Jon Davison(I)
- Producer
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Jon Davison was born on July 21, 1949 in Haddonfield, New Jersey.
Davison studied at New York University's Film Institute, where one of
his instructors was director Martin Scorsese. While attending NYU Jon
staged film retrospectives at the Fillmore East in the East Village.
Davison began his career running the St. Marks Cinematheque movie
theater in New York. Fellow NYU classmate and future film director
Jonathan Kaplan suggested to Jon that he move to Los Angeles,
California. In 1972 Davison hooked up with Roger Corman's prolific
B-flick outfit New World Pictures, where he initially was the director
of advertising and publicity. Davison made his debut as associate
producer of "Big Bad Mama." He went on to produce the hilarious
exploitation feature parody "Hollywood Boulevard," Ron Howard's
delightful directorial debut "Grand Theft Auto," and Joe Dante's
terrific tongue-in-cheek killer animal treat "Piranha" for New World
Pictures. Jon left New World Pictures in 1980. He produced the
uproarious comedies "Airplane!" and "Top Secret!" for Jim Abrahams and
the Zucker brothers. Davison subsequently produced the excellent and
exciting science fiction cult favorites "RoboCop" and "Starship
Troopers" for director Paul Verhoeven. He went on to produce sequels
for those two films. In addition, Jon handled second unit director
chores on both "Rock'n'Roll High School" and "The Howling." Moreover,
Jon Davison has popped up in small parts in a few movies; he's
especially memorable as the tinny metallic voice of the murderous
malfunctioning robot ED-209 in "RoboCop."