Ross Hunter
Ross Hunter was an American film and television producer and actor. Hunter is best known for producing light comedies such as Pillow Talk, and the glamorous melodramas Magnificent Obsession, Imitation of Life, and Back Street.
Over the course of his career, Hunter produced films of various genres but found his greatest success with light-hearted comedies, musicals and melodramatic "tear jerkers" that were high on romance and glamour.
Biography
Early life
Hunter was born Martin Terry Fuss in Cleveland, Ohio. His birth year is controversial, while 1920 seems to be the most logic if he worked as a teacher before his service in World War II, also 1926 and 1929 are named. He was of Austrian-Jewish and German Jewish descent.Hunter attended Glenville High School where he later taught English and drama.
During World War II, he worked in United States Army Intelligence.
After his time in the Army, he returned to his job as a drama teacher. He eventually moved to Los Angeles after his students sent his photo to Paramount Pictures. Paramount Pictures passed on signing him to a contract and he subsequently signed with Columbia Pictures. It was at Columbia that a casting agent changed his name from "Martin Fuss" to "Ross Hunter".
Actor
During the 1940s, Hunter acted in a number of B-movie musicals. He was a leading man in his first movie, Louisiana Hayride, starring Judy Canova.Hunter had support parts in Ever Since Venus and She's a Sweetheart and was promoted to star for A Guy, a Gal and a Pal, directed by Budd Boetticher.
Hunter was reunited with Canova for Hit the Hay. He was the second lead in a war film, Out of the Depths and had a support role in Sweetheart of Sigma Chi.
His career stalled in part because he was stricken with penicillin poisoning.
He returned to teaching drama at the Ben Bard Dramatic School and also taught speech therapy. Hunter missed working in films and decided to return to the business and focus on film production.
During the late 1940s, Hunter enrolled at the Motion Picture Center Studio where he was trained – for free – in film production. "I never wanted to be on the receiving end again", he said. "I wanted to be the man who handed out the jobs."
Dialogue Director
Hunter was dialogue director in The Jackie Robinson Story, for Eagle-Lion Films. He performed similar duties on Woman on the Run at Universal with Anne Sheridan who Hunter says promoted and mentored him. "It was my real big break", he later said.He was dialogue director on The Sword of Monte Cristo at Fox, and When I Grow Up for Sam Spiegel at United Artists.
Associate Producer
In 1951, Universal-International hired him as an associate producer for the film Flame of Araby, starring Jeff Chandler and Maureen O'Hara. During production Hunter cut $172,000 from the film's budget, which pleased Universal executives, who raised his salary.The producer was Leonard Goldstein, who also used Hunter as an associate on Steel Town, with Anne Sheridan, directed by George Sherman; The Battle at Apache Pass, with Jeff Chandler, directed by Sherman; Untamed Frontier, with Joseph Cotten and Shelley Winters; The Duel at Silver Creek with Audie Murphy, directed by Don Siegel; and Son of Ali Baba, an "Eastern" with Tony Curtis.
They also worked on Take Me to Town, a Western with Sheridan and Sterling Hayden directed by Douglas Sirk who became important to Hunter's career. Sheridan's normal price was $475,000 per film but she agreed to $100,000 to work with Hunter. "It was Annie who really gave me my first break", later recalled Hunter. "She was a very great lady."
Staff Producer
In 1953, Universal-International hired Hunter as staff producer on the strength of his previous credits as a theatrical producer and director.Hunter's first film as sole producer was All I Desire, a melodrama directed by Sirk starring Barbara Stanwyck. It was made for $460,000 and earned over $2 million.
Hunter followed it with two Westerns, Tumbleweed with Audie Murphy, and Taza, Son of Cochise with Rock Hudson, directed by Sirk.
''Magnificent Obsession''
The breakthrough film of Hunter's career was the 1954 film remake of the 1935 film Magnificent Obsession, starring Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman and directed by Sirk. It was a huge hit, making over $5 million, establishing Hudson as a star.Hunter produce a film noir with Sterling Hayden, Naked Alibi and a Western with Lex Barker, The Yellow Mountain.
He was reunited with Hudson and Sirk on a costume swashbuckler set in Ireland, Captain Lightfoot.
Having enjoyed success with a remake, Hunter remade another old melodrama, There's Always Tomorrow, directed by Sirk with Stanwyck.
He produced One Desire, a melodrama with Hudson and Anne Baxter, then All That Heaven Allows, which reteamed Sirk, Hudson and Wyman. The latter was especially popular making over $3 million.
Hunter stepped in at the last minute to produce a "northern", The Spoilers, another remake, with Jeff Chandler and Anne Baxter. He did Battle Hymn, a biopic with Hudson and Sirk.
Romantic Comedies
Hunter's first romantic comedy as producer was Tammy and the Bachelor with Debbie Reynolds. It was very successful making $3 million.Less popular were two films he did with June Allyson, Interlude, a melodrama with Rossano Brazzi directed by Sirk, and My Man Godfrey with David Niven directed by Henry Koster.
This Happy Feeling was a romantic comedy with Reynolds and John Saxon written and directed by Blake Edwards. He produced The Restless Years, a teen melodrama with Saxon and Sandra Dee. Dee was also in A Stranger in My Arms, a melodrama from the author of Written on the Wind with Allyson and Jeff Chandler.
''Imitation of Life'' and ''Pillow Talk''
Hunter had the biggest hit of his career to date with Imitation of Life, a remake of the 1934 film directed by Sirk, with Lana Turner, Dee and Rock Hudson look-alike John Gavin. it was the fourth-most successful motion picture of 1959, grossing $6.4 million. It was Universal-International's top-grossing film that year, and ranked as Universal's most successful film until the release of Thoroughly Modern Millie.The film was rivalled in popularity by the romantic comedy Pillow Talk, starring Doris Day and Rock Hudson.
While "Ross Hunter movies" were a hit with audiences, his work was largely dismissed by critics. Hunter later said, "I gave the public what they wanted: a chance to dream, to live vicariously, to see beautiful women, jewels, gorgeous clothes, melodrama."
Hunter followed these with two mystery melodramas, both written by Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts" Portrait in Black, starring Turner, Anthony Quinn, Dee and Saxon, and Midnight Lace starring Day, Rex Harrison and Gavin.
Hunter produced a sequel to Tammy, Tammy Tell Me True with Dee replacing Reynolds in the title role, and Gavin as the male lead. Gavin starred in a remake of Back Street with Susan Hayward, which was a box office disappointment.
Hunter produced a popular adaptation of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Flower Drum Song.
In 1962 Hunter announced he had six films coming up: If a Man Answers, a new Tammy, remakes of Dark Angel and Madam X, The Thrill of It All and The Chalk Garden. Plans to make In the Wrong Rain and Fanfare were postponed.
He did two romantic comedies with Dee, If a Man Answers with Bobby Darin and Tammy and the Doctor with Peter Fonda.
Hunter produced a hugely popular comedy with Day and James Garner, The Thrill of It All, directed by Norman Jewison. He then did his first ever straight drama, The Chalk Garden with Deborah Kerr and Hayley Mills, which was well reviewed and performed well commercially. "I'd like to make one Chalk Garden type movie a year if I can find a good one", Hunter said. Dark Angel wound up not being made. He said around this time, "My principle is to know the audience you're aiming for – women, teenage, family audience – and aim straight at it, casting and budget accordingly." He said Goldwyn offered him the remake rights to Stella Dallas but he did not think he could do it.
Seven Year Pact
In November 1964 he signed a seven-year contract with Universal to make three films a year, with an overall budget of $75 million.He produced I'd Rather Be Rich with Dee, a remake of It Started with Eve, and The Art of Love with Garner, directed by Jewison.
Hunter produced a remake of Madam X with Turner. He was going to remake Dark Angel but it was not made. "Tear jerkers are more difficult to make than any other kind of movie", he said.
In 1965 it was estimated that 32 of his films had, in eleven years, grossed $150 million.
Hunter did a lower budgeted comedy without stars, The Pad and How to Use It, from a play by Peter Shaffer but it was little seen. He had a big hit with the musical Thoroughly Modern Millie starring Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler Moore and Gavin. Rosie! was less successful, a comedy with Rosalind Russell and Dee.
In 1970, he had a major box office hit with Airport which also earned him a Best Picture Academy Award nomination. However Hunter had a falling out with Universal, and left the studio after almost two decades.
Columbia
Hunter went to Columbia where produced the musical remake of the 1937 film Lost Horizon. The film was a box office failure and ultimately lost $7 million. It would be the last feature film Hunter produced.He was briefly head of Brut Productions but left after disagreements with the company.
Television
In 1975, he was hired by Paramount Pictures to produce for television.|author=His first produced film for them was The Lives of Jenny Dolan with Shirley Jones.In 1977, he was nominated a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Limited Series for producing Arthur Hailey's The Moneychangers .
He produced A Family Upside Down with Fred Astaire and Helen Hayes, and Suddenly, Love with Cindy Williams.
His last project was the 1979 television movie The Best Place to Be with Donna Reed.