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Roy Francis McGillicuddy (August 27, 1888 – February 11, 1960), known as Roy Mack, was an American baseball team executive owner who co-owned the Philadelphia Athletics of the American League with his father Connie Mack and brother Earle Mack from 1950 through 1954.
Roy Mack was born on 14 December 1889 in New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA. He was a director and writer, known for Vitamin 'U' for Me (1942), The Gigolo Racket (1931) and Poor Little Butterfly (1930). He died on 16 January 1962 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Director, Writer, Additional Crew
- December 14, 1889
- Roy Mack
- January 16, 1962
Roy Mack (born LeRoy A. McClure) was an American director of short films, mostly comedies, with over 200 titles to his credit.
1,049 Followers, 692 Following, 263 Posts - Roy Mack (@roygmack) on Instagram: ""
Seeing Red: Directed by Roy Mack. With Red Skelton, A. Robins, The Merry Macs, Harris & Shore. When he is fired from his job, Red puts a hex on his boss. That evening, the boss goes to a nightclub and discovers that the hex worked.
Roy Mack was a prolific director of short musical films during the 1930's. Although these films were typically around 20 minutes long, they are full fledged Hollywood musicals in every sense of the term, with story, characters and song and dance numbers.