Walter Mirisch began to work as a producer at
Monogram Pictures beginning with
Fall Guy (1947), the profitable
Bomba, the Jungle Boy series,
Wichita (1955), and
The First Texan (1956), by which time the company was known as Allied Artists. Walter Mirisch was in charge of production at the studio when it made
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and
Love in the Afternoon (1957). The Mirisch Company was founded in 1957 at which time it signed a 12-picture deal with
United Artists (UA) that was extended to 20 films two years later. Its first production was
Man of the West (1958) starring
Gary Cooper. UA acquired the company on March 1, 1963, but the Mirisch brothers continued to produce for their distribution, under other corporate names, in rented space at the
Samuel Goldwyn Studio. It produced many successful motion pictures for
United Artists, beginning with the release of
Fort Massacre (1958) but later including
Some Like It Hot (1959),
The Horse Soldiers (1959),
The Apartment (1960),
The Magnificent Seven (1960),
West Side Story (1961),
Follow That Dream (1962 with
Elvis Presley),
The Great Escape (1963),
The Pink Panther (1963),
Hawaii (1966),
In the Heat of the Night (1967),
The Thomas Crown Affair (1968),
Fiddler on the Roof (1971), and many others. In 1964, Mirisch Films Ltd, or Mirisch Films GB was formed in the United Kingdom for the production of
633 Squadron,
A Shot in the Dark and several other films.
The Pink Panther featured an animated
Pink Panther, which soon became a star of a series of theatrical cartoons made by
DePatie–Freleng Enterprises and released by Mirisch/UA. The cartoon series earned the partnership name of
Mirisch-Geoffrey-DePatie-Freleng for the copyright of The Pink Panther and is used to this day by special arrangement through MGM for new cartoon specials and series. Mirisch first entered television in 1959 with the series,
Wichita Town for NBC. It also co-produced live-action television shows such as
The Rat Patrol,
Hey, Landlord and
The Magnificent Seven television series, as well as a number of television movies and cartoon shows of
The Super 6 and
The Pink Panther Show. In 1965, the company, along with
Lee Rich started
Mirisch-Rich Television Productions, with the intent to produce shows for network television and it maintains headquarters in the Samuel Goldwyn Studios. Rich left in 1967 and it was soon renamed
Mirisch Television Productions. The company forged long-term associations with directors such as
Billy Wilder,
Blake Edwards,
Robert Wise,
George Roy Hill,
William Wyler,
J. Lee Thompson,
John Sturges, and
Norman Jewison, who directed three consecutive successes for it:
The Russians Are Coming the Russians Are Coming (1966),
In the Heat of the Night (1967), and
The Thomas Crown Affair (1968). == Filmography ==