Charles Guggenheim(1924-2002)
- Producer
- Director
- Writer
Charles Guggenheim was born into a wealthy Cincinnati family (his
father was a furniture manufacturer). While studying agriculture in
college in 1943, Guggenheim was drafted into the army. Upon discharge
from the service he decided against an agricultural career and moved to
New York to pursue a career in broadcasting. He founded Charles
Guggenheim and Associates, a film production company. He developed an
interest in politics, and soon moved the company from New York to
Washington, DC, where he became a media adviser to many Democratic
political figures. After
Robert F. Kennedy's assassination,
Guggenheim put together a tribute to him culled from the thousands of
feet of film he had shot of Kennedy over the years. The resulting film,
Robert Kennedy Remembered (1968),
won an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short. Although Guggenheim
occasionally ventured into feature film production, he stayed mostly
with documentaries, where he received his first Academy Award for
1964's
Nine from Little Rock (1965),
about the desegregation effort in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957. He
won two more Oscars for documentary filmmaking, in 1989 and 1994. His
last documentary,
Berga: Soldiers of Another War (2003),
was about a group of 350 American soldiers captured by the Nazis during
the Battle of the Bulge who, because they were either Jewish or the
Nazis thought they "looked Jewish", were sent to concentration camps
instead of POW camps (Guggenheim had been assigned to the unit that was
captured, but a severe illness resulted in his being left behind when
it was sent to the front lines so he was not with them when the men
were captured). He finished the film just a few months before his death
in October of 2002.