Mike Frankovich (born Mitchell John Frankovich, September 29, 1909 â January 1, 1992), also known professionally as M. J. Frankovich, was an American football player turned film actor and producer. For a number of years he was head of Columbia Pictures in London. His achievements included helping finance Bridge on the River Kwai and giving Goldie Hawn her first key film roles.
Frankovich was the adopted son of actor Joe E. Brown and his wife, Kathryn. Frankovich attended Belmont High School in Downtown Los Angeles. He played football for UCLA and was inducted into UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 1986.
Frankovich began his motion picture career in 1935, as an actor. He usually played radio announcers or masters of ceremonies; today's audiences probably know him from Abbott and Costello's Buck Privates (1941), in which "Mike Frankovich" reports the army war games to the radio audience. He was working at Republic Pictures when his career was interrupted by service in the Army Air Corps during World War II. After the war, he returned to Republic and became a film producer. He supervised four adventure serials in 1947âÂÂ48.
He moved to Europe with his wife, British actress Binnie Barnes. He became managing director of Columbia Pictures in Britain in 1955.
Frankovich moved back to Los Angeles in 1963.
In 1968 he gave up his position as vice president and became an independent producer at Columbia.
In 1969 Frankovich put Goldie Hawn under a four-picture contract starting with Cactus Flower.
He served as president of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission in the early 1980s, and helped to bring the Los Angeles Raiders football team and 1984 Summer Olympics to Los Angeles.
He received the Academy Awards' Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1983.
A devout Catholic, Frankovich married his first wife, Georgiana (or Georgianna) Feagans, on January 15, 1938. No details are available regarding that marriage or how or when it ended. Known descendants are his fourth cousins, Williamson Frankovich and Haley Frankovich.
He married actress Binnie Barnes in 1940. They remained married until his death. He produced some of her late movies, including her last movie in 1973, 40 Carats, in which she portrayed Liv Ullmann's mother.
He died of pneumonia on New Year's Day, 1992.