Albert Zugsmith age, height, net worth, birthday, biography, facts! In this article, we will discover how old is Albert Zugsmith? Who is Albert Zugsmith dating now & how much money does Albert Zugsmith have?
Albert Zugsmith Biography
Albert Zugsmith is one of the famous Screenwriter, who was born on the memorable day of April 24 in the year 1910. Hailing from the vibrant city of New Jersey, Albert Zugsmith is a proud citizen of United States.
Screenwriter and director, most remembered for screenplays including 1959’s The Big Operator and 1964’s Fanny Hill.
Over the years, not only have skills been honed, but a significant impact has also been made in the professional field. Whether it's through work, public appearances, or contributions to the community, Albert Zugsmith continues to be an inspiration for many.
Albert Zugsmith Wiki
Popular As
Albert Zugsmith
First Name
Albert
Last Name
Zugsmith
Death Date
1993-10-26
Death Day
October 26
Death Year
1993
Family
LeAnne Zugsmith, his older sister, was a writer and author.
Height & Weight
Albert Zugsmith height Not available right now. Albert weight Not Known & body measurements will update soon.
Height
Unknown
Weight
Not Known
Body Measurements
Under Review
Eye Color
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Feet/Shoe Size
Not Available
Like heavy metal singer Kevin Dubrow, he was born in Los Angeles, CA.
Career
He initially became wealthy via the Howard Hughes years, producing films at RKO.
Trivia
An archive of some of his selected screenplays are in the University of Iowa’s Special Collections department.
Net Worth & Salary
Albert Zugsmith net worth is $5 Million (2022).
Albert Zugsmith Timeline
1930
His older sister, Leane Zugsmith, was a leading proletarian novelist in the 1930s.
1939
In 1939 he moved in to brokering sales of communication properties like newspapers and radio and television stations; he was very successful, making up to $250 million worth of sales, and became a millionaire from his commissions.
1950
Zugsmith's most significant credits are a string of four genre masterpieces produced in the late 1950s, all for Universal Studios: the science-fiction classic The Incredible Shrinking Man, Orson Welles' Touch of Evil, Douglas Sirk's Written on the Wind, and the camp exploitation films (produced for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer) High School Confidential and The Girl in the Kremlin.
1952
They did a three-picture deal with RKO to make Captive Women (1952), Sword of Venus (1953), and Port Sinister (1953).
1953
He followed it with Paris Model (1953), and Top Banana (1954, starring Phil Silvers), both comedies.
1955
While there he acted as a script doctor for several Universal-International films and produced Female on the Beach (1955), a melodrama with Joan Crawford and Jeff Chandler; The Square Jungle (1955), a boxing film with Tony Curtis; Raw Edge (1956), a Western with Yvonne de Carlo and Rory Calhoun; Red Sundown (1956), a Western with Calhoun, directed by Jack Arnold; and Star in the Dust (1956), another Western with John Agar and Mamie Van Doren, directed by Charles F.
1956
Zugsmith had a big hit with Written on the Wind (1956) starring Rock Hudson, Robert Stack, Lauren Bacall and Dorothy Malone, directed by Douglas Sirk.
1957
Also popular was The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) from the script and novel by Richard Matheson.
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1958
Zugsmith's next film was Touch of Evil (1958), which had Welles attached to play the villain; Charlton Heston agreed to star if Welles directed, which happened, although some additional scenes were directed by Harry Keller after Zugsmith left the studio.
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1960
Zugsmith turned director with The Private Lives of Adam and Eve (1960) which he filmed with Rooney, who also starred; Van Doren was in the cast.
1963
He produced Zigzag (1963) in the Philippines, then produced and directed The Great Space Adventure (1963).
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1964
He produced Russ Meyer's Fanny Hill (1964), but the two men disliked working together.
1966
He wrote and directed The Incredible Sex Revolution (1966); directed Psychedelic Sexualis (1966), Movie Star, American Style or; LSD, I Hate You (1966) and The Chinese Room (1968); produced and wrote Sappho Darling (1968); and directed Two Roses and a Golden Rod (1969), The Very Friendly Neighbors (1969), and The Phantom Gunslinger (1970) with Troy Donahue.
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1973
In 1973, he said in an interview "many of the talents that I have developed or worked with have suffered by not continuing with me.
1975
Zugsmith's last credit was directing Violated! (1975).
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