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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sig_HerzigSig Herzig - Wikipedia

    Sig Herzig (born Siegfried Maurice Herzig; July 25, 1897 – March 12, 1985) was an American screenwriter and playwright. Biography. Born Siegfried Maurice Herzig in New York City, Herzig began his career as the director of the comedy short Husband and Strife (1922), but he switched gears to create plot lines for more than three dozen silent films.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0381280Sig Herzig - IMDb

    Sig Herzig. Writer: Broadway Gondolier. Sig Herzig was born on 25 July 1897 in New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer and director, known for Broadway Gondolier (1935), Indianapolis Speedway (1939) and Varsity Show (1937). He died on 12 March 1985 in Thousand Oaks, California, USA.

    • Writer, Director, Additional Crew
    • July 25, 1897
    • Sig Herzig
    • March 12, 1985
  3. Screenwriter Sig Herzig provided scripts and basic storylines for films from the late 1920s through the early '60s including Brewster's Millions (1945). Born and raised in New York, Herzig started out as a playwright, a vocation he never entirely abandoned after becoming an established scenarist.

  4. Sig Herzig is known as an Screenplay, Writer, Story, Adaptation, Theatre Play, and Director. Some of his work includes They Made Me a Criminal, 77 Sunset Strip, Brewster's Millions, Four's a Crowd, I Wanted Wings, Where Do We Go from Here?, Indianapolis Speedway, and On Your Toes.

  5. Who was Sig Herzig? Sig Herzig was an American screenwriter and playwright. Born Siegfried Maurice Herzig in New York City, Herzig began his career as the director of the comedy short Husband and Strife, but he switched gears to create plot lines for more than three dozen silent films.

  6. Sig Herzig (1897-1985) was a motion picture screenwriter, playwright, and television writer during the twentieth century. A native of New York City, Herzig wrote screenplays for numerous popular movies between the 1920s and 1960s, including "Old Man Rhythm" (1935), "They Made Me a Criminal" (1939), and "Brewster's Millions" (1945).

  7. Sig Herzig was an American screenwriter and playwright. Born Siegfried Maurice Herzig in New York City, Herzig began his career as the director of the comedy short Husband and Strife, but he switched gears to create plot lines for more than three dozen silent films.