Henry Koster

Flexible studio talent who began his career as a critic, becoming a scenarist in 1926 and a director in 1932. Leaving Germany the year Hitler took power, Koster made several films in Europe before going to Hollywood. His US debut with "Three Smart Girls" (1937), the first in a series of Deanna Durbin vehicles, was a resounding success and helped bolster the straitened Universal studios.

Koster is perhaps best known for the charming "Harvey" (1950), in which James Stewart played opposite an invisible six-foot rabbit; he also directed the rather stodgy but well-remembered "The Robe" (1953), notably primarily as the first film to be shot in CinemaScope.

  • Also Credited As:
    Hermann Kosterlitz
  • Born:
    May 1, 1905 in Berlin, Germany
  • Died:
    September 21, 1988.
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Screenwriter, Cartoonist, Film critic, Reporter, Painter
Family
  • Son: Peter Koster.
  • Son: Robert J Koster.
Education
  • Academy of Fine Arts, Berlin, Germany
Milestones
  • 1924 Screenwriting debut
  • 1932 Directing debut with Das Abenteuer der Thea Roland
  • 1933 Moved to France
  • 1937 US directing debut Three Smart Girls
  • 1953 Directed first cinemascope movie The Robe
  • Immigrated to USA via France

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