American film / tv director (1925–2009)
Paul Wendkos
Born Abraham Paul Wendkos
(1925-09-20 ) September 20, 1925Died November 12, 2009(2009-11-12) (aged 84) Occupation(s) Television director , film director Spouses
Ruth Bernat
(
m. 1953; died 1978)
Children 1
Abraham Paul Wendkos (September 20, 1925 – November 12, 2009) was an American television and film director .[ 1]
Early life and education
Wendkos was born in Philadelphia to parents Simon Wendkos and Judith Wendkos.[ 1]
Wendkos served in World War II in the United States Navy and went to Columbia University on the G.I. Bill . Paul made his first feature, a documentary on a school for the blind called Dark Interlude in 1953.
Career
Columbia Pictures
Wendkos' first feature film was The Burglar .[ 2] His fluid camera technique caught the attention of the head of Columbia Pictures , Harry Cohn , who not only wished to distribute the film but put Wendkos under contract.[ 3]
Wendkos directed episodes of Playhouse 90 then did The Case Against Brooklyn (1958) for producer Charles Schneer at Columbia. He directed a TV movie for Columbia about Jesse James , Bitter Heritage (1958) and episodes of Behind Closed Doors (1958).
Wendkos directed another for Schneer, the war movie Tarawa Beachhead (1958). He had a massive hit with the teen film Gidget (1959) starring Sandra Dee , Cliff Robertson and James Darren . Face of a Fugitive (1959) was a Western for Schneer, and Battle of the Coral Sea (1959) was a war movie with Robertson.
Wendkos went back to TV for Five Fingers , Tightrope , Law of the Plainsman , Alcoa Theatre , Two Faces West , and Route 66 .
He returned to Columbia for two youth movies with Darren and Michael Callan , Because They're Young (1960) and Gidget Goes Hawaiian (1961). He did a drama, Angel Baby (1961) with George Hamilton , then made Gidget Goes to Rome (1962).
Wendkos later directed episodes of Ben Casey , Dr. Kildare , The Rifleman , Mr. Novak , Honey West , The Big Valley , I Spy , and The Invaders . He also directed the pilot for the original Hawaii Five-O . When Wendkos worked on I Spy , he was dismissed from the production when the producers deemed the episodes he had filmed to have been too "arty".[ 4]
In 1968 Wendkos signed a five-picture contract with Mirisch Productions , beginning with the war films Attack on the Iron Coast and Hell Boats , followed by two westerns set in Mexico (but filmed in Spain), Guns of the Magnificent Seven and Cannon for Cordoba . He also made the first and only feature film for Quinn Martin , The Mephisto Waltz .
Later career
From 1970 until his retirement in 1999, Wendkos specialized in made-for-television movies—one of these was The Taking of Flight 847: The Uli Derickson Story (1988), based on a TWA hijacking in 1985. It picked up five Emmy nominations, including one for Wendkos.[ 4] He also directed 90-minute episodes of the James Stewart legal drama and murder mystery series Hawkins ,[ 5] which aired on an every-third-week basis as part of the CBS "wheel series " The New CBS Tuesday Night Movies .
Personal life
Wendkos married Ruth Bernat on March 1, 1953, and had one son, Jordan Elkan Wendkos. Ruth died in June 1978. In 1984, Wendkos married Lin Bolen , former NBC vice president and producer; they lived in Malibu , California until his death.[ 1]
Wendkos was ill for several years following a stroke . He died on November 12, 2009, in Malibu.[ 6] He was survived by his son, Jordan, granddaughter, Justine Wendkos, and his wife, Lin Bolen Wendkos.[ 1]
References
Additional sources
The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929–1968 , by Andrew Sarris
The American Vein: Directors and Directions in Television by Christopher Wicking and Tise Vahimagi (Talisman Books (England) / E.P. Dutton (United States), 1979)
"Interview with Paul Wendkos" . Cinefantastique . Vol. 2, no. 1. Spring 1972.
External links
International National Artists People Other