Lee H. Katzin
Known for: Directing
Born: April 11, 1935 in Detroit, Michigan, USA - Died: October 29, 2002
Lee H. Katzin (April 12, 1935 – October 30, 2002) was an American film director. He was born in Detroit, Michigan and became a TV director in the late 1960s for TV shows that included Bonanza, Mission: Impossible and Police Story. He also directed the 1971 feature film Le Mans. Starting in 1969, he did an array of theatrical films starting with Heaven with a Gun and other films like The Break and the cult classic What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice? In 1972, he directed the film The Salzburg Connection, which starred Barry Newman and Anna Karina. In 1975, he directed the launch episode "Breakaway", and other early episodes, of the Gerry Anderson live-action series Space: 1999. He also directed the pilots for the television series Man from Atlantis and Spenser: For Hire. He was primarily known as a prolific episodic television director, and he worked on series such as MacGyver, Police Story, The Young Riders, and Mission Impossible.
Known for
Showing 24 of 68 titles
Steve McQueen: The Man & Le Mans
Self (archive footage)
Heaven with a Gun
Director
Man from Atlantis
Director
Le Mans
Director
The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission
Director
The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission
Director
World Gone Wild
Director
Zuma Beach
Director
Terror Out of the Sky
Director
Alien Attack
Director
What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice?
Director
Journey Through the Black Sun
Director
Hondo and the Apaches
Director
Savages
Director
Restraining Order
Director
Ordeal
Director
Along Came a Spider
Director
The Break
Director
The Last Survivors
Director
Sky Hei$t
Director
Hoodwinked
Director
The Stranger
Director
Relentless
Director
Emergency Room
Director