Aubrey Schenck(1908-1999)
- Producer
- Additional Crew
- Writer
Aubrey Schenck practiced law for seven years (1932-39) in New York
City, connected with the legal department of 20th Century-Fox; he was
also an assistant to Fox president Spyros P. Skouras, who was based in New York.
Schenck wrote a story and submitted it to the studio, asking to be
given the chance to produce the picture as well. When the resultant
movie (Shock (1946) with Vincent Price) turned out well, Schenck went on to work
on other Fox films, then shifted to newly-formed Eagle-Lion Pictures.
In the 1950s, Schenck paired with Howard W. Koch and they began their own
indie production company (Bel-Air), releasing their features through
United Artists. Schenck and Koch later went their separate ways (Koch
went to work for Frank Sinatra Enterprises), but Schenck stayed true to
his adventure- and horror-picture roots, adding to his filmography such
titles as Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964), Superbeast (1972), Daughters of Satan (1972), Ambush Bay (1966) and others.