Horberg was born in
Chicago, Illinois, where, in his first venture into film, he owned and operated the downtown repertory Sandburg Movie Theatre from 1979 to 1981. Earlier, he graduated high school from the
Latin School of Chicago in 1976. He moved into production starting his company, FutureVision, Inc., and was a producer on
Cheap Trick: Live At ChicagoFest for
MTV,
Chicago Blues, a 13-part series featuring legendary blues performers for subscription TV, and was an Associate Producer on
Miami Blues, and Executive Producer on
A Rage in Harlem for
Miramax Films. Horberg began his career in 1987 as a creative executive at
Paramount Pictures and later a Senior Vice President of Production. While at Paramount he oversaw the development and production of such films as
Ghost,
The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear,
Dead Again,
Regarding Henry,
Soapdish,
The Addams Family and
The Godfather Part III. In 1993, Horberg joined producer/director
Sydney Pollack's company, Mirage, where he produced such films as
Cold Mountain based on the best-selling novel by
Charles Frazier,
The Talented Mr. Ripley, based on the novel by
Patricia Highsmith,
The Quiet American based on the novel by
Graham Greene,
Heaven and
Searching for Bobby Fischer, the directorial debut of
Oscar-winning screenwriter (''
Schindler's List'')
Steven Zaillian. During that time, he also created and produced the
Showtime anthology series
Fallen Angels which featured
Tom Hanks,
Tom Cruise,
Steven Soderbergh and
Alfonso Cuaron. He also produced the HBO film
Poodle Springs based on the unfinished novel by
Raymond Chandler and adapted by
Tom Stoppard, along with
Charlie Countryman. ==Later career==