Norman Tokar

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Norman Tokar

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Biography

As a child actor, New Jersey-born Norman Tokar was active on stage and in radio in the '30s and '40s. He understudied Ezra Stone in the radio role of Henry Aldrich, taking over the part in June of 1942 -- only to vacate the series a month later when called to active duty with the Signal Corps. After the war, Tokar turned to directing, signing with the Walt Disney talent pool. He helmed several episodes of such Disney TV projects as The Mickey Mouse Club and Zorro before being given a feature-film opportunity with Big Red (1962). This assignment established Tokar as an "outdoors" director, a handy talent for a Disney employee; subsequent Tokar-directed projects included Savage Sam (1962), A Tiger Walks (1963) and Follow Me Boys (1966). With the made-for-TV Sammy the Way Out Seal (1962), Tokar displayed his talent for slapstick and family farce, which served him well with such Disney comedies as The Ugly Dachshund (1967). Tokar directed the last film personally supervised by Walt Disney, The Happiest Millionaire (1967). He remaining on the lot long after Disney's death. Most of his output of the '70s was mired in the cut-and-dried comic techniques he'd perfected in the '60s, but Norman Tokar still brought in box-office gold with such Disney Studio efforts as The Boatniks (1970) and Candleshoe (1978), his final film. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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Norman Tokar
Born November 25, 1919(1919-11-25)
Newark, New Jersey, USA
Died April 6, 1979(1979-04-06) (aged 59)
Hollywood, California, USA
Years active 1956-1979
Spouse Phyllis Coates
Grace Tokar (1941-1949) (divorced) 1 child

Norman Tokar (November 25, 1919 in Newark, New Jersey - April 6, 1979 in Hollywood) was a prolific director (and occasionally writer and producer) of serial television and feature films, who directed many of the early episodes of Leave it to Beaver, and found his greatest success directing over a dozen films for Walt Disney Productions, spanning the 1950s to the 1970s.

Career

After a career as an actor on Broadway in the early 1940s, Tokar moved into television direction on such sitcoms as The Bob Cummings Show and The Donna Reed Show, and the drama Naked City.

In the early 1960s, Tokar’s success working with the juvenile actors on 93 episodes of the TV sitcom Leave it to Beaver encouraged Walt Disney to hire him to direct family features for his studio, which frequently used children in key roles. His first feature film assignment was the Western Big Red (1962), followed by the Old Yeller sequel Savage Sam (1963) and Those Calloways (1965). After directing the 1966 Fred MacMurray picture Follow Me, Boys!, and the Dean Jones/Suzanne Pleshette slapstick comedy The Ugly Dachsund that same year, Tokar's next directorial assignment (Walt Disney's last before his death) was the 1967 roadshow musical The Happiest Millionaire. With a Sherman Brothers score and a cast including Fred MacMurray, Greer Garson, Tommy Steele, Lesley Ann Warren, and John Davidson, the studio hoped the film would do as well with critics and audiences as Mary Poppins had three years earlier. When it failed to do so, the studio cut the nearly three-hour film down to 144 minutes and again to 118 minutes for general release; the cut footage went unseen until it was restored in the 1990s.

Tokar followed Millionaire with more examples of the high-concept comedies that became the mainstay of the studio in the 1960s and 1970s: The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit (1968), The Boatniks (1970), and Snowball Express (1972).

After directing his only non-Disney feature in 1974, Where the Red Fern Grows, Tokar made his most commercially successful film; the 1975 comedy western The Apple Dumpling Gang. With his final film before his death, 1978's The Cat From Outer Space, Tokar obtained a co-producer credit.

Between his Disney films, Tokar continued to direct TV, working on The Doris Day Show and M*A*S*H.

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