Born 1910 (age 84) · Holitz, Bohemia
Appears in 39 titles

Harry Horner (July 24, 1910 - December 5, 1994) was an Austrian art director who made a successful career in Hollywood. He was born in the town of Holitz, which now belongs to the Czech Republic, to German speaking parents in Bohemia. He began his career working with Max Reinhardt in Vienna. When Reinhardt moved to the United States in the early 1930s, Horner went along with him. During World War II, he served as production designer and set designer for the U.S. Army Air Forces show Winged Victory. He won an Oscar in 1949 for his work on William Wyler's The Heiress and another in 1961 for Robert Rossen's drama The Hustler. One of his first notable successes was George Cukor's A Double Life (1947) and he soon found himself up on the Oscar podium in 1949 for his work on William Wyler's The Heiress. He worked with Cukor again in 1950 on Born Yesterday and then tried his hand at directing on several TV series, including Gunsmoke. He was nominated for a third time in 1969 for Sydney Pollack's 30s drama They Shoot Horses, Don't They .  Horner directed a few films beginning with Red Planet Mars and Beware, My Lovely both in 1952. He retired after completing the Neil Diamond remake of The Jazz Singer in 1980. He died of pneumonia in 1994 in Pacific Palisades, California, aged 84. Description above from the Wikipedia article Harry Horner, licensed under CC-BY-SA,full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Filmography

Separate Tables
7.0
Separate Tables
1958
Associate Producer
Tarzan Triumphs
6.2
Tarzan Triumphs
1943
Production Designer
Beware, My Lovely
6.1
Beware, My Lovely
1952
Director
Red Planet Mars
4.9
Red Planet Mars
1952
Director
Man from Del Rio
6.4
Man from Del Rio
1956
Director
Vicki
5.5
Vicki
1953
Director
A Life in the Balance
6.4
A Life in the Balance
1955
Director
New Faces
5.9
New Faces
1954
Director
The Wild Party
6.6
The Wild Party
1956
Director