Marys, Ohio - February 21, 1954 in Los Angeles, California) was a film director, writer and producer.
Howard began his work in Hollywood as an assistant director on the 1920 release The Adorable Savage. The following year, he received his first directing credits, for Get Your Man, Play Square and What Love Will Do. He wrote The One-Man Trail that same year.
Some of his better known works as a director are The Thundering Herd, Surrender, Transatlantic, Sherlock Holmes, This Side of Heaven, Fire Over England, When the Lights Go on Again and A Guy Could Change.
His film The Power and the Glory, directed by Howard from a screenplay by Preston Sturges, was neglected for decades but in recent years has received significant reappraisal due to recognition that this movie was a major influence on the structure of Citizen Kane.
Howard has a "Star" on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
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Back Door to Heaven

Fire Over England

The Princess Comes Across

Back Door to Heaven

Evelyn Prentice

Rendezvous

Transatlantic

The Power and the Glory

A Ship Comes In

The Cat and the Fiddle

Mary Burns, Fugitive

The Valiant

When the Lights Go On Again

Bullets for O'Hara

Johnny Come Lately

The Squeaker

Sherlock Holmes

Vanessa: Her Love Story

Money and the Woman

Klondike Fury

Deserted at the Altar

White Gold

A Guy Could Change

Scotland Yard

This Side of Heaven

Good Intentions

Don't Bet on Women

The Trial of Vivienne Ware

Gigolo

The Main Event

Love, Live & Laugh

Captain Fly-by-Night

The Thundering Herd

The Light of Western Stars

The Crusader

Surrender

The Border Legion

The One-Man Trail

Get Your Man

Trooper O'Neill

The Green Cockatoo

The Valiant

The First Year

Christina

Let's Go

Red Dice

Rendezvous

Code of the West

Bachelor Brides

Danger Ahead

The River Pirate

Back Door to Heaven
