Howard Koch
Howard Koch was born on Dec 12, 1901 in USA. Howard Koch's big-screen debut came with Virginia City directed by Michael Curtiz in 1940. Howard Koch is known for Smog directed by Franco Rossi, Enrico Maria Salerno stars as Vittorio Ciocchetti and Annie Girardot as Gabriella. Howard Koch has got 5 awards and 2 nominations so far. The most recent award Howard Koch achieved is Golden Boot Awards. The upcoming new movie Howard Koch plays is Stepping Out which will be released on Oct 11, 1991.
Playwright and author of sophisticated screenplays, a graduate of Bard College and Columbia University Law School. Howard Koch started out as a practicing lawyer in Hartsdale, New Jersey, but soon found himself dissatisfied with his career choice and began to write plays on the side. His first two efforts flopped on Broadway (respectively in 1929 and 1933). Nonetheless, Koch continued, undaunted, and had his first critical success with "The Lonely Man", produced at the Blackstone Theater in Chicago in 1937. On the strength of this work he was engaged by John Houseman to write dramatic material for Orson Welles' "Mercury Theater on the Air" radio program (his starting salary was $75 for roughly sixty pages of script). Koch re-wrote H.G. Wells sci-fi story "War of the Worlds" as "Invasion from Mars" for the famous Halloween broadcast that "panicked America". It had such an effect on the public that the "New York Times" ran the headline "Many Flee Homes to Escape 'Gas Raid From Mars'".The following year Koch moved to Hollywood and was signed to a screenwriting contract by Warner Brothers (1939-1945). He achieved lasting fame through his felicitous collaboration with brothers Philip Epstein and Julius J. Epstein in adapting Murray Burnett's adaptation of the obscure play "Everybody Comes to Rick's" to the now classic Casablanca (1942). The Epsteins concentrated on the dialogue while Koch worked out the dramatic continuity. The three subsequently shared the 1943 Academy Award for Best Screenplay (Koch sold his Oscar at auction in 1994 for $184,000 in order to fund a granddaughter's school tuition). Before and after "Casablanca", Koch worked on a variety of other subjects, turning out polished screenplays for Errol Flynn's hugely entertaining swashbuckler L'aigle des mers (1940), an adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's steamy melodrama La Lettre (1940), the patriotic flag-waver Sergent York (1941) and the George Gershwin biopic Rhapsodie en bleu (1945). His own personal favorite was his script for Lettre d'une inconnue (1948), a tender story of unrequited love set in Vienna.Koch's reputation was sadly tarnished as a result of his work on Mission à Moscou (1943), the account of Joseph E. Davies, a former US ambassador to Russia. Although he was not particularly happy with this assignment, Koch was coerced into it by studio boss Jack L. Warner, who, in turn, was under pressure from the U.S. government to produce a picture that showcased the efforts of the Soviet Union in the fight against Nazi Germany. However, in 1947, at the height of the Red-baiting hysteria stirred up by senator Joseph McCarthy, Warner testified as a "friendly" witness before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), charged with "rooting out" Communist influence in the motion picture industry. Warner named Koch and other "liberals" as being Communist sympathizers, using the pro-Russian content of "Mission to Moscow" as "proof". This resulted in Koch becoming one of the so-called "Hollywood Nineteen" and finding himself being blacklisted by the industry in 1951. Unable to earn a living, he had little choice but to leave the country. Like other writers and directors in the same position, he moved to England where he continued to write screenplays under a pseudonym ("Peter Howard"). Returning to the US five years later, he bought a property near Woodstock, NY, and resumed writing plays for regional productions (as well as occasional film scripts).In his memoirs, "As Time Goes By", Koch recalled how, early in the casting process, the stars of "Casablanca" were slated to be Dennis Morgan (!), Ann Sheridan and Ronald Reagan (in the Paul Henreid role of Victor Laszlo). Our appreciation of the classic film would have been rather different . . .
Birthday
Dec 12, 1901Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Known For
Awards
5 wins & 2 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 19916.3
- 1978
producer
5.4 - 19757.0
- 19644.7
- 1964
writer
6.4 - 1962
actor
7.6 - 1962
writer
6.5 - 1961
writer
6.7 - 1956
writer
6.2 - 1951
writer
6.3 - 1950
writer
6.7 - 1946
writer
7.0 - 1945
writer
7.0 - 1944
writer
6.6 - 1943
writer
5.4 - 1942
writer
8.5 - 1941
writer
7.7 - 1941
writer
6.5 - 1940
writer
7.6 - 1940
writer
7.6 - 1940
writer
6.8