Howard Smith (director)

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Howard Smith with his Oscar award for "Marjoe" in 1972
Howard Smith with his Oscar award for "Marjoe" in 1972

Howard Smith is an Oscar winning film director, producer, journalist, screenwriter, actor, and radio broadcaster.

Contents

[edit] Early career

Howard Smith started his career as a photographer. His work appeared in Life, Newsweek and many other national publications.

[edit] Journalist

Several years later, he pursued journalism from another perspective and became a writer for more than thirty years. His articles appeared in newspapers and magazines ranging from Playboy to The New York Times; from the Ladies Home Journal to The Village Voice.

He wrote regularly for the New York City based weekly newspaper, The Village Voice, in the 1960s and 1970s. One of his regular columns was "Scenes".

During the Village Voice's early and formative years, his column, "Scenes", with its reporting on the emerging counterculture, became a part of the paper's groundbreaking new journalism. The column ran weekly for twenty years and became known for its cutting edge coverage and innovative short-form critiques. His work for the Village Voice is frequently cited as one of the highly influential examples of the new participatory journalism that made less rigid the distinction between the observer and the observed.

[edit] Film Producer and Director

Howard produced and directed, with Sarah Kernochan, the Oscar winning feature-length documentary film, "Marjoe", in 1972, about the evangelist Marjoe Gortner.

When it was first shown at the Cannes Film Festival, and subsequently played in theatres worldwide, the movie caused a sensation by exposing, for the first time ever, the underbelly of a corrupt movement, including its self righteous religious leaders, that was about to burst into public awareness.

He followed up with a documentary film in 1977, called "Gizmo!", about improbable inventions of modern times, caught on film. The film received wide distribution and acclaim.

He was also a film actor and a screenwriter.

[edit] Radio Personality

In the 1960's and 1970's, Howard had a weekend overnight show on WPLJ FM radio in New York City, and syndicated nationally, conducting extensive in-depth interviews with well-known musicians and notable figures, as well as playing an interesting mix of albums and songs in the "progressive" freeform rock music and Album-oriented rock formats.

He covered many of the tumultuous era's most legendary events including Woodstock, from which America heard his live radio reports, broadcast around the clock for five full days. At the peak of the historic Stonewall Riots, he managed to get inside the now famous bar. He was the only journalist who reported about the siege from that dangerous vantage point.

Over the years he interviewed an array of pop-culture icons: From Mick Jagger to Buckminster Fuller; from Janis Joplin to Margaret Mead. The list continues with Jim Morrison, Hugh Hefner, Jane Fonda, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Andy Warhol, Ravi Shankar, Dustin Hoffman, Carole King, Jack Nicholson and many others.

[edit] Lecturer and pundit

Howard Smith became particularly well known for his insights into the growing influence and economic power of America's rapidly expanding Youth Culture. As a result, he frequently lectured and was a guest on many network TV shows.

[edit] Current work

In the early 1990's, he shifted his creative focus to concentrate his activities in the world of non-profit organizations. Amongst these, he is a former board member, and current Director of Operations for the Mood Disorders Support Group (MDSG), an organization helping people with depression, manic depression, and their families and friends.

He is writing a book about his involvement, as both participant and commentator, in the late 1950s beatnik scene, the explosive hippie 1960s, right through to the brouhaha that was to characterize the Nixonian mid-1970s.

[edit] Recent events

On November 15, 2005, in New York City, the IFC Center showed "Marjoe" as the closing film in a series of documentaries called "Stranger Than Fiction". In their program they called it "a lost gem."

[edit] External links