In 1963, Jacobs formed the feature film production company APJAC Productions, Despite being cheaper and less troublesome to produce than
Dr. Dolittle, it, too, went mostly unnoticed at the box office. According to Trundy, Jacobs stated, "I will never in my lifetime make a film that cannot be seen by the whole family" and gave the rights to
Midnight Cowboy to his associate, Jerome Hellman, for no fee, saying, "I will not have my name on it".
Midnight Cowboy went on to win the 1969
Academy Award for Best Picture for Hellman. In 1973, APJAC Productions was renamed APJAC International. Jacobs produced the ''
Reader's Digest-financed Tom Sawyer, a musical which featured both a script and musical score by the Sherman Brothers. It was to be the first in a five-picture deal with the prolific composers. But on June 27, 1973, during production of the second film, Huckleberry Finn'', Jacobs died suddenly of a heart attack at the age of 51. In addition to producing
Huckleberry Finn, Jacobs was working on a number of projects at the same time. He had just made a pilot for a TV series,
Topper Returns, starring
Roddy McDowall,
Stefanie Powers and
John Randolph; was the Executive Producer of a
Planet of the Apes TV series; and was developing a full-length science fiction feature called
Voyage of the Oceanauts. He also wanted to produce a film version of the Frank Herbert novel
Dune. Trundy, who was filming
Huckleberry Finn on location at the time of her husband's death, assumed control of APJAC Productions. A 1975 article in
Planet of the Apes UK stated that APJAC later sold "all rights and privileges" of the Apes adventures to 20th Century-Fox, choosing to concentrate on future projects. ==Filmography==