Prolific producer Sandy Howard was born in the Bronx, New York on
August 1, 1927. Soon afterwards his parents moved to Yonkers, where he
spent his early childhood harboring dreams to set the world on fire.
He broke into show business as a teenager, working as a publicist for
Broadway shows for Lee Solters. During the infancy of television,
Sandy, at the age of 19, started directing Howdy Doody. He continued in
this new medium as the producer and director of Captain Kankaroo. On a
more serious note, Howard produced Author Meets the Critics. For many
years he was the executive producer of "The Barry Gray Radio Show," the
forerunner of all the talk show hosts and formats that followed.
On movie sets around the globe, Sandy was often mistaken for on camera
talent because of his dashing good looks. He produced a total of 72
films, among them A Man Called Horse.
His heroic stands on behalf of vulnerable people were multiple. While
in South Africa filming he took a stand against apartheid by refusing
to separate the black cast and crew members from the whites. When the
government stepped in to enforce their political agenda, he moved a
sleeping bag into the African compound and stayed with the segregated
cast and crew. Another example was his imprisonment in Greece for an
explosion of the set of Sky Rider, when he offered himself up to
anti-American military officials (at the time) to save a crew member
from any consequences.
Many stars worked with Howard, including Jodie Foster, who got her film
break in Howard's Echoes of Summer, a young Sean Connery in Meteor and
famed silent screen actress Lillian Gish. He was most proud of working
with Ms. Gish, who gave him an autographed photo that he always
treasured.
Howard married very late in life (at the age of 65) to Arlene Howard
(Noel.) She was his PA in the early days of his career. He struggled
with the ravages of Alzheimer's disease, to which he succumbed in on
May 16, 2008. A classic gentleman, Sandy Howard was always dashing and
cavalier to the very end.