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Foster H. Phinney
Foster Phinney dedicated much of his life to the motion picture business. Fresh out of high school, his suave and sophisticated appearance made it possible for him to break into the film business. He started appearing in scenes that required dress extras while still collecting an occasional paycheck as a soldier. Phinney faces an unusual problem, his elegant appearance made him an unlikely candidate to appear in the trenches in Hollywood's war time films but it enabled him to appear in socialite scenes that usually required much older men. This led him to garnering work as a stand-in in films in the 1940s and 1950s. By the time the 1950s rolled around, Phinney got his big break. He became the regular stand-in for Kirk Douglas. Douglas was so kind to him that Douglas considered him his good luck charm and gave him little roles in all of his films. While his work was steady, it was Douglas who got Phinney steady work as an assistant director. This began a second career where he worked as the assistant director on many shows including The Beverly Hillbillies where he had a character named after him.
7.3Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
1953
8.1All About Eve
1950
6.8High Society
1956
5.7Experiment Perilous
1944
6.6Wallflower
1948
6.5Guys and Dolls
1955
7.7Monsieur Verdoux
1947
7.0The Country Girl
1954
6.6Don't Bother to Knock
1952
6.7Deception
1946
6.2Iron Man
1951
6.6Bedlam
1946
7.0It's Always Fair Weather
1955
6.3Affair in Trinidad
1952
5.9A Walk in the Sun
1945
6.3The Merry Widow
1952
6.5Living It Up
1954
7.0Humoresque
1947
5.7Let's Make It Legal
1951
5.6The Bamboo Blonde
1946