Anderson was born in
Los Angeles,
California, on March 31, 1920, the son of Minerva Ayling and Howard Alvin Anderson. He grew up in
Culver City, California, where his younger brother, Darrell Addison Anderson, was born in 1921. His father was a Hollywood special effects photographer who pioneered the emerging art of visual effects when he created the lightning, flood and storm effects for
Cecil B. DeMille's epic silent film
The King of Kings, released in 1927. That year, he founded the Howard Anderson Special Photographic Effects Company, where Anderson Jr. began working part-time in the 1930s, still in his pre-teens. By age 10, Anderson had become what he later called a "Navy enthusiast," and he joined the
U.S. Navy Reserve while in high school. He began attending
Alexander Hamilton High School in 1934 and transferred to
Hollywood High School the following year, graduating in 1938. He enrolled in
UCLA, where he studied mathematics and joined the university's
Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps program. He found work shooting industrial films for the
Douglas Aircraft Company, including a documentary on the construction of the
Douglas XB-19, and the company's public-relations film
We Give Them Wings. In 1943, he began serving in the
U.S. Navy, primarily as a still photographer and a cameraman on training films. == Career ==