- Henry Koster
Infobox Actor
name = Henry Koster
birthname = Hermann Kosterlitz
birthdate = birth date|1905|5|1
birthplace =Berlin ,Germany
deathdate = death date and age|1988|9|21|1905|5|1
deathplace =Camarillo, California
spouse = Katherine Kiraly (1934-1941)Peggy Moran (1942-1988)
yearsactive = 1925 - 1967
occupation = director, screenwriter, producerHenry Koster (
May 1 ,1905 –September 21 ,1988 ) was born Herman Kosterlitz inBerlin ,Germany . He became afilm director and later moved toHollywood . Koster's father, a salesman, left home when Henry was a young man. Koster still managed to finish "gymnasium" (high school) in Berlin while working asshort story writer andcartoon ist.Koster was introduced to cinema about 1910 when his uncle opened a very early
movie theater in Berlin. Koster's mother played the piano to accompany the films, leaving the young boy to occupy himself by watching the films. After working initially as a short story writer, Koster was subsequently hired by a Berlin movie company as scenarist, became assistant to directorCurtis Bernhardt . Bernhardt became sick one day and asked Koster to take over as director. In about 1931 or 1932, Koster directed two or three films in Berlin for UFA.Koster, who was in the midst of directing a film, had already been the subject of
anti-Semitism , and knew he had to leave. He lost his temper at anSA officer at his bank during lunch hour, and knocked the officer out. He went directly to the railroad station and left Germany forFrance , where he was rehired by Bernhardt (who had left earlier). Eventually Koster went toBudapest and met and married Kato Kiraly in 1934. In Budapest he metJoe Pasternak , who represented Universal inEurope , and directed three films for him.In 1936 Koster got a contract to work with Universal in Hollywood, and he travelled to the
United States to work with Pasternak, other refugees and his wife. Although Koster did not speak English, he convinced the studio to let him make "Three Smart Girls ", for which he personally coached 14-year-old starDeanna Durbin . This picture, a big success, pulled Universal out ofbankruptcy . Koster's second Universal film, "One Hundred Men and a Girl ", with Durbin andLeopold Stokowski put the studio, Durbin, Pasternak, and Koster on top.Koster went on to do numerous musicals and family comedies during the late 1930s and early 1940s, many with
Betty Grable , Durbin and other musical stars of the era. Koster worked at Universal until 1941 or so, and then moved to MGM, and then Fox in 1948. Ironically, despite his escape from Nazi Germany, when the United States enteredWorld War II Koster was considered anenemy alien and had to stay in his house in the evening. ActorCharles Laughton would visit Koster and play chess with him.Koster discovered
Abbott and Costello working at a nightclub in New York. He returned to Hollywood and convinced Universal to hire them. Their first picture, which featured the "Who's On First? " routine, was "One Night in the Tropics ". The female lead,Peggy Moran , would become Koster's second wife in 1942. When he married Moran, Koster promised her he would put her in every movie he made from then on. He did, but it was her statue. Usually it is a sculptured head on a mantelpiece or a piano or desk. In "The Robe" he commissioned a Grecian bust which appears prominently in a Romanvilla .Koster was nominated for an Academy Award for "
The Bishop's Wife " (1947). In 1950 he directed what was his biggest success to date, the James Stewart comedy "Harvey". He directedRichard Burton 's first U.S. film, "My Cousin Rachel", and then was given the firstCinemaScope film to direct, "The Robe" in 1952. He directed some morecostume drama s, including "Désirée" (1954) withMarlon Brando , "The Virgin Queen" (1955) withBette Davis and "The Naked Maja " (1958) withAva Gardner then went back to family comedies and musicals, including "Flower Drum Song " for Universal in 1961. His last picture was "The Singing Nun" in 1965. Koster retired to Leisure Village,Camarillo, California , to indulge in his lifelong interest inpainting . He did a series of portraits of the movie stars with whom he worked.Although Koster never won an Oscar himself, he directed six different actors in Oscar-nominated performances:
Cecil Kellaway ,Loretta Young ,Celeste Holm ,Elsa Lanchester ,Josephine Hull , James Stewart andRichard Burton . Hull won the Oscar for "Harvey".External links
*imdb name|id=0467396|name=Henry Koster
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.