David Brown, Oscar-nominated producer, dies in NYC
Feb. 2, 2010
NEW YORK (AP) --
David Brown, a film and theater producer who helped bring to the screen two of the 1970s' biggest hits, "Jaws" and "The Sting," has died. He was 93.
Brown, who was the husband of longtime Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown, died Monday at his Manhattan home following a long illness, according to the Hearst Corp., which owns Cosmopolitan.
Brown came to Hollywood in 1953, in the waning years of the studio system, and remained active into the 21st century. As a producer, he was nominated for the best picture Oscar four times, for "Jaws," 1975; "The Verdict," 1982; "A Few Good Men," 1992; and "Chocolat," 2000.
"Yes, I've survived," he told The New York Times in 1999, when he was 83. "At a certain age you become cool, not cold. I kind of represent the new and old Hollywood."
In 1991, he and his former partner, Richard D. Zanuck, won the Irving G. Thalberg award, given at the Academy Awards for a producing career of consistent high quality.
"It's a tough business. It has a lot of heartbreak in it," Brown said at the time.
He also earned a spot in popular culture history for encouraging his wife to write her groundbreaking 1962 book, "Sex and the Single Girl," that led to her fabled career at Cosmopolitan magazine, which Brown himself had worked at years earlier.
"I owe him everything" Helen Gurley Brown told Success Magazine in 2008. "(Without him,) I wouldn't be who I am or achieved what I did."
http://movies.msn.com/movies/article.aspx?news=456001&affid=100055
From later in the article:
He brought Elvis Presley to the big screen for the first time in "Love Me Tender," and was credited with talking George C. Scott into playing "Patton," according to Hearst.
Feb. 2, 2010
NEW YORK (AP) --
David Brown, a film and theater producer who helped bring to the screen two of the 1970s' biggest hits, "Jaws" and "The Sting," has died. He was 93.
Brown, who was the husband of longtime Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown, died Monday at his Manhattan home following a long illness, according to the Hearst Corp., which owns Cosmopolitan.
Brown came to Hollywood in 1953, in the waning years of the studio system, and remained active into the 21st century. As a producer, he was nominated for the best picture Oscar four times, for "Jaws," 1975; "The Verdict," 1982; "A Few Good Men," 1992; and "Chocolat," 2000.
"Yes, I've survived," he told The New York Times in 1999, when he was 83. "At a certain age you become cool, not cold. I kind of represent the new and old Hollywood."
In 1991, he and his former partner, Richard D. Zanuck, won the Irving G. Thalberg award, given at the Academy Awards for a producing career of consistent high quality.
"It's a tough business. It has a lot of heartbreak in it," Brown said at the time.
He also earned a spot in popular culture history for encouraging his wife to write her groundbreaking 1962 book, "Sex and the Single Girl," that led to her fabled career at Cosmopolitan magazine, which Brown himself had worked at years earlier.
"I owe him everything" Helen Gurley Brown told Success Magazine in 2008. "(Without him,) I wouldn't be who I am or achieved what I did."
http://movies.msn.com/movies/article.aspx?news=456001&affid=100055
From later in the article:
He brought Elvis Presley to the big screen for the first time in "Love Me Tender," and was credited with talking George C. Scott into playing "Patton," according to Hearst.