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  1. Death. In the early 1990s, Samuel Fuller, along with his wife, Christa, and their daughter Samantha, settled into a small apartment at 61 rue de Reuilly in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, but after he suffered a stroke in 1994, they returned to the States the following year.

  2. A los 17 años, se convirtió en un reportero criminal en Nueva York, trabajando para el New York Graphic. A partir de mediados de los años 1930, empezó a escribir novelas y guiones. Fuller también se convirtió en un escritor fantasma de guiones y en entrevistas posteriores nunca reveló qué guiones escribió anónimamente.

  3. 1 de nov. de 1997 · Samuel Fuller, a director, screenwriter and producer who was widely viewed as the reigning virtuoso of low-budget films and was ranked by European critics as one of the best directors in the...

  4. Samuel Fuller's death and legacy. In 1629 / 1630, Fuller was sent to assist the colonists of Salem and Charlestown who were sick and also needed help in organising their local Church. A few years later, Fuller himself fell ill with the sickness ("infectious fever") that had quickly spread throughout Plymouth Colony.

  5. Samuel born about 1629. Samuel died on August 17, 1695. Samuel Fuller (Jr) married: 1. Susanna 2. Elizabeth (Nicholas) Bowen between April 11, 1663, and May 2, 1667, and had seven children. Will. Samuel Fuller made out his will on July 30, 1633, calling himself "sick and weak," and died sometime between August 9 and September 26, 1633.

  6. Samuel was baptized at Redenhall, Norfolk, England, 20 January 1580, the son of Robert and Sarah (Dunkhorn) Fuller. He died at Plymouth between 30 July and 28 October 1633 during the general sickness that swept through the Plymouth area in 1633 and 1634.

  7. Samuel Fuller died in 1633, one of at least 10 people in Plymouth Colony who died during a smallpox epidemic. Click here for Samuel Fuller's will and the inventory of his estate at the time of his death. Pilgrim Hall Museum displays the "Fuller cradle." This cradle was made between 1680 and 1720.