Chicago Sun-Times

Legendary Hollywood producer, 101, won Oscar for ‘In the Heat of the Night’

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LOS ANGELES — Walter Mirisch, the astute and Oscar winning film producer who oversaw such classics as “Some Like It Hot,” “West Side Story” and “In the Heat of the Night,” has died of natural causes, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said Saturday. He was 101.

Mr. Mirisch died on Friday in Los Angeles, according to a statement from the academy’s CEO Bill Kramer and its president Janet Yang.

“Walter was a true visionary, both as a producer and as an industry leader,” they said, noting he had served as academy president and an academy governor for many years. “His passion for filmmaking and the Academy never wavered, and he remained a dear friend and advisor. We send our love and support to his family during this difficult time.”

Mr. Mirisch received the best picture Academy Award for 1967’s “In the Heat of the Night,” and the company run by him and his brothers also produced the bestpictur­e Oscar winners “The Apartment” and “West Side Story.”

Born eight years before the first Academy Awards ceremony, he served as president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from 1973 to 1977 and received two honorary Oscars, in 1978 and 1983, for his body of work and his humanitari­an efforts.

As a producer, Mr. Mirisch aggressive­ly recruited top filmmakers such as Billy Wilder and Norman Jewison, then gave them freedom to craft the movies as they saw fit.

“We offered these filmmakers what they needed,” he told the Los Angeles Times in 1983. “Billy could call me up and say, ‘I’d next like to do a picture about so-and-so’ — and that’s all we’d need to know . ... We became, in effect, partners with our directors.”

His company’s regular stable of directors included not only Wilder and Jewison, but Blake Edwards and John Sturges. The company also produced movies by John Ford, John Huston, William Wyler, George Roy Hill and Hal Ashby.

Walter Mortimer Mirisch was born in New York City on Nov. 8, 1921. After studying at City College of New York, he earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin in Madison in 1942 and a graduate degree in business from Harvard in 1943.

Mr. Mirisch entered the movie business in his teens, advancing from usher to management jobs with a theater chain before going on to production work on low-budget action flicks and Westerns in the late 1940s.

The company he founded in 1957 with his brother Marvin and half brother Harold was one of the most successful independen­t production outfits to arise from the old studio system as television cut into movie attendance.

The Mirisches made a string of hits from the 1950s to the 1970s, among them “The Magnificen­t Seven,” “Fiddler on the Roof,” “The Great Escape,” “The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming,” “The Thomas Crown Affair,” “The Pink Panther” and its sequel, “A Shot in the Dark.”

Their company started with a handful of Westerns before producing 1959’s “Some Like It Hot,” the Wilder comedy with Marilyn Monroe co-starring with Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis as cross-dressing musicians running from the mob.

Mr. Mirisch was willing to take on unusual projects. A Harvard-trained business executive, he efficientl­y oversaw the commerce side of things, allowing his filmmakers to concentrat­e on their movies.

Elmore Leonard — the crime novelist and screenwrit­er on two Mirisch production­s, 1974’s “Mr. Majestyk” and the 1987 TV movie “Desperado” — dedicated his Hollywood satire “Get Shorty” to Mr. Mirisch, calling him “one of the good guys.”

Mr. Mirisch was also among a handful of filmmakers Sidney Poitier acknowledg­ed in his speech at the 2002 Academy Awards when he accepted an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievemen­t.

“Those filmmakers persevered, speaking through their art to the best in all of us,” said Poitier, who starred in Mr. Mirisch’s “In the Heat of the Night.”

Mr. Mirisch continued to produce theatrical movies into the 1980s. Although the quality and commercial success of his films generally declined, there were still some hits, including Oscar nomination­s and a Golden Globe for “Same Time Next Year.” Other films that came late in his career included “Midway,” “Gray Lady Down,” and the 1979 version of “Dracula.”

 ?? AP ?? Walter Mirisch (right) with Charlton Heston at the 1977 Golden Globe Awards. In the 1950s and ’60s, Mirisch’s company was behind “The Magnificen­t Seven,” “The Great Escape” and “The Thomas Crown Affair.”
AP Walter Mirisch (right) with Charlton Heston at the 1977 Golden Globe Awards. In the 1950s and ’60s, Mirisch’s company was behind “The Magnificen­t Seven,” “The Great Escape” and “The Thomas Crown Affair.”

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