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Victor Halperin
Victor Halperin
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Victor Hugo Halperin (August 24, 1895 – May 17, 1983) was an American stage actor, stage director, film director, producer, and writer. The majority of his works involved romance and horror.[1] His brother, with whom he collaborated, was producer Edward Halperin (May 12, 1898 – March 2, 1981).

Key Information

Biography

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Victor Halperin began his career as a filmmaker in 1922, working as a writer on The Danger Point (an original story). In two years, he was working as a writer-producer-director on the Agnes Ayres film, When a Girl Loves. He is best known for his 1932 horror film White Zombie, starring Madge Bellamy and Bela Lugosi. Once thought "lost", the film has grown in stature over the years, first gaining a cult status, and eventually becoming recognized as one of the leading classics of the genre. Years after the film's release, Victor Halperin expressed a distaste for his horror films: "I don't believe in fear, violence, and horror, so why traffic in them?"[2]

Other notable horror films Halperin directed include Supernatural (1933) and Revolt of the Zombies (1936).

Halperin often worked in collaboration with his brother Edward. The Halperin brothers produced a series of independent low-budget films in the 1930s. Victor Halperin retired in 1942, after working as a director at PRC studios.[3]

Filmography

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Director

Producer

References

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from Grokipedia
Victor Halperin was an American film director, producer, and screenwriter known for pioneering horror films, particularly White Zombie (1932), widely regarded as the first feature-length zombie movie. Born on August 24, 1895, in Chicago, Illinois, Halperin began his entertainment career as a stage actor and director before entering the film industry during the silent era, where he wrote, directed, and produced numerous pictures in the 1920s. He frequently collaborated with his brother Edward Halperin, who produced many of his films, and occasionally used the pseudonym Rex Hale for directing and writing credits. His breakthrough came with White Zombie, starring Bela Lugosi, which established his reputation in the horror genre for its atmospheric style and innovative approach to supernatural themes. Halperin continued working through the 1930s and early 1940s, directing a mix of horror, melodrama, and low-budget genre films, including Supernatural (1933) and Revolt of the Zombies (1936). Though his later works received mixed reception, White Zombie remains his most celebrated contribution to cinema history. He died on May 17, 1983, in Bentonville, Arkansas.

Early life

Early life and stage career

Victor Halperin was born on August 24, 1895, in Chicago, Illinois. He was the older brother of Edward Halperin, born May 12, 1898, in Chicago, Illinois, who later became a film producer and collaborated with him on multiple projects. Halperin began his professional career as a stage actor and later advanced to working as a stage director. His experience in theater preceded his entry into the film industry.

Film career

Silent era

Victor Halperin entered the film industry in the silent era with his first credited contribution as the original story writer for The Danger Point (1922), appearing under the full name Victor Hugo Halperin. He continued writing with the story credit for Tea: With a Kick! (1923) and directed and wrote Greater Than Marriage (1924) and screenplay for it. Halperin made his directing debut with When a Girl Loves (1924), a film he also produced. He went on to direct and produce several additional silent features, including Greater Than Marriage (1924), The Unknown Lover (1925), School for Wives (1925), In Borrowed Plumes (1926), and Dance Magic (1927), with most credits listing him as Victor Hugo Halperin. He additionally served as producer on Convoy (1927) and She Goes to War (1929). Halperin's silent era output concluded as the industry shifted toward sound films in 1930.

1930s independent films

In the early sound era, Victor Halperin shifted to independent low-budget productions, directing and producing Ex-Flame (1930) and Party Girl (1930), both released through small distributors such as Sono Art-World Wide Pictures and Tiffany Pictures. He frequently collaborated with his brother Edward Halperin on these early independent projects, often handling directing and producing duties within the constraints of modest resources. Halperin occasionally employed the pseudonym Rex Hale for directing credits, including on a re-issue version of Party Girl. By the mid-1930s, Halperin continued in the independent sector, directing I Conquer the Sea! (1936) for Grand National Films, Racing Blood (1936) for Reliable Pictures, and Nation Aflame (1937) for Heritage Pictures. These films exemplified his pattern of low-budget work outside major studios, with Halperin again using Rex Hale for directing Racing Blood and story credit on Nation Aflame. During this same period, Halperin directed horror titles alongside his non-horror independent output.

Horror genre contributions

Victor Halperin made notable contributions to the horror genre during the 1930s. His work in this area is most prominently defined by White Zombie (1932), widely recognized as the first feature-length zombie film in Hollywood cinema. Directed independently, White Zombie starred Bela Lugosi as the menacing voodoo master Murder Legendre and Madge Bellamy as the young woman transformed into a zombie slave. The film drew inspiration from William B. Seabrook's 1929 book The Magic Island, presenting zombies as living individuals deprived of free will through voodoo rituals rather than the flesh-eating undead of later genre conventions. It has since developed a cult following among horror fans, appreciated for its atmospheric style, gothic tone, and Lugosi's distinctive, hypnotic performance. Halperin also directed the studio-produced Supernatural (1933) for Paramount Pictures and the independent Revolt of the Zombies (1936), the latter serving as a loose sequel to White Zombie. These productions, often undertaken with his brother's involvement, formed the core of his genre output amid his wider filmmaking activities during the decade.

Later films and retirement

In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Victor Halperin directed a series of low-budget independent films, continuing his work in the B-movie sector after his earlier genre efforts. His directing credits during this period included Buried Alive (1939), Torture Ship (1939), and Girls' Town (1942). Buried Alive (1939) was a prison drama that departed from horror themes despite its title. Torture Ship (1939) was a science fiction picture involving medical experiments on convicts. Halperin collaborated with his brother Edward on various independent projects throughout the 1930s. He retired from directing in 1942 after completing Girls' Town, following his tenure as a director at PRC studios on these low-budget productions.

Personal life

Marriage and family

Victor Halperin married Irene McDaniel on August 20, 1923. They divorced on May 1, 1938. The marriage produced three children, though specific names and further details about them are not widely documented. Halperin had a younger brother, Edward Halperin, who served as a professional collaborator in the film industry, particularly on screenwriting and production for several of Victor's projects.

Death and legacy

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