Reginald Le Borg(1902-1989)
- Director
- Additional Crew
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
The oldest of three sons, Reginald LeBorg majored in political economy
at the University of Austria and studied musical composition for a year
at Arnold Schoenberg's Composition Seminar. His education completed,
LeBorg entered his father's banking business and, acting as the senior
LeBorg's representative, traveled to Prague, Hamburg and Paris to
transact family business negotiations. During his two-year stay in
Paris he studied at the Sorbonne. In the mid-'20s LeBorg traveled to
New York to dispose of a collection of paintings on his father's
behalf. Remaining in New York, he was employed by several banks and
brokerage houses and at an advertising agency. The stock market crash
of 1929 wiped out the LeBorg family fortune, and Reginald's interest in
the financial world waned. He returned to Europe and his first love,
the stage. He worked at the Max Reinhardt
School in Vienna, and later devoted much of his time to directing
operas and musical comedies for provincial houses throughout Central
Europe. Arriving on the Hollywood scene in the early 1930s, LeBorg
appeared as an extra in pictures at Paramount and Metro and later
staged opera sequences in the
Grace Moore hits
One Night of Love (1934) and
Love Me Forever (1935), as well
as other films with operatic themes at Fox, Paramount and United
Artists. After a number of second-unit assignments at MGM, Goldwyn and
Selznick, LeBorg joined Universal, where he turned out band shorts. An
18-month hitch with the U.S. Army interrupted his Hollywood career,
which resumed in 1943 with his return to Universal and his promotion to
feature film director. He later worked in TV.