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American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tony Owen (May 2, 1907 – May 12, 1984) was an American agent and producer, who was married to Donna Reed.[1]
Owen was born in Chicago and worked in that city as a journalist. In the late 1930s he produced game programs for the Detroit Lions, and in 1940 became a vice president of the football club.[2]
He served in the army during the war, but was invalided out. He moved to Los Angeles in 1942 and got work as an agent.[1]
He married Donna Reed in 1945 and they would go on to have four children (two were adopted).[3]
Owen and Reed formed their own company, Todon Productions. Owen moved into film production with Duel in the Jungle (1953). It established a formula of using two American leads, an American director, and 80% British crew, to qualify for the subsidies of being a British film and because it was cheaper to make. "As an independent I can give everybody a percentage", said Owen. "This includes a star who will take a cut in lieu of his regular salary of say, $300,000." Owen added that "I believe the American public loves seeing foreign backgrounds. They're a definite plus value."[4]
Duel in the Jungle made $3 million. This launched Todon on a series of films.[4]
He followed it with two films directed by Ken Hughes and distributed by Allied Artists: Little Red Monkey (1955), with Richard Conte, and Timeslip (1955) with Gene Nelson and Faith Domergue.
Then came Portrait of Alison (1956) with Terry Moore directed by Guy Green; Dial 999 (1956), with Gene Nelson directed by Montgomery Tully; and The Intimate Stranger (1956) with Richard Basehart and Mary Murphy.
In 1956, a report said Todon was "perhaps the biggest Anglo-American company next to Warwick."[4] As he made Beyond Mombasa Owen said he'd produced six films and "all of them stink but they made money... But not the final one I made with my wife. In fact, this is the first one I've done that isn't lousy – and I'm worried."[4]
"I'm no genius", he said later. "I just wanted to make commercial films."[1]
In May 1956, Owen said Todon would make eight films with an overall budget of $9,250,000.[5]
That month it was announced Maxwell Setton would run the company in London, to make six films, starting with The Nylon Web which became Town on Trial.[6] Others included The Long Haul (1957) with Victor Mature and Diana Dors, directed by Hughes; I Was Monty's Double (1958) with John Mills directed by John Guillermin;[7]
Owen said "the last one [film] died the death of a dog at the box office. So I came back and started working in television."[1]
Owen developed a series for his wife where she would play the secretary of the Secretary of State. A number of scripts were written but they did not feel confident, and eventually developed a show where Reed played the wife of a pediatrician. This became the hugely successful The Donna Reed Show.[1]
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