From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American film director and philatelist (1902?1987)
F. Herrick Herrick
|
---|
Born
| (
1902-03-25
)
March 25, 1902
|
---|
Died
| August 11, 1987
(1987-08-11)
(aged 85)
|
---|
Nationality
| American
|
---|
Occupation(s)
| Film director, producer, writer, actor; philatelist, numismatist
|
---|
F. Herrick Herrick
(March 25, 1902 ? August 11, 1987) was an American
film director
and
philatelist
.
Career
[
edit
]
Herrick began to direct short films in 1925, and within a year
The Moving Picture World
magazine wrote that he was poised to become "one of the leading film directors on the East Coast".
[1]
While an independent director and producer, he did most of his work for studios such as Tec-Art, which wrote to the
Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America
in 1927 that "the motion picture industry would be well rid of Mr F. Herrick Herrick".
[2]
He frequently produced short travel documentary subjects, including some entries in the "Vagabond Adventure"
travelogue
series for
Pathe Exchange
and
RKO Pictures
in the early 1930s.
[3]
His movies were frequently filmed in Florida, and many of the short documentary subjects involved fishing.
[4]
In 1935, he wrote and directed
Obeah!
, a
horror film
which was among the first to be filmed in
Jamaica
.
[5]
He was a founding member of the
Screen Directors Guild
when it was established in 1936, and served as its first Executive Secretary, until he was replaced by
Jack McGowan
in 1938.
[6]
Personal life
[
edit
]
By 1971, Herrick was retired from film and lived in Florida, where he had become friends with several Apollo astronauts. He was also an avid
stamp collector
, an interest that he had begun to develop in the 1930s and had directed a short film about in 1939.
[7]
During preparations for
Apollo 15
, he asked astronaut
Alfred Worden
to carry 144
postal covers
to the Moon and bring them back for sale.
[8]
In addition to other postal covers carried on the mission, the commercialization of Herrick's covers resulted in the
Apollo 15 postal covers incident
, and the astronauts were effectively fired from NASA. Worden later described Herrick in his old age as "a cross between
Santa Claus
and everyone's favorite grandfather", but admitted he should never have taken the offer: "I was too old to believe in Santa Claus."
[9]
In his retirement, Herrick wrote columns for the
San Francisco Bulletin
, the
Los Angeles Examiner
, the
Boston Telegram
and the
London Express
, and narrated a local television show in Miami,
Ports of Call
on
WPLG
-TV channel 10.
[10]
Herrick died in
Saginaw, Michigan
in 1987.
[11]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Herrick Completes His First Feature for Independent Field"
,
The Moving Picture World
, January 2, 1926, p. 81.
- ^
"Record #1421"
(Correspondence from Alfred T. Mannon to J. Homer Platten),
MPPDA
Digital Archive,
Flinders University
.
- ^
"Herrick Subject at Music Hall"
,
The Film Daily
, January 19, 1934, p. 2.
- ^
"Nipping that weed in the bud"
,
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
, March 26, 2003.
- ^
Polack, Peter.
Jamaica, the Land of Film
, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2017, p. 46-48.
- ^
McGowan, John J.
J.P. McGowan: Biography of a Hollywood Pioneer
, McFarland, 2005, p. 116.
- ^
Stamps: A Weekly Magazine of Philately, Volumes 27-28
, H.L. Lindquist, 1939, p. 53.
- ^
United States Senate Committee on Aeronautics and Space Sciences (August 3, 1972).
"Commercialization of Items Carried by Astronauts"
. United States Senate.
]
United States Senate
, August 3, 1972.
- ^
Worden, Alfred
.
Falling to Earth: An Apollo 15 Astronaut's Journey to the Moon
,
Smithsonian Institution
, 2012, p. 147-48.
- ^
"Socially Yours"
,
Naples Daily News
, November 13, 1973, p. 14.
- ^
Obituary of F. Herrick Herrick,
The Saginaw News
, August 16, 1987, page G9. Reproduced
here
Archived
2022-11-18 at the
Wayback Machine
.