Writer/director/producer Arthur Marks was born on August 2, 1927 in Los Angeles, California. His grandparents acted in silent pictures
and his father,
Dave Marks, was an assistant director and production
manager at MGM whose credits include
The Wizard of Oz (1939) and
Easter Parade (1948).
Arthur began his film career as a young boy working as both
an extra and bit actor in movies in the 1930s. He attended the
University of Southern California and got a job working in the
production department at MGM. However, it was in the 1950s that his
career really took off: He was an assistant director for the TV shows
Broken Arrow (1956),
The 20th Century-Fox Hour (1955) and
Treasury Men in Action (1950) and worked on the immensely popular
Perry Mason (1957) TV series
as both a producer and director. He eventually began directing
enjoyably trashy low-budget drive-in exploitation features in
the 1970s; he made his theatrical film debut with the 1970 movie
Togetherness (1970). He truly hit his stride, though, with several hugely
entertaining blaxploitation outings: The rousing crime thriller
Detroit 9000 (1973) (this particular picture was re-released in theaters in
1998 by
Quentin Tarantino), the delightfully breezy
Pam Grier vehicle
Friday Foster (1975), the bang-up
Fred Williamson action flick
Bucktown (1975), the atmospheric horror winner
J.D.'s Revenge (1976), and the amusingly goofy
comedy
The Monkey Hu$tle (1976). His other films as director include the
gritty film noir
Bonnie's Kids (1972), the sleazy serial killer opus
The Roommates (1973), and the silly soft-core romp
Class of '74 (1972). In addition,
he served as production manager on
The Centerfold Girls (1974) and
Wonder Women (1973). He often produced the films he directed.
Marks ran
the independent outfit General Film Corp. in the 1970s, which
picked up pictures like
William Girdler's
The Get-Man (1974) and the
notorious cult exploitation gem
The Candy Snatchers (1973) for theatrical
distribution. Outside of his movie work, he has directed episodes of
such TV shows as
The Dukes of Hazzard (1979),
Starsky and Hutch (1975) and
I Spy (1965)He and his wife Phyllis Marie Lehman had four
children; his sons
Beau Marks and
Paul Marks are both successful film and television producers.
Marks died at age 92 at his home in Woodland Hills, California on November 13, 2019.