Reginald Le Borg Movies
Serving his apprenticeship with Austrian theatrical impresario
Max Reinhardt, Vienna-born former banker
Reginald LeBorg struck out on his own the 1920s as a director of European musical productions. Moving to Hollywood in the 1930s, LeBorg paid the bills with a few appearances as a movie extra, then secured work as directing MGM musical shorts; his script for the 1943 2-reeler
Heavenly Music won an Academy Award. A contract director at Universal in the 1940s, LeBorg helmed several of the Inner Sanctum "B"-picture series starring
Lon Chaney Jr. His best Universal effort, the whimsical comedy
San Diego I Love You (1945), bears the distinction of being the only Hollywood feature film in which
Buster Keaton ever smiled. From 1945 onward, LeBorg was confined to such second-string studios as Monogram (where he was principal director for the
Joe Palooka series) and Lippert. He was reunited with his old friend
Lon Chaney Jr. for the 1955 horror film
The Black Sleep, one of LeBorg's few totally worthwhile projects of the 1950s.
Reginald LeBorg spent his final years calling the shots for various TV series and for such lurid drive-in fodder as So Evil My Sister (1973). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide