Years active 1950-1979 Name Ralph Nelson | Role Movie director | |
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Born August 12, 1916 ( 1916-08-12 ) Long Island City, New York, U.S. Children Ted Nelson, Meredith Nelson, Ralph Nelson, Peter Nelson Awards Golden Globe Award for Best Film Promoting International Understanding Movies Soldier Blue, Lilies of the Field, Duel at Diablo, Charly, Father Goose Similar People Lilia Skala, Peter Strauss, Sidney Poitier, Cliff Robertson, Candice Bergen |
Charly ralph nelson 1968 quiero presentarles a charly gordon ahora
Ralph Nelson (August 12, 1916 – December 21, 1987) was an American film and television director, producer, writer, and actor. He was best known for directing the Oscar winning films Lilies of the Field (1963), Father Goose (1964), and Charly (1968).
Contents
- Charly ralph nelson 1968 quiero presentarles a charly gordon ahora
- Ralph Nelsons Man in The Funny Suit 1960 perhaps his best movie
- Life and career
- Death
- Filmography
- References

Ralph Nelson's "Man in The Funny Suit", 1960-- perhaps his best movie
Life and career

Nelson was born in Long Island City, New York. He served in the Army Air Corps as a flight instructor in World War II.
Nelson directed the acclaimed episode A World of His Own of The Twilight Zone" (he should not be confused with The Twilight Zone's production manager, Ralph W. Nelson). He also directed both the television and film versions of Rod Serling's Requiem for a Heavyweight.
He directed Charly, the 1968 film version of Flowers for Algernon, for which Cliff Robertson won an Academy Award, as well as several racially provocative films in the 1960s and early 1970s, including the Academy Award-winning Lilies of the Field, ...tick...tick...tick..., Christmas Lilies of the Field, The Wilby Conspiracy, and Soldier Blue. The starring role in "Lilies" led to Sidney Poitier winning the Academy Award for Best Actor.
Nelson also directed the Cary Grant comedy Father Goose, the offbeat Soldier in the Rain with Jackie Gleason and Steve McQueen, the crime story Once a Thief, and Rita Hayworth's last film, The Wrath of God. He both directed, and briefly appeared in, Duel at Diablo, starring James Garner and Sidney Poitier.
Nelson's other credits include several episodes of TV's Starsky & Hutch, the '70s camp horror classic Embryo, and A Hero Ain't Nothin' But A Sandwich.
A television drama about mounting the live show of Requiem for a Heavyweight called The Man in the Funny Suit was made in 1960, with Nelson both writing and directing. Nelson, Serling, Red Skelton, Keenan Wynn and Ed Wynn appeared in it as themselves.
He returned to TV in the late 1970s with a string of TV movies, including a sequel to Lilies of the Field which starred Billy Dee Williams.
Death
He died in 1987 in Santa Monica, California at the age of 71.