- Shelby Storck
Shelby William Storck (
October 3 ,1916 -April 5 ,1969 ) was an Americannewscaster ,actor ,writer ,journalist ,public relations specialist, andmotion picture andtelevision producer-director. He was a radio actor on "The Air Adventures of Jimmie Allen " and other programs, and appeared in the feature filmsThe Delinquents andThe Cool and the Crazy .The descendant of General
Joseph O. Shelby , Shelby Storck was born inKansas City, Missouri and was graduated from the University of Kansas City, now theUniversity of Missouri-Kansas City , in 1937. Storck worked as a newscaster for theKansas City Star and its affiliated radio station WDAF from 1939 until he joined theNavy in 1942. A Navy pilot, he rose to the rank of lieutenant before being discharged in 1945. Two of his years of service had been in theMediterranean theater, where he saw action duringWorld War II .Post-WWII years
On returning to Kansas City, Storck rejoined WDAF and again became a newscaster but soon moved on to become a member of the staff of T. R. Finn & Associates, a Kansas City company, as its publicity director. He was assistant director of education and organization for the Consumers Cooperative Association from 1947 to 1949 and was public relations director and assistant manager of the North Kansas City Development Company in 1949 and 1950. He was also a semi-professional actor in local radio, television, civic theater, and in films made in the Kansas City area. Storck's first wife, the former Barbara Marsh, died of bulbar
polio in 1950. He later established a Barbara Storck Memorial award for poetry at the University of Kansas City in her memory.Films
Shelby Storck continued in radio and television work through the 1950s, working between Kansas City and St. Louis, making documentary films which he often narrated as well as produced. He frequently acted in industrial and educational films produced by the
Calvin Company of Kansas City and by theCentron Corporation ofLawrence, Kansas . There, he worked with such notable directors asRobert Altman andHerk Harvey . In 1954 he became general manager ofKETC in St. Louis, aneducational television station.From 1955 to 1966 Storck was associated with
Charles Guggenheim of St. Louis as a director and narrator of documentary and commercial movies produced by Guggenheim. Among the fims Storck made while associated with Guggenheim were several award-winning documentaries on St. Louis history. Storck remarried, to longtime friend Jacqueline Field, in 1956. In 1960 the Storcks moved from Kansas City to St. Louis. In 1966, when Charles Guggenheim transferred his operations toWashington, D.C. , Storck formed his own production company in St. Louis, Shelby Storck & Associates, Inc., and began producing documentaries and commercials. He was best known for making half-hour campaign biographies for politicians, mostly under the direction of media consultant Joe Napolitan, including successful films forMilton Shapp ,Winthrop Rockefeller , andMike Gravel . In 1968 Storck wrote, produced, and directed a half-hour promotional documentary onHubert Humphrey called "What Manner of Man," which was hugely instrumental in Humphrey's sudden surge in the polls towards the end of his unsuccessful race againstRichard Nixon for President of theUnited States .Shelby Storck had been diagnosed with
heart disease and was under a doctor's care for several months. He died in his sleep, apparently after a heart attack, at home in St. Louis in April of 1969. His wife, Jackie, was on the way by air toTaiwan to visit a sister when he died, and funeral arrangements had to be delayed for several days until she could return to St. Louis.torck Awards
There currently exists a Shelby Storck Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. The annual Storck Awards for Notable Achievement in the Political Advertising Arts were established by the
Washington Post in 1980. Today, Shelby Storck is primarily known for the political films he produced in the 1960s, as well as for his role as a hard-nosed, wise-to-the-world police detective in the 1958 Kansas City-produced feature-length filmThe Cool and the Crazy (where his wife Jackie also makes a cameo appearance).Shelby Storck had three children: Shelby Randall Storck (1943-1987), who followed in his father's journalistic footsteps and became a
photographer ; Phillip Alan Storck (b. 1944); and Gael Winslow Storck (b. 1950). He also had a stepdaughter, Kathy Field (b. 1948) from his second marriage.Film Appearances
Ephermeral film archivist
Rick Prelinger has in his possession several rare educational and industrial films that Shelby Storck acted in. Several are available for free viewing and downloading online onPrelinger Archives :
* [http://www.archive.org/details/WhatAbou1954 What About Drinking?] (1954 - In thisCentron Corporation film directed byHerk Harvey , Shelby Storck plays a doctor who chats with a teenager about alcoholism)
* [http://www.archive.org/details/MagicBon1955_2 The Magic Bond (Part 2)] (1956 - In this film produced by theCalvin Company for theVeterans of Foreign Wars and directed byRobert Altman , Storck narrates a brief sequence on the importance of voting)
* [http://www.archive.org/details/CoffeeBreak Coffee Break] (1958 - ACalvin Company film, in which Storck plays an office boss frustrated by his employees' tendencies to take extra-long coffee breaks)
* [http://www.archive.org/details/promotion_bypass Promotion Bypass] (1958 - Another Calvin film on office workers, where Storck plays an office boss who tells his junior to send his "best man" over to a new office)
* [http://www.archive.org/details/innocent_party The Innocent Party] (1959 - An award-winning and groundbreaking Centron production directed by Herk Harvey, in which Storck portrays a school doctor who has an educational talk with a teen student who has contracted syphilis)References
* "His Voice to the Navy," The Kansas City Star, January 3, 1942.
* "Wed to Shelby Storck," The Kansas City Times, July 21, 1956.
* Fleming, Thomas J., "Selling the Product Named Hubert Humphrey," The New York Times Magazine, October 13, 1968.
* "Shelby W. Storck Dies; Made Documentary Movies," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 6, 1969.
* "Shelby Storck Dies," The Kansas City Star, April 6, 1969.
* "Shelby W. Storck Dies; TV. Movie Producer," St. Louis Globe Democrat, April 7, 1969.
* "Shelby Storck Rites," The Kansas City Times, April 9, 1969.
* Lemann, Nicholas, "The Storcks," The Washington Post Magazine, December 7, 1980.
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