John P. McCarthy (March 17, 1884 – September 4, 1962), also known as J.P. McCarthy or simply as John McCarthy, was an American director and screenwriter of the 1920s through 1945. He began in the film industry in front of the camera, as an actor in silent films and film shorts during the 1910s, before moving behind the camera in 1920. He usually directed his own screenplays. Although he directed the occasional drama or comedy, his specialty was the Western, which make up 28 of his 38 filmography entries.[1]
Life and career
John P. McCarthy was born on Saint Patrick's Day 1884 in San Francisco, California to John Henry and Catherine Lynch McCarty. He later changed his last name from "McCarty" to "McCarthy".
His brother, Francis Joseph McCarty, developed an early radiotelephone system,[2] before dying in a 1906 accident. John P. McCarthy continued promotion, but was unsuccessful in marketing this invention,[3][4] and entered the film industry in 1914. His first part was a small role in the film short The Wireless Voice, which also featured his radio equipment.[5] Over the next four years he appeared in eight films, all but one a short. His one feature was in a small part of a prison guard in the 1916 D. W. Griffith classic, Intolerance.[6]
His most prolific year was 1931, when he directed eight films, two of which he also wrote: Cavalier of the West and God's Country and the Man.[8] He took a hiatus from the film industry in the early 1940s, before returning in 1944.[14] His final directorial credit was part of The Cisco Kid series, 1945's The Cisco Kid Returns.[15] In 1946 McCarthy wrote the story for the Western, Under Arizona Skies, directed by Lambert Hillyer, which was his final film credit.[16]