Hamilton MacFadden
An image from Stand Up and Cheer!, one of the productions that also features Hamilton MacFadden.

Hamilton MacFadden

April 26, 1901 — Chelsea, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Hamilton MacFadden (April 26, 1901 – January 1, 1977) was an American actor, screenwriter and film director.

MacFadden's parents were Rev. Robert A. MacFadden and Edith Hamilton MacFadden. His father died in 1909, leaving his mother to support herself and four children. In 1928, she became the first woman to file papers to run for governor of Massachusetts.

MacFadden was a 1925 graduate of Harvard University. Soon after graduating, he became producer of the American Theatre Company, which presented plays for 10 weeks in the Boston area. The project was backed by Michael Strange, a writer who made her professional stage debut in the productions. He also served as director of the Community Arts Association in Santa Barbara, California, and the Theatre Guild School of Acting in New York.

Plays that MacFadden produced on Broadway included Gods of the Lightning and La Gringa. After starting out on Broadway in the 1920s, he moved into filmmaking in Hollywood. During the early 1930s he was a contract director at Fox. McFadden made a number of films for them including several early entries in the Charlie Chan series such as Charlie Chan Carries On (1931). He was released from his Fox contract following the 1934 merger with Twentieth Century Pictures. Thereafter he mixed occasional directing jobs with a number of small supporting appearances in films.

Later in his career, MacFadden was associate chief of the United States Department of State's international motion picture division.

The Black Camel

The Black Camel

1931

Charlie Chan in Paris

Charlie Chan in Paris

1935

Escape by Night

Escape by Night

1937

Stand Up and Cheer!

Stand Up and Cheer!

1934

Oh, for a Man!

Oh, for a Man!

1930

It Can't Last Forever

It Can't Last Forever

1937

Fighting Youth

Fighting Youth

1935

Charlie Chan Carries On

Charlie Chan Carries On

1931