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・ Leonard Hill
・ Leonard Hill (physiologist)
・ Leonard Hill (politician)
・ Leonard Hill (producer)
・ Leonard Hilty
・ Leonard Ho
・ Leonard Hoar
・ Leonard Hodgson
・ Leonard Hoffmann, Baron Hoffmann
・ Leonard Hofstadter
・ Leonard Hokanson
・ Leonard Holbrook
・ Leonard Hollands
・ Leonard Holliday
・ Leonard Hopkins
Leonard Horn
・ Leonard Horner
・ Leonard Horridge
・ Leonard House
・ Leonard House (Greensboro, Maryland)
・ Leonard Howard
・ Leonard Howard Loyd Irby
・ Leonard Howe
・ Leonard Howell
・ Leonard Howell (footballer)
・ Leonard Hughes IV
・ Leonard Humphries
・ Leonard Hurst
・ Leonard Hussey
・ Leonard Hutchinson


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Leonard Horn : ウィキペディア英語版
Leonard Horn

Leonard J. Horn (August 1, 1926 – May 25, 1975) was a director of US prime time television programs in the 1960s and 1970s, and helped shape a number of “classic” adventure and sci-fi series, including ''Mission: Impossible'', ''Mannix'', ''Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea'', and ''Wonder Woman''. Contemporary fan-sites such as the viewer polling pages of the ''Internet Movie Database'' (hereafter IMDB) and TV.com show Horn’s work to have stood the test of time; many of the 94 episodes he directed for 34 prime-time television series rank among the more popular moments in the first “Golden Age of Television”.
Horn was born in Bangor, Maine. He started directing in 1959-1962 for ''Alfred Hitchcock Presents'' and ''The Alfred Hitchcock Hour'', and was soon among a stable of directors working on such popular prime-time programs as ''The Untouchables'', ''Route 66'', and ''The Fugitive''. Horn’s most sustained contribution to one series was directing ten episodes of ''Mission: Impossible'', including five in the first season. His “Operation Rogash” (1966), the series’ 3rd episode, ties among IMDB voters for the most popular first-season show, and most of his other efforts get high marks. In one of Horn’s second-season episodes, “Trek”, Peter Graves appeared for the first time as “Mr. Phelps”.
==TV Pilot Episodes==
Horn was responsible for a number of classic TV pilots. In 1967, he directed the first episode of ''Mannix'' (“My Name is Mannix”), written by Bruce Geller, the creator and producer of ''Mission: Impossible''. Half of the images for the show’s subsequently-famous opening montage derive from this production. Horn directed an additional six shows for the series. Also in 1967, he directed the second pilot for the series ''Ironside'' (“Split Second to an Epitaph”). His last pilot, and final television production, was for the series ''Wonder Woman'' in 1975, and was nominated for an Emmy in graphic design and title sequencing.

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