Michael Todd

  • Michael Todd
Who's Dated Who feature on Michael Todd including awards, trivia, quotes, pictures, biography, photos, videos, pics, news, commentary, vital stats, fans and facts.
 

Michael Todd Relationships

Who is Michael Todd dating?

Click on the photos to find out Who's Dated Who...
 

Post Your Vote

Vote for Michael's Top Romance

Vote Results

 

Career Highlights



Update Information
 

Michael Todd Biography

Very close friends with Eddie Fisher at the time of his death.
 

Comments

Be the first person to add a comment!
 

Submit a Comment

 

Snapshot

    Name Michael Todd
    (Avrom Hirsch Goldbogen)
    Build Athletic
    Eye Color Brown - Dark
    Hair Color Black
    Date of Birth June 221909
    Birthplace Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Star Sign Cancer
    Died March 22, 1958 (Aged 49)
    Location of Death Grants, New Mexico
    Cause of Death plane crash
    Nationality United States
    Ethnicity White
    Religion Jewish
    High School Drop Out
    Occupation Personality
    Celebrity Index Mi
    Claim to Fame Around the World in 80 Days

    Rate this Date

 

Photo Gallery

 

Fans

 

Trivia

Trivia and Quotes

Trivia
  • He had committed himself to provide financial backing for Laurence Olivier`s most cherished project, a film of Shakespeare`s "Macbeth," shortly before his fatal plane crash. But after Todd`s death, the funding didn`t come through and Olivier was forced to abandon the project.
  • His biographer, Art Cohn, died with him in the plane crash that took Todd`s life. The biography was nearly finished and was completed by Cohn`s wife and published as "The Nine Lives of Mike Todd" in 1958.
  • His penultimate show was entitled "Michael Todd`s Peep Show," running at the Winter Garden Theatre from June 28, 1950 to February 24, 1951 for a total of 278 performances. The music and lyrics for this musical revue, which featured female nudity, were by Prince Chakrband Bhumibol, who became the King of Thailand! In Art Cohn`s posthumous biography of Todd, "The Nine Lives of Mike Todd," it is revealed that the naked girls featured in the show`s mermaid sequence had difficulty getting the blue dye used in the water out of their pubic hair.
  • In the 1940s, stripper Gypsy Rose Lee fell in love with Todd, who was then famous as a Broadway theatrical impresario. Todd produced two Broadway shows starring Lee, "Star and Garter" and "The Naked Genius" (the latter of which was written by Lee). Gypsy married William Alexander Kirkland in 1942 in an attempt to make the already-married Todd jealous. They divorced in 1944.
  • The biography "The Nine Lives of Mike Todd" reveals that he briefly was suspected of murdering his first wife Bertha, who died mysteriously in 1946, freeing the way for Todd to marry his mistress, Joan Blondell. Blondell later claimed that Todd fleeced her.
  • Todd twice went bankrupt, once when he filed for bankruptcy for over $1 million as a young man and his construction business (which specialized in soundproofing Hollywood sound-stages, among other lines of business) folded during the Great Depression, and the second time around 1950, when his huge gambling losses and massive debts linked to his lavish lifestyle overwhelmed him. He remained ensconced in a splendid Hudson Valley estate in Tarrytown, New York with his second wife Joan Blondell, living the high life and spending like a pasha, as his second bankruptcy suit wound its way through the federal court system. When creditors` objections threatened to land him in jail due to apparent fraud (Todd had destroyed evidence of his gambling debts so as not to implicate his friends), Todd withdrew the suit and agreed to pay back his creditors. Subsequently, Todd owned over three-quarters of the gross profits of Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), a spectacular that racked up over $20 million in rentals in its first release (approximately $135 million in 2005 terms), a huge sum for the time exceeded by very few films. Despite the fact that he was again rich, and richer than ever (worth about $7-8 million at the time of his death, or about $50 million in 2005 terms), many observers at the time predicted that the profligate Todd would manage to bankrupt himself a third time. He never got the chance, dying in a plane crash in 1958. His widow, Elizabeth Taylor, still owns his share of the Oscar-winning film.
  • Co-developed the Todd A-O sound system. [1955]
  • He was preparing a lavish film version of "Don Quixote" at the time of his death. Todd`s version was never made.
  • In 1957, to celebrate the one-year anniversary of his Oscar-winning film Around the World in Eighty Days (1956), Todd staged an elaborate party at Madison Square Garden for his then-wife Elizabeth Taylor and hundreds of guests. The evening eventually deteriorated into a giant food fight. The party was treated as a serious news event by CBS, which sent Walter Cronkite to cover it. The next day newspaper critics tore the event to shreds. It became what Cronkite considers the low point in his career.
  • Killed, along with journalist Art Cohn, when his private plane went down in a blizzard just outside of Albequerque, New Mexico. The plane`s ironic name was "The Lucky Liz."
  • Todd had previously (1946) produced an elaborate Broadway musical version of "Around the World in 80 Days." Despite mammoth production values, a Cole Porter score and a cast headed by Orson Welles as Phineas Fogg, it was a notorious, costly failure, losing nearly all of the money invested in it.
  •  

    Top Contributors

    Top editors for this profile:
    Who's Dated Who content is contributed and edited by our readers. Please report errors or omissions on this page.
     

    Related Links

     

    Related Profiles