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William O. Harbach
Harbach and wife Barbara, Winter 1998 photograph by Lucian Capehart
Laurie "Dougie" Douglas (1948-1951) Fay Caulkins Palmer (1954-1973) Barbara Schmid Vought (1981-2016; her death)
William Otto Harbach (October 12, 1919 – December 18, 2017) was an American television producer, director and author. He won four Emmy Awards [1] and a Peabody Award [2] Harbach also produced and directed special events, including eight ASCAP celebrations for renowned composers, lyricists and librettists. He was the son of American lyricist, librettist and ASCAP co-founder Otto Abels Harbach.
Early life and education
Born on October 12, 1919, to Otto Abels Harbach and Ella Smith Dougal Harbach, William Otto Harbach began life in New York City. His brother Robert (Bob) was born in February, 1921. The family moved to Mamaroneck, New York, when he was six years old. His father was known as the "Dean of American Librettists," and penned tunes including Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.[3]
Harbach attended the Horace Mann School's kindergarten and Pelham Day School. He spent five years at the Choate School (now Choate Rosemary Hall)[4] where he met John F. Kennedy and Alan Jay Lerner. Harbach spent one year preparing for college at the Hun School of Princeton,[5] after which he was accepted at Brown University. He spent one year at Brown before enlisting in the Coast Guard.[6]
Television career
After a brief stint managing the nightclub acts Kay Thompson and the Williams Brothers, Harbach got an entry-level job in 1948 as editor at the NBC New York Studio. Three years later he was offered the position of producer for a new show, the "Knickerbocker Beer Show".[7] The show starred Steve Allen, who did not like the producer that had been assigned to the show. Harbach replaced him and the two became an award-winning team and followed their work on The Tonight Show with The Steve Allen Show, a variety series. During this time, he developed a partnership with Nick Vanoff, with whom he continued a personal and professional relationship and friendship until Vanoff's death in 1991.[8] Harbach and Vanoff produced the acclaimed variety show The Hollywood Palace from 1964 to 1970,[9] as well as multiple specials.
He staged and directed the Mary Martin Tribute at the Schubert Theater. He produced and directed the first New York International Festival of the Arts (an ASCAP show) in 1988 and, in the following year, The 75th Anniversary of ASCAP in Los Angeles. That same year he produced An Evening with Alan Jay Lerner at Lincoln Center for the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center,[16] and produced and directed the Irving Berlin Tribute at the Music Box Theater on February 6, 1990.
On July 23, 2009, Harbach delivered a eulogy[17] for his friend of half a century, Walter Cronkite.
Harbach died in December 2017 at the age of 98 following a brief illness.[18]
Awards and honors
1966 Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Series - The Hollywood Palace[1]
1967 Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Series - The Hollywood Palace[1]
1973 Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Musical Series - The Julie Andrews Hour[1]
1976 Emmy Award for Outstanding Special - Comedy-variety Or Music - Gypsy in My Soul[1]
1979 Directors Guild of America (DGA) Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Actuality - The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (1978)[19]
1980 Directors Guild of America (DGA) Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Actuality - The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts (1979)[19]