Sam Katzman (July 7, 1901 –
August 4, 1973) was an American
film producer and director. Born into a poor
Jewish family, Katzman went to work as a stage laborer
at the age of 13 in the fledgling
East Coast film industry.
He would
learn all aspects of filmmaking and become a highly successful
Hollywood
producer for more than forty years.
Katzman produced cost-effective productions that made money for the
studios and the financial backers. He is noted for numerous
Western films of the 1930s, his
Bela Lugosi and
East Side Kids features of the 1940s, the
15-chapter
Superman
serial of 1948, and a string of
rock-'n'-roll musicals in the 1950s. At
MGM
Studios in the 1960s, Katzman produced several
Elvis Presley films and singer
Roy Orbison's only film,
The Fastest Guitar
Alive.
Early life and career
Born in
New York
City
to Abraham and Rebecca Katzman, Katzman entered the
film industry shortly before World War
I, as an errand boy at the old Fox Film Corporation,
which was then making low-budget short films at their studios in
Fort Lee, New Jersey. As a mail carrier, prop boy, and
laboratory messenger, carrying cans of exposed film back and forth
to the lab, Katzman quickly learned all the angles of the
low-budget film business, and gradually rose to the rank of
assistant director.
Fox let Katzman go in a wave of cutbacks just before the company
merged with 20th Century Pictures. He thus became an independent
producer and created his first venture, a feature-length film,
His Private Secretary
(1933), which he wrote himself.
John
Wayne was featured in the picture, which Katzman made in six
days at an overall cost of $13,000. From this modest beginning,
Katzman never looked back.
Low-budget producers usually made outdoor westerns and action
pictures, saving money on sets and using inexpensive actors.
Katzman was no exception, and he filled his films with former
silent-screen players who still had name value but commanded lower
salaries. His companies of the late 1930s,
Victory Pictures (1935-1939) and
Puritan Pictures (1935-1938), relied on
screen menace
Bela Lugosi, cowboy star
Tim McCoy, and Olympic athlete
Herman Brix to draw the customers.
Monogram Pictures
Monogram Pictures, a small but
prolific independent studio, specialized in low-budget films for
neighborhood theaters. Monogram manufactured much of its own
product, but also released films made by independent producers. Sam
Katzman sold Monogram on a
juvenile
delinquency series, to cash in on the successful cycle of the
Dead End Kids and
Little Tough Guys melodramas. Katzman's
series,
The East Side Kids,
caught on almost immediately, and before long many of the original
Dead End Kids and Little Tough Guys joined Katzman's series. The
East Side Kids films gradually evolved from noisy melodramas to
roughneck comedies.
Leo Gorcey,
Huntz Hall,
Bobby
Jordan,
Gabriel Dell, Billy
Benedict, and Ernie
'Sunshine' Sammy
Morrison were mainstays of Katzman's East Side troupe.
Katzman branched out with companion series for Monogram. He
partnered with Jack Dietz to produce
Bela
Lugosi thrillers, and comedy features with
Harry Langdon,
Billy
Gilbert, and
Shemp Howard. When Leo
Gorcey demanded double his weekly salary from Katzman in 1945,
Katzman refused and pulled the plug on The East Side Kids. He then
approached Monogram with an idea at the opposite extreme: the
wholesome adventures of squeaky-clean high school kids. Monogram
agreed, and Katzman launched the "Teen Agers" series, featuring
singer Freddie Stewart and future "Superman" co-star
Noel Neill.
Move to Columbia
In 1945 Katzman accepted a contract from
Columbia Pictures to produce adventure
serials and, soon after, feature films. For two years he worked for
both Monogram and Columbia, grinding out serials and low-budget
features at a truly torrential pace. In 1947 he joined Columbia
full-time, with a series of four Jean Porter musical comedies and
another two
Gloria Jean vehicles. In
1949 he hired Olympic hero and movie Tarzan
Johnny Weissmuller (who had been replaced
by
Lex Barker in the
RKO Tarzan films) for a series of
Jungle Jim adventures, earning Katzman
the nickname "Jungle Sam." By 1955 Columbia turned Jungle Jim into
a television property, and legalities prevented Columbia from
making any more Jungle Jims for theaters, Katzman simply shrugged
off the Jungle Jim character and had Johnny Weissmuller use his own
name in three more features. The last one,
Jungle Moon Men
(Charles S. Gould, 1955), was yet another remake of
Sir H. Rider Haggard’s classic novel
She. (After Katzman stopped making the features,
Weissmuller starred in 39 "Jungle Jim" TV episodes.)
Katzman revitalized the waning
serial
market with his 1948 production
Superman, starring
Kirk Alyn as the Man of Steel, and erstwhile "Teen
Agers" actress Noel Neill as Lois Lane. The 15-chapter cliffhanger
was tremendously successful, spawning two more superhero serials,
Batman and Robin (1949) and
Atom Man vs. Superman
(1950). Katzman continued to produce serials until 1956; his
Blazing the Overland Trail (a very-low-budget patchwork of
old stock footage and new scenes, with the actors costumed to match
three serial heroes of the 1940s!) rang down the curtain
on the serial genre. (Columbia would reissue Katzman's serials
through 1965.)
One of Katzman's specialties at Columbia was taking a major news
story, popular trend, or musical craze and making a film about it.
He worked so quickly that the film could play theaters while the
topic was still hot, ensuring big profits. One of his first
pictures of this type was 1948's
I Surrender Dear, cashing
in on the new disc-jockey phenomenon in broadcasting. He used
elements from this picture as a blueprint for his 1956
rock-and-roll musical hits,
Rock Around the Clock and
Don't Knock the Rock that he remade in 1961 as
Twist
Around the Clock and
Don't Knock the Twist. He also
made films on two other musical crazes
Cha Cha Cha Boom!
(with
Perez Prado) and
Calypso Heat
Wave. Katzman produced one of the first films about the
Korean War A Yank in Korea with
Lon McCallister that competed with
Lippert's
The Steel
Helmet and
Eagle-Lion's
Korea Patrol.
On the set, Katzman would use his collection of canes as a personal
prop, banging them against the floor, or the scenery, when
production fell behind schedule. The pace of Katzman’s film
production from 1950 to 1959 is blistering, touching nearly all the
generic bases in the process. Starting in 1950 with director
William Berke’s
Mark of the
Gorilla, Katzman proved himself a master of all genres, with
such films as
Lew Landers’s
Tyrant
of the Sea (1950), a rapidly paced swashbuckler;
Spencer Gordon Bennet’s
Cody of the Pony Express
(1950), an elegiac western chapter-play; the near-documentary
State Penitentiary (Lew Landers, 1950); the rousing action
serial
Pirates of the High
Seas (Spencer Gordon Bennet, 1950);
Chain Gang
(Lew Landers, 1950); a hard-boiled exposé of the prison system
reminiscent of
Mervyn LeRoy’s 1932
classic
I Am a
Fugitive from a Chain Gang;
A Yank in Korea (Lew
Landers, 1951), covering the then-escalating conflict), Richard
Quine’s wartime drama
Purple Heart Diary (1951);
Last
Train from Bombay (Fred F. Sears, 1952), an exotic thriller;
Fred F. Sears’
The 49th Man, an essay in Cold
War atomic paranoia; two
Arabian
Nights films
Prisoners of the Casbah and
The
Saracen Blade (William Castle, 1954), and Castle’s
The
Iron Glove (1954), which starred Robert Stack in a Technicolor
swashbuckler, done in typical Katzman fashion. In many respects,
Katzman’s films proved an apt training ground for young directors;
if you could work for Katzman and make something worthwhile, you
could work for the majors, with their relaxed schedules, without a
problem.
Columbia sometimes used the Katzman unit as a threat. When Columbia
president
Harry Cohn wanted to break an
actor's contract, he gave the actor a Katzman script. Everyone knew
Katzman as a "
schlock" producer, and Cohn
knew full well that the actor would refuse the lowbrow script,
giving Cohn cause to terminate the contract without penalty. This
ploy backfired in 1951 when Cohn owed
Lucille Ball $85,000 and one feature film. He
sent Ball the script of a formula Arabian Nights fantasy,
The
Magic Carpet, confident that Ball would decline. Ball
recounted her next move in her memoir,
Love, Lucy: "I had
never feuded with a studio before and I wasn't about to earn the
reputation of being difficult at this late date. I picked up the
phone and called Harry Cohn. 'I've just read the Sam Katzman
script,' I crooned into his ear. 'I think it's
marvelous!
I'd be delighted to do it.' 'You
would?' Mr. Cohn almost
fell over backward and poor Sam Katzman just about had a
coronary... My salary ate up half Katzman's budget." Undaunted,
Katzman and Columbia house director Lew Landers made the film in
color, using costumes and sets left over from other, more lavish
productions.
Katzman's directors
Katzman’s directors were either on their way up, or trailing off at
the end of their careers. Studio veterans Arthur Dreifuss, Lew
Landers. and William Berke were good, workmanlike directors, and
old hands at directing "B" comedies, musicals, and mysteries.
Serial specialist Spencer Gordon Bennet, whose career went back to
the silent-film days, speedily churned out action fare for Katzman.
Richard Quine, on the other hand,
would go on to “A” features, most memorably with
The Solid Gold Cadillac (1956),
which starred
Judy Holliday and
Paul Douglas, and established Quine’s
career as a major Columbia director. Future horror director
William Castle was still developing
his own style as a director, and Katzman allowed Castle to cut his
directorial teeth on a series of low-budget films.
Fred F. Sears was
a former actor in Columbia "B" pictures, who assisted behind the
scenes on Katzman's serials, and was promoted to full-fledged
director.
But working for Katzman could be very tough indeed. On
The
Houston Story (1956), Castle was shooting on location in
Texas, in August 1955, when star
Lee J.
Cobb was felled with a non-fatal heart
attack after three days of shooting. Katzman insisted that
production continue, so Castle, who resembled Cobb’s general
physical build, took over Cobb’s role, performing much of the
action in long shot, with his back to the camera. This took another
three days, and then the company returned to Hollywood. Castle
hoped to finish up Cobb’s scenes after the actor recuperated, but
Katzman instead cast actor
Gene Barry in
Cobb’s role, shot a few more days of film, and then released the
production with Gene Barry as the star. In the final film, Cobb,
Castle, and Barry played the leading role of “Frank Duncan” in
various snippets of film; Katzman simply gave the material to his
trusted editor, Edwin H. Bryant, and told him to patch it
together.
New Orleans Uncensored (William Castle, 1955) was a
true-crime drama, exposing the seamy underside of the Big Easy;
It Came from Beneath
the Sea (Robert Gordon, 1955) served primarily as a
showcase for
Ray Harryhausen’s
stop motion special effects; while Fred
F. Sears’s
Teen-Age Crime Wave (1955) was a surprisingly
stark nod to the country’s new awareness of the problem of juvenile
delinquency.
Rock
Around the Clock (Fred F. Sears, 1956) was one of the
first rock-'n'-roll movies to be released by a major studio, based
upon Katzman’s intuition that rock music would soon be a major
force in American culture; and
Miami Exposé (Fred F.
Sears, 1956) starred
Lee J. Cobb in a neo-realist tale of big-city
corruption, with spirited support from
Alan
Napier and
Edward
Arnold.
Hollywood blacklist
Katzman also made it a practice to employ screenwriters who were
involved with the
House Un-American
Activities Committee blacklist during the
Cold War era. Many producers followed this
practice, but Katzman, with his insatiable need for screenplays,
was more deeply involved in using “blacklisted” talent than most.
Blacklisted scenarist
Bernard Gordon,
for example, wrote Castle’s
The Law vs. Billy The Kid
(1954) as “John D. Williams,” as well as
Earth vs. The Flying
Saucers (Fred F. Sears, 1956),
Edward L. Cahn’s
Zombies of Mora Tau (1957),
Leslie Kardos’s
The Man Who Turned to Stone (1957), and
Sears’s
Escape from San Quentin (1957) as “Raymond T.
Marcus,” all of which were produced by Katzman. For Katzman, the
important thing was that a person worked reliably, efficiently, and
inexpensively; if a writer fit these criteria, Katzman was
interested.
In all his films, Katzman created a sealed, hermetic universe,
within which his characters could operate with generic impunity.
There were no rules to break, because Katzman had created the
rules, and with them, the concept of the genre “hot-wire,” (in
which several genres are combined to create a new twist on an
existing format, such as the comedy/western, the horror/musical,
and the like). Using this concept to bring new life to existing,
and often overused genres, Katzman created a cinematic vision that
was his alone.
Final years
As the 1960s continued, Katzman would make several films at MGM
with the fading star
Elvis Presley,
including
Gene Nelson’s
Harum Scarum (1965), with a budget of
$2,400,000 and an 18-day schedule. Presley received $1,000,000,
while the rest of the cast split a paltry $200,000; the rest of the
budget went entirely to production costs. But the Elvis films did
not reflect Katzman’s true approach to filmmaking. Whereas
Columbia's
Twist Around the Clock, made just three years
earlier, had cost a mere $280,000, now Katzman was forced to deal
with a budget that was nearly 10 times that amount. The fun, and
the maverick vision that had brought Katzman to Hollywood, had
vanished.
Katzman’s final films were marginal, and the assembly-line
production system that had served him so well now seemed out of
step with the times. For the first time, Katzman was unable to
adapt to changing circumstances. Katzman died on August 4, 1973, in
Hollywood, the town he had known for most of his life.
He is
interred in the Hillside
Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California
.
Further reading
- Dixon, Wheeler Winston. Lost in the Fifties: Recovering
Phantom Hollywood. Southern Illinois University Press,
2005.
Notes
- p.57 Dixon, Wheeler. W. Lost in the Fifties: Recovering
Phantom Hollywood 2005 SIU Press
External links
- Meet Jungle Sam Life magazine
http://books.google.com.au/books?id=IUIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA79&dq=sam+katzman+%2B+3-d#v=onepage&q=sam%20katzman%20%2B%203-d&f=false