

William Dozier
Birthday
February 13, 1908 (83 years)
Place of Birth
Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Known For
Production
Biography
William Dozier was an American TV and movie producer who made it to the top of the TV heap briefly in the mid-1960s with his show "Batman (1966)". Born on February 13, 1908 in Omaha, Nebraska, Dozier was also known for his wives. After divorcing his first wife, he was married to Oscar-winner Joan Fontaine from 1946 to 1951 and to movie star Ann Rutherford from 1953 to his death on April 23, 1991. In 1948, he and Fontaine launched Rampart Productions, which produced "Max Ophüls' Letter from an Unknown Woman (1948)" starring his wife, and "You Gotta Stay Happy (1948)", which starred Fontaine and James Stewart. He served as executive producer on both pictures. Turning to TV as the new decade of the Fifties dawned, Dozier produced the series "Danger (1950)", which ran for five years from 1950-55. In the Fifties and Sixties, he continued his career as a TV producer, bringing to the tube the short-lived TV series "Rod Brown of the Rocket Rangers (1953)" and "The Loner (1965)". In 1966, he achieved the height of TV success with "Batman" which ran for three seasons and was a cultural sensation. The TV show spun off a "Batman: The Movie (1966)" feature film. That same year, he also launched , a modest success, and "The Tammy Grimes Show (1966)", a notorious flop that shot five episodes and was canceled after four. Dozier retired as a producer after the 1969 movie "The Big Bounce (1969)" flopped, though he enjoyed a modest second career as an actor in the Seventies and early Eighties.
William Dozier Movies & TV-shows on Netflix
Movies with William Dozier
American Gigolo
Feb 1, 1980
Batman
Jul 30, 1966
Joker: Put on a Happy Face
Aug 18, 2020
Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 1
Jan 1, 1999
Be Water
Jan 25, 2020
The Amazing Howard Hughes
Apr 13, 1977
Evening in Byzantium
Aug 14, 1978
Not Just Another Affair
Oct 1, 1982
Batgirl
Jan 1, 1967
Mission to Glory: A True Story
Jan 1, 1977
Guilty or Innocent: The Sam Sheppard Murder Case
Nov 17, 1975
Crisis in Mid-Air
Feb 13, 1979