As an actor, Damon was one of the many stolidly pretty figures underwriting the post-War studio system. Signed to Fox in 1958, he often “played handsome leads in inconsequential films”, as the biographer Ephraim Katz summarised. Yet he found more notable work outside his contract, winning the Golden Globe for Best Male Newcomer as Philip Winthrop in Roger Corman’s Poe adaptation The Fall of the House of Usher (1960).
Upon moving to Italy in 1962, Damon – and his cerulean eyes, newly piercing in gaudy Eastmancolor – became a fixture of the emergent spaghetti Western genre. An agent blocked him from appearing in A Fistful of Dollars (1964), but he headlined Sergio Corbucci’s Ringo and His Golden Pistol (1966) and made an especially dastardly villain in Requiescant (1967).
“I was surprised, because I had never ridden a horse in my life,” Damon later told an interviewer. “Cowboys had to be tall and blond, and I’m not that tall. I had very dark hair at the time, but they said, ‘It doesn’t matter. You’re American.’ I said OK and learned to ride a horse.”
Yet Damon grew tired of typecasting, taking a job with an Italian distributor – “they really wanted me because they thought I knew everyone in Hollywood and could get them bigger pictures” – before returning to the US with a greater understanding of the hardscrabble involved in making low-budget pictures.
His
producing career began with the Pam Grier vehicle The Arena (1974),
which bore the semi-irresistible tagline “See Wild Women Fight to The Death”. The
rights for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) eluded him, but he assumed
mogul status soon thereafter: Das Boot (1981) netted six Oscar
nominations, while its director Wolfgang Petersen’s well-packaged follow-up, The
NeverEnding Story (1984), yielded big box-office and a top ten pop hit.
Juggling such family fare with altogether more adult material, including 9½ Weeks (1986), Damon grasped what his legacy would be: “My claim to fame will be the fact that I basically […] became what they call the godfather of independent films… How did somebody do what I did? Because I didn’t know better. I came in with such a fresh viewpoint because I’d been an actor and didn’t know anything.”
Damon
was born Alan Harris on April 22, 1933 in Chicago, where his parents were
grocers. A keen actor from his schooldays, he studied dentistry at UCLA – briefly
rooming with Jack Nicholson – before switching courses, eventually emerging
with a literature BA and an MA in business administration. He made his screen
debut in a 1952 episode of true-crime compendium Gang Busters, and his
feature debut in the union drama Inside Detroit (1956).
He worked well into his eighties, producing the Nicolas Cage actioner Willy’s Wonderland (2021), while his 2008 memoir From Cowboy to Mogul to Monster: The Neverending Story of Film Pioneer Mark Damon became a touchstone for independently minded creatives. Flexibility, he admitted, had been key to his success: “If you don’t succeed in the field of your dreams, you may one day succeed in the field you never dreamed of. That’s the story of my career.”
He is survived by his second wife, the actress Margaret Markov, and their two children; he was previously married to the actress Barbara Frey.
Mark Damon, born April 22, 1933, died May 12, 2024.
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