Robert Marion Gist (October 1, 1917 – May 21, 1998) was an American actor and film director. Gist was reared around the stockyards of Chicago, Illinois, during the Great Depression. Reform school-bound after injuring another boy in a fistfight, Gist instead ended up at Chicago's Hull House, a settlement house originally established by social worker Jane Addams. There he first became interested in acting. Work in Chicago radio was followed by stage acting roles in Chicago and on Broadway (in the long-running Harvey with Josephine Hull).[citation needed] While acting in Harvey, he made his motion picture debut in 20th Century-Fox's Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street (1947). Gist was also seen on Broadway in director Charles Laughton's The Caine Mutiny Court Martial (1954) with Henry Fonda and John Hodiak. While shooting Operation Petticoat (1959), Gist told director Blake Edwards that he was interested in directing. Edwards later hired Gist to helm episodes of the TV series Pe...
Strangers on a Train
1951
Miracle on 34th Street
1947
Operation Petticoat
1959
Al Capone
1959
Angel Face
1953
The FBI Story
1959
D-Day the Sixth of June
1956
The Band Wagon
1953
The Stratton Story
1949
Jack the Giant Killer
1962
I Was a Shoplifter
1950
The Naked and the Dead
1958
The Jackpot
1950
Scene of the Crime
1949
Jigsaw
1949
One Minute to Zero
1952
A Dangerous Profession
1949
Love That Brute
1950
Blueprint for Robbery
1961
Wolf Larsen
1958