• Albert Paul Mantz (August 2, 1903 – July 8, 1965) was a noted air racing pilot, movie stunt pilot and consultant from the late 1930s until his death in the mid-1960s.
  • Albert Paul Mantz was one of kind: a self-sure pilot who succeeded at anything he ever really wanted, be it aerobatics, a virtual monopoly on movie stunt flying or...
  • Paul Mantz(1903-1965). Stunts. ... After a brief period of commercial flying, Mantz took up the more lucrative career of stunt flying for the film industry.
  • Paul Mantz in his P-51C, Blaze of Noon, in which he set coast-to-coast speed records in each direction and won that year's Bendix Trophy.
  • Born in Alameda, California, on August 8th, 1903, Paul Mantz first learned to fly when he was 17.
  • Paul Mantz did it all: air shows, movie flying, air racing, competition flying, skywriting, air charters, and flight instruction.
  • PAUL MANTZ. King of the Hollywood Pilots. He had severe vertigo, but would fly an airplane anywhere. Flying through a hanger in 1932 for John Ford.
  • Other admirers remain unknown to me. Who else but Paul Mantz would fly a P-51C Mustang racer in a suit and tie, and win Bendix races doing so?
  • Born in Alameda, California, on August 8th, 1903, Paul Mantz first learned to fly when he was 17. After spending several years barnstorming...
  • Stunt pilot and entrepreneur Paul Mantz. ... About Paul Mantz. The aviator served as a major and later lieutenant colonel during World War II (1939-1945).