Virgil Vogel Movies
Virgil Vogel enjoyed a half-century-long career in the movie industry, starting out in the editing department at Universal as an assistant in his early twenties and eventually becoming a successful director.
Vogel's early credits as an editor include
Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man, the
Frank Sinatra vehicle
Meet Danny Wilson, and the
Tony Curtis costumer
Son of Ali Baba. By the second half of the decade, he was working on such top studio releases as
This Island Earth and
Orson Welles'
Touch of Evil (the editing of which became a major source of contention between
Welles and the studio). In 1956, tired of editing, he earned his directorial debut on the sci-fi horror film
The Mole People (1956), a silly but extremely popular and profitable release, and he also closed out the
Ma and Pa Kettle series with
The Kettles on Old MacDonald's Farm (1957), having edited the preceding movie in the series. Over the next few years, he handled the direction on such modest (if popular) programmers as
The Land Unknown and
Invasion of the Animal People (a Swedish-made science fiction film that had many hauntingly eerie and beautiful sequences), while also working increasingly in television, principally for Universal's Revue TV division, on series such as
Mike Hammer, Overland Trail, and
Wagon Train, and later on series such as
Bonanza,
Burke's Law,
Honey West,
Dan August, and
The Streets of San Francisco. His 1970s credits included many detective and action series, among them Cannon,
Police Story, and Joe Forrester, as well as the occasional science fiction-oriented show such as The Six Million Dollar Man and The Man From Atlantis.
Vogel's career in the 1980s brought him to such series as
Knight Rider,
Magnum P.I., and
Miami Vice, while in the 1990s he worked on
Walker, Texas Ranger, among other series.
Vogel retired in the mid-'90s and passed away in 1996. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide