Biography
Working briefly as an actor in the late 1950s, American director Richard Donner first wielded the megaphone for a group of TV commercials, then graduated to the weekly western Wanted: Dead or Alive. Some of Donner's best early work was concentrated on the fantasy anthology
Twilight Zone, including the imperishable 1963 episode "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet." Donner also worked for Hanna-Barbera, directing several episodes of "Danger Island", a component of the 1968 kid's series
The Banana Splits; there was, however, very little that was "kiddie" about "Mystery Island," a hallucinatory symphony of hand-held camerawork. A film director since 1961 Donner turned to movie work full time with 1968's
Salt and Pepper.
The Omen (1976), a demonic-possession opus, was Donner's first major moneymaker, leading to his directing assignment on the first
Superman film in 1978.
Superman was popular enough to inspire three sequels, the first of which contained so much uncredited Donner-directed footage that the director was compelled to sue. Donner has struck gold at the box office several times since 1978, notably with the three action-packed
Lethal Weapon films starring
Mel Gibson and
Danny Glover, and more recently with another Gibson vehicle,
Maverick (1994). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide