Robert Wyler

Personal Info

Known For Producer

Gender Male

Birthday 1900-09-25

Deathday 1971-01-17 (70 years old)

Robert Wyler

Biography

Robert Wyler (September 25, 1900 – January 17, 1971) was a Swiss-American film producer and associate producer. He was the older brother of film director William Wyler and a nephew of Universal Studios head, Carl Laemmle. Wyler was born in Mülhausen, Alsace, Germany (now Mulhouse, Haut-Rhin, France). His first credit was as a producer in 1928, and he made several unsuccessful attempts at directing in the early 1930s. Wyler found success in the late 1940s and 1950s. He was associate producer of his brother's adaptation of The Heiress (1949), which was nominated for Best Film at the Academy Awards and won its star, Olivia de Havilland, her second Oscar. Wyler himself was nominated for Best Screenplay for Detective Story (1951), another film directed by his brother and a controversial hit in its day. He was involved as an associate producer on most of his brother's films through the 1950s, such as Roman Holiday (1953) and Friendly Persuasion (1956). Then 47-year-old Wyler married 24-year-old actress Cathy O'Donnell on April 11, 1948. They had met two years earlier, while she was being directed by his brother in The Best Years of Our Lives. She died in 1970, on their 22nd wedding anniversary, following a long illness. Robert Wyler died nine months later, on January 17, 1971.

Known For

Producer

1966
How to Steal a Million

as Production Assistant

1961
The Children's Hour

as Associate Producer

1958
The Big Country

as Associate Producer

1956
Friendly Persuasion

as Associate Producer

1955
The Desperate Hours

as Associate Producer

1953
Roman Holiday

as Associate Producer

1951
Detective Story

as Associate Producer

1949
The Heiress

as Associate Producer

Writer

1958
The Big Country

as Adaptation

1951
Detective Story

as Screenplay

1946
1937
Sophie Lang Goes West

as Screenplay

1937
1937

Director

1935
1932
The Wonderful Day

as Director

1923
The Hunchback of Notre Dame

as Assistant Director

Crew

1936
Dodsworth

as Additional Writing