Howard W. Koch(1916-2001)
- Producer
- Director
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Getting his start in the movie business in Universal's contract and
playdate department in New York City, Howard W. Koch moved on to 20th
Century-Fox as a film librarian and then entered production as second
assistant director on
The Keys of the Kingdom (1944).
After many films as assistant director, Koch joined forces with his
professional benefactor Aubrey Schenck
and Edwin F. Zabel to strike a
three-picture production deal with United Artists that was to start
with the western War Paint (1953). The
success of these pictures opened up the deal for more UA films by Koch,
Schenck and Zabel (Bel-Air Productions). With Schenck, Koch produced
TV's Miami Undercover (1961)
and also worked as a director on such series as
Maverick (1957),
Hawaiian Eye (1959),
Cheyenne (1955) and
The Untouchables (1959).
From 1961 to 1964 Koch was vice-president in charge of production for
Sinatra Enterprises; among his many executive-producer credits during
this period was the chilling
Ứng Cử Viên Bị Giật Dây (1962).
He became the production head at Paramount in 1964 and then shifted
gears two years later to form his own production unit, which supplied
major features to Paramount for years. By all accounts one of the
best-loved men in Hollywood, Koch was a recipient of the
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the
1990 Oscarcast.