Ben Moses
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ben Moses | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1948 (age 77–78) Illinois |
| Occupations | Writer, director, producer |
Ben Moses (born 1948) is an American documentarian, television producer, director, writer, and filmmaker best known for Good Morning, Vietnam and the documentary A Whisper to a Roar. Moses has been the executive in charge of television production and programming for General Electric, the executive producer of the ABC-TV affiliate in Washington, DC, and was a producer for Young & Rubicam Advertising in New York.
Moses was born and raised in southern Illinois, and it was his interest in amateur radio that introduced him to the world beyond his small hometown. He received his first "ham" radio license at the age of ten and started talking to other ham operators all over the world via short-wave radio. He received his First Class Television Engineering License at the age of 16. During college at the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, where he studied electrical engineering, he worked at the local public television station, KETC, as a cameraman and engineer, and joined the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW). His sophomore year he attended Jacksonville University in Florida, studying theater, and worked as a cameraman at Jacksonville's Channel 10 and was the all-night DJ at WZOK Radio.
Military service and "Good Morning, Vietnam"
The following year, he was recruited to join the U.S. Army Intelligence Corps and trained at Fort Holabird, Maryland. Then he was assigned to the 519th MI Battalion in Miami, Florida, where he interviewed Cuban refugees fleeing Fidel Castro’s government. During the last six months of his enlistment, his unit was deployed to Vietnam, where he joined Armed Forces Radio-Saigon and met the station’s program director, Airman Adrian Cronauer. Their close friendship resulted in Moses' decision to write the story of their experiences at Armed Forces Radio – Saigon, which he titled "Good Morning, Vietnam"[1]
Television career
After the Army, Moses' first network television job was in 1970 as a camera assistant for CBS on The Jackie Gleason Show in Miami Beach.[2] He married Andrea Duda, one of the show's dancers,[3] and they moved to New York, where in 1971 he became a producer for Young & Rubicam Advertising. Eighteen months later he joined General Electric as executive in charge of television programming and production for the company’s new General Electric Theatre series of TV documentaries and movies, one of which -– “The Wolfmen”—received an Academy Award. While in New York, Moses earned his private pilot's license and began to write articles for Flying Magazine.
Four years and dozens of awards for the series later, he divorced, resigned from GE, and returned to working directly in live production. He freelanced as a stage manager, director and associate director for CBS on 60 Minutes, soap operas, election coverage and CBS Sports and News specials with Walter Cronkite and Dan Rather in the mid-1970s. Then he was hired as executive producer at the ABC affiliate in Washington, DC, where he oversaw news specials that received national acclaim and two Emmy nominations.
In 1977, Moses moved to Los Angeles to work on Barry Manilow's first television special as Associate Director,[4] then stayed with the production team for more music-variety specials. Under director Marty Pasetta and the production team that produced the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards and Grammy Awards specials, Moses worked as stage manager and/or AD on those and many other live musical-variety specials for CBS, ABC and NBC. In between specials, from 1977-1981, Moses was the associate director of the ABC hit game show Family Feud starring Richard Dawson.
Feature film career
In 1983, Robin Williams became attached to Moses' treatment for Good Morning, Vietnam, and for the next five years the project was in development at Paramount Pictures. During this time Moses began teaching documentary production at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Extension and continued work as a director, associate director and stage manager for the major networks. In 1984, he formed Buckhantz-Moses Productions with Diana Buckhantz. The team produced several Emmy-winning documentaries, among them Not a Question of Courage, East of the LA River and Dying with Dignity, each of which won at least one Emmy.
In 1987, Good Morning, Vietnam went into production[5] at Disney's Touchstone Pictures. Buckhantz-Moses had a first-look development deal with ITC Entertainment, where in 1988 they developed the motion picture Without A Clue starring Ben Kingsley and Michael Caine for production in England. UCLA Extension asked Moses to also take on the course in Motion Picture and Television Production,[6] which he taught for 8 years. He married Lynne Lueders later that year.
