Don Edmonds was born on September 1, 1937, in Kansas City, MO.
He came to Hollywood in the mid to late 1950s. He
studied acting with noted acting coach Estelle Harmon and began
performing in various California stage productions. His initial
forays into television acting included such live TV shows as
Playhouse 90 (1956),
Studio One (1948) and
The Loretta Young Show (1953).
He was usually cast as a goofy sidekick in such "beach
party"-type movies as
Gidget Goes Hawaiian (1961),
Beach Ball (1965) and
Wild Wild Winter (1966).
He made guest appearances on such TV shows as
Hunter (1984),
Green Acres (1965),
Combat! (1962),
Petticoat Junction (1963),
The Munsters (1964),
Gidget (1965) and
Father Knows Best (1954).
Edmonds made his directorial debut with the soft-core features
Wild Honey (1972) and
Tender Loving Care (1973). He
achieved his greatest enduring cult exploitation cinema popularity by
directing the infamous Nazisploitation classic
Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS (1975)
and its marvelously outrageous sequel
Harem Keeper of the Oil Sheiks (1976).
After "Ilsa" Edmonds went on to direct the superbly gritty urban action
winner
Bare Knuckles (1977), the
cruddy slasher horror entry
Terror on Tour (1980), the action
comedy
Tomcat Angels (1991) and
the pilot of the TV series
Silk Stalkings (1991). As the
vice president of production at Producers Sales Organization, Don was
responsible for getting movies like
Short Circuit (1986),
8 Million Ways to Die (1986)
and
The Clan of the Cave Bear (1986)
greenlit and subsequently made. He had also been involved as
either a producer, co-producer or executive producer on a sizable
number of pictures, including
Larceny (2004),
Fast Money (1996),
True Romance (1993) (he was part of
the production team which helped
Quentin Tarantino get his early
professional filmmaking career off and running),
Skeeter (1993) and
The Night Stalker (1986).
In later years, Don attended screenings of his 1970s drive-in flicks and
appeared as a guest at film conventions held all over the country.
He died at age 71 of liver cancer on May 30, 2009.