Wray Bartlett Physioc (November 23, 1890 – May 8, 1933) was an American film director, producer and artist.
However, during production Physioc was on a schooner preparing for a scene when a premature explosion occurred forcing him to leap overboard and causing burns to his face and neck.
[2][12][13] In 1917, Physioc directed The Gulf Between, which was a critical and commercial failure but notable in that it was one of the first color films ever produced and the first to use Technicolor.
[14] In 1919, he was directing a series of weekly shorts entitled Facts and Follies which were produced by Bernarr Macfadden for the Pioneer Film Corporation.
In the mid-1920s, Physioc spent a couple years in the West Indies directing films before returning to New York in March 1928.