Martin Melcher

Martin Melcher
Born (1915-08-01)August 1, 1915
North Adams, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died April 20, 1968(1968-04-20) (aged 52)
Los Angeles, California
Occupation film producer
Spouse(s) Patty Andrews (19471950; divorced)
Doris Day (19511968; his death)

Martin Melcher (August 1, 1915 – April 20, 1968) was an American film producer and husband of Doris Day.

Early life

Born to Jewish parents in North Adams, Massachusetts, Melcher began his career as a song plugger while married to his first wife, singer Jane Rappaport in New York. He then worked as an agent and road manager for The Andrews Sisters and eventually married Patty Andrews on October 19, 1947. The couple divorced on March 30, 1950.

Career

Slightly more than a year later, he married Doris Day, and they formed their own production company, Arwin Productions, in 1952. With the exception of one movie, all of his projects were starring vehicles for Day.

In 1962, Melcher made his only foray into Broadway theatre with The Perfect Setup, a play starring Gene Barry, Angie Dickinson, and Jan Sterling. It closed after five performances.[1]

Death

Melcher died of what could have been a ruptured appendix. According to Day's 1975 autobiography, Melcher's physician informed her that Melcher suffered from an enlarged heart. Melcher practiced Christian Science and elected not to seek medical intervention until his condition deteriorated.

Debts

Shortly after his death, Day discovered Melcher had committed her to a CBS situation comedy, The Doris Day Show, without consulting her, and that not only had he lost the millions she had earned throughout their marriage because of poor investments, but he had left her seriously in debt as well. She sued his business partner Jerome B. Rosenthal and was awarded nearly US$23 million for fraud and malpractice following a 99-day trial. Rosenthal declared bankruptcy, and in August 1977 Day settled with his insurers for US$6 million that was paid in 23 annual installments.[2]

Selected credits

References

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