Micky Moore dies at 98; director and early Hollywood actor
Moore acted in silents as a boy and then for decades worked as a second-unit director, contributing to such works as 'Patton' and three 'Indiana Jones' movies.
By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
March 10, 2013, 5:39 p.m.
Micky Moore and Hollywood grew up together.
He was a toddler in 1916 when he began his career as a child actor in silent films and sat on the laps of such leading ladies as Mary Pickford and Gloria Swanson. As a 5-year-old he worked with legendary director Cecil B. DeMille, who would mentor Moore as he transitioned to directing in adulthood.
As the motion picture industry moved from silent pictures to sound and into the digital era, Moore would contribute to more than 200 movies over nine decades. He experienced so much Hollywood history firsthand that he was moved to preserve it in a memoir published when he was 95. He called it "My Magic Carpet of Films."
When Moore finally retired from the business, in his late 80s, he was regarded as a leading second-unit director for his work on such films as "Patton," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and the first three "Indiana Jones" movies.
Moore died March 4 at his longtime home in Malibu of congestive heart failure, his family announced. He was 98.
"He was amazing because the pictures he was second-unit director on, such as 'Patton' and 'Indiana Jones' have the highest reputation for their action. And who did the action scenes?" film historian Kevin Brownlow asked rhetorically in an interview with The Times.
The answer is, of course, Moore.
Over three decades he made nearly 40 films as a second-unit director shooting action and background footage while the primary director was engaged elsewhere. Hewing to another director's vision didn't bother Moore, known for bringing kindness and gentleness to his Hollywood sets. Besides, he said, the top directors had the confidence to take his advice.
"If you are good, you shouldn't even be aware that a second-unit director has been involved," Moore said in 2009 in the Malibu Times. "I just did the best I could possibly do on each shot, so they kept asking me to make more movies."
When filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg needed a second-unit director for "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981), Moore was their first choice, and a perfect one, Lucas later recalled.
"Micky Moore was exceptional.... He was confident behind the camera and knew when to speak up to make things better," Lucas wrote in a foreword to Moore's 2009 book.
After Moore suggested that the truck-chase scene he would direct in "Raiders" could be improved by moving it from an empty desert to narrow tree-lined streets to give it context, the change was made. The results, Lucas wrote of the now-iconic scene, "speak for themselves."
Spielberg wrote in another foreword to Moore's book: "He saw around the corners of my imagination and made significant contributions. For this and for his friendship, I shall always be grateful."
He was born Dennis Michael Sheffield in October 1914 in Vancouver, Canada, one of four children of Thomas Sheffield, a shipbuilder from Britain, and Norah Moore, an actress from Dublin.
After his family arrived in Santa Barbara by boat in 1915, they lived near a branch of the American Film Manufacturing Co., known as the Flying "A" Studio. When a neighbor suggested that brother Patrick, then almost 4, audition there, 18-month-old Micky — with his mop of curls and expressive eyes — was soon employed as well.
To further their careers, the family moved to Los Angeles in 1916, and Micky Moore was making $200 a week in 1920. His mother wanted the boys to use her last name professionally.
Patrick appeared in dozens of silent pictures, including the 1923 version of "The Ten Commandments," and later worked at Paramount Studios in music and sound editing. He died at 91 in 2004.
Their father maintained a lifelong affinity for the water. He was a founder of the original Santa Monica Lifeguard Service in 1916 and helped pioneer the American Red Cross safety program on the West Coast.
Young Micky soon joined the new Lasky studio, known as the Famous Players-Lasky Corp., where he spent much of his childhood. He often played the son in the dozens of silent films he made until the late 1920s.
MOORE, Michael D. (aka Micky Moore) (Dennis Michael Sheffield)
Born: 10/14/1914, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Died: 3/4/2013, Malibu, California, U.S.A.
Michael D. Moore’s westerns – actor, assistant director, second unit director:
Out of the Dust – 1920 (Evans' Grandchild)
The Man from Red Gulch – 1925 (Little Jimmie Falloner)
The Lady from Hell – 1926 (Billy Boy)
No Man's Gold – 1926 (Jimmi Rogers)
Good As Gold – 1927 (Buck Brady as a child)
California (1947) [assistant director]
Unconquered (1947) [assistant director]
The Paleface – 1948 [assistant director]
Streets of Laredo – 1949 [assistant director]
Fancy Pants – 1950 [assistant director]
The Furies – 1950 [assistant director]
Pardners – 1956 [assistant director]
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral - 1957 [assistant director]
The Tin Star - 1957 [assistant director]
Last Train from Gun Hill - 1959 [assistant director]
The Sons of Katie Elder - 1965 [assistant director]
An Eye for an Eye - 1966 [director]
The Fastest Guitar Alive - 1967 [director]
Bonanza (TV) - 1967 [director]
Hondo (TV) – 1967 [director]
Buckskin – 1968 [director]
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid - 1969 [second unit director]
Rooster Cogburn - 1975 [second unit director]
The Missouri Breaks - 1976 [second unit director]
The Return of a Man Called Horse - 1976 [second unit director]
The Electric Horseman - 1979 [assistant director]
Zorro: The Gay Blade - 1981 [second unit director]