Robert
A. Katz Dies: Oscar- And Emmy-Nominated Producer On ‘Introducing Dorothy Dandridge’
And Films ‘Gettysburg’ And ‘Selena’ Was 79
DEADLINE
By
Bruce Haring
June
23, 2022
Robert Katz, a film and television producer best known for Gettysburg, Selena and Introducing Dorothy Dandridge, died
June 22 at Valley Presbyterian Hospital in Van Nuys, CA following a long battle
with lung cancer. He was 79. His death was confirmed by his family.
Katz was born February 7, 1943 in Los Angeles, where he grew up,
graduated high school and attended college.
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He served in the U.S. Marines as a jet fighter pilot. In the mid
1960s, he was detailed to Israel, where he helped to train the Israeli Air
Force. Following his honorable discharge, he was a bush pilot in Africa,
traveling with documentary film crews. This inspired him to become a filmmaker,
and he produced more than 70 documentaries for French and American television
about the wars of liberation in Africa, accompanying the independence forces in
what is now Zimbabwe, as well as neighboring countries.
He was a founder of a medical education company, Medcom, Inc.,
which he successfully took public. Katz was also an early pioneer in the home
video market, producing exercise projects with Jane Fonda, Arnold
Schwarzenegger and many others. His time abroad gave him an entry point into
the international sales and licensing of films.
In 1986, he co-founded Esparza/Katz Productions along with
Moctesuma Esparza. Together, they produced more than 20 projects including the
theatrical motion pictures Telephone (1989), Gettysburg (1993), Granada (1996), Selena (1997) which won an Imagen
Award as Best Picture, and Gods and Generals (2003). Their
television projects included Rough
Riders (1997), Introducing
Dorothy Dandridge (1999) which received an Emmy nomination as
Outstanding Made for TV Movie, and Walkout (2006).
In 1988 Katz produced Shoeshine, which
won an Oscar nomination in the Best Live Action Short Film category.
Most recently, Katz was working on a variety of projects including
a feature-length motion picture, Delfino’s
Journey, based on the novel and screenplay by Jo Harper. He was also
working on a miniseries about the life of Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, based on his
bestselling autobiography It Doesn’t
Take a Hero. On the Schwarzkopf project, he is one of the executive
producers.
An avid aviation enthusiast, Katz was a founding member of
Showhawks, an entertainment industry flying club based in Los Angeles.
Katz is survived by his wife, Patricia Brown; along with a
stepdaughter, Victoria Flores and two step-grandchildren, Skyler, 17, and
Adysun, 15, from a prior marriage to Pamela Katz who preceded him in death, as
did his first wife, Tishialu Katz.
Burial will take place at Mount Olive Memorial Park on June 26 at
11 a.m. PT. The cemetery address is 7231 E. Slauson Ave., Commerce, CA 90040.
KATZ,
Robert
Born:
2/7/1943, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Died:
6/22/2022.
Van Nuys, California, U.S.A.
Robert
Katz’s westerns, consultant, producer, executive producer:
Gettysburg
– 1993 [producer]
Rough
Riders – 1994 [producer]
The
Cisco Kid (TV) – 1994 [producer]
The
Avenging Angel (TV) – 1995 [executive producer]
Gods
and Generals – 2003 [executive producer]
Cowboys
and Heroes (TV) – 2015 [consultant]
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