More than any other director,
Larry Auerbach was synonymous with New
York daytime drama, starting with
Love of Life (1951), which he directed for
28 years. When the show ended in 1980, its final scene showed Mr.
Auerbach walking from set to set, turning off the lights. The show's
demise --at the time it was the second-oldest show on the air-- was
reported by
Walter Cronkite on that evening's news.
Following "Love of Life," Mr. Auerbach went on to direct several other
New York soap operas, including
All My Children (1970),
Another World (1964),
As the World Turns (1956) and
One Life to Live (1968) for which he won a Daytime
Emmy Award. A collection of his early work is archived at The Paley
Center for Media in New York.
Larry Auerbach was born in the Bronx and raised in Mount Vernon, NY. He
always considered himself a New York director, but his television
career began in Chicago in the late 1940s during what is now called
"The Golden Age" of television production. He was stage manager on
Studs' Place (1949) with
Studs Terkel and on
Kukla, Fran and Ollie (1969).
Following a brief stint on
Zoo Parade (1950), a live program from the
Chicago Zoo with
Marlin Perkins, Mr. Auerbach went on to become the
first director on
Watch Mr. Wizard (1951).
Returning to New York in 1951, Mr. Auerbach launched
Love of Life (1951) on
CBS. Because soaps were a fertile training ground for young actors,
many who went on to careers in Hollywood worked with Mr. Auerbach,
including
Christopher Reeve,
Roy Scheider,
Jessica Walter,
Frances Sternhagen,
Warren Beatty,
Tige Andrews,
Ray Wise,
Bonnie Bedelia, and
Peter Falk. Entertainer
Sammy Davis Jr. was an avid fan of
Love of Life (1951) and
made an appearance on the show. When
Dustin Hoffman was filming the
soap opera comedy
Tootsie (1982), Mr. Auerbach was one of the people he
sought out as an advisor.
In addition to his work as a director, Mr. Auerbach was deeply involved
with the Directors Guild of America, serving as its National Vice
President as well as sitting on its National Board and the board of the
union's pension and health plan. During his 50-plus years at the DGA,
he was a forceful advocate for greater recognition of New York
directors and daytime television. In 1991, he was awarded the DGA
Robert Aldrich Award. In 2004 he was named a DGA Honorary Life Member,
joining a small elite group that includes
Charles Chaplin,
David Lean,
Frank Capra,
Walt Disney,
Louis B. Mayer,
Jack L. Warner and
Chuck Jones.