Milo O. Frank Jr.(1921-2004)
- Producer
- Writer
Milo O. Frank was born in New York City in 1922. He served in the US
Marines during WWII and attended the USC-sponsored language school in
Boulder, Colorado.
Frank worked as a talent agent for the William Morris Agency in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and became agent for Sally Forrest (born Sally Feeney), whom he married in 1951. Mrs. Frank still lives (2009), and had a career as a movie actress, starring in Not Wanted (1949), a 1948 movie directed by Ida Lupino and in MGM's Excuse My Dust (1951), a 1952 movie co-starring Red Skelton, and also as a dancer/entertainer who appeared on TV shows during the 1950s, including The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (1956).
Frank went on to work as head of Talent And Casting for CBS Television, and later for Cinerama. He became a producer of independent movies in the 1960s, including All the Loving Couples (1969), a movie about wife-swapping which became a major box-office success in 1970.
In his later life, he became an author, and wrote "How To Make Your Point In Thirty Seconds", and was hired as a business management consultant by major corporations assisting in meeting planning and executive communications streamlining. He died in California in 2004 at age 82 of Parkinson's Disease.
Frank worked as a talent agent for the William Morris Agency in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and became agent for Sally Forrest (born Sally Feeney), whom he married in 1951. Mrs. Frank still lives (2009), and had a career as a movie actress, starring in Not Wanted (1949), a 1948 movie directed by Ida Lupino and in MGM's Excuse My Dust (1951), a 1952 movie co-starring Red Skelton, and also as a dancer/entertainer who appeared on TV shows during the 1950s, including The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (1956).
Frank went on to work as head of Talent And Casting for CBS Television, and later for Cinerama. He became a producer of independent movies in the 1960s, including All the Loving Couples (1969), a movie about wife-swapping which became a major box-office success in 1970.
In his later life, he became an author, and wrote "How To Make Your Point In Thirty Seconds", and was hired as a business management consultant by major corporations assisting in meeting planning and executive communications streamlining. He died in California in 2004 at age 82 of Parkinson's Disease.