- Walter Wanger
Infobox Actor
name = Walter Wanger
birthname = Walter Feuchtwanger
birthdate = birth date|1894|7|11
location =San Francisco, California
deathdate = death date and age|1968|11|18|1894|7|11
deathplace =New York City, New York
spouse =Justine Johnstone (1919-1938)Joan Bennett (1940-1965)
academyawards =Academy Honorary Award 1946 Lifetime Achievement 1949 "Joan of Arc"Walter Wanger (
July 11 ,1894 –November 18 ,1968 ) was anAcademy Award -winning Americanfilm producer . His long, colorful career is one of Hollywood's greatest untold stories. An intellectual and a socially conscious movie executive who produced provocative message movies and glittering romantic melodramas, Wanger's career started at Paramount studios in the 1920s and led him to work at virtually every major studio as either a contract producer or an independent.For the most complete sense of Walter Wanger's life and film career, read Matthew Bernstein's book "Walter Wanger, Hollywood Independent" and "The Genius of the System: Hollywood Filmmaking in the Studio Era" by Thomas Schatz. Wanger was born Walter Feuchtwanger in
San Francisco, California . He served with theUnited States Army duringWorld War I . He attended Dartmouth college in New Hampshire.He produced his first motion picture in 1929 titled "
The Cocoanuts ", directed byRobert Florey andJoseph Santley and starring theMarx Brothers . His many significant productions include "The Sheik " (1921), "Gabriel Over the White House " (1933), "Queen Christina " (1933), "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine" (1936), "Stagecoach" (1939), "Foreign Correspondent" (1940), "Scarlet Street " (1945), "Joan of Arc" (1948), "The Reckless Moment " (1949), "Invasion of the Body Snatchers " (1956), "I Want to Live! " (1958), and "Cleopatra" (1963).Wanger married
silent film actress Justine Johnstone in 1919. They divorced in 1938 and in 1940 he marriedJoan Bennett with whom he remained married until their divorce in 1965. They had two daughters, Stephanie (born 1943) and Shelley Antonia (born 1948), and Wanger adopted Bennett's daughter, Diana, by her marriage to John Marion Fox. In 1950, Bennett signed with MCA agent Jennings Lang (1915-1996). In 1951, Wanger shot at Lang after believing him to be having an affair with Bennett. Wanger's attorney,Jerry Giesler , mounted a "temporary insanity" defense and Wanger served a four-month sentence at the Castaic Honor Farm two hours' drive north of Los Angeles. The experience profoundly affected him and in 1954 he made the prison film "Riot in Cell Block 11 ".Wanger was given an
Honorary Academy Award in 1946 for his service as President of theAcademy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences . He refused another honorary Oscar in 1949 for "Joan of Arc", out of anger over the fact that the film, which he felt was one of his best, had not been nominated for Best Picture.His 1958 production of "I Want to Live!" starred
Susan Hayward in an anti-capital punishment film that is one of the most highly regarded films on the subject. Hayward won her only Oscar for her role in the film.In May 1966, Wanger received the Commendation of the Order of Merit, Italy's third-highest honor, from Consul General Alvaro v. Bettrani, "for your friendship and cooperation with the Italian government in all phases of the motion picture industry."
Walter Wanger died of a heart attack, aged 74, in
New York City . He was interred in the Home of Peace Cemetery inColma, California .External links
*imdb name|id= 0911137|name=Walter Wanger
* [http://www.cobbles.com/simpp_archive/walter-wanger_shooting.htm Article on Wanger shooting Jennings Lang]###@@@KEY@@@###
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