Hollywood producer Richard Zanuck has died aged 77 after suffering a heart attack at his Beverley Hills home.
Dick Zanuck, as most people called him, was best known for his work on films such as The Sound of Music, Driving Miss Daisy and Jaws.
Son of Hollywood royalty, he became the youngest studio head in history when he took over 20th Century Fox aged 28.
His friend Steven Spielberg called him a “cornerstone of the film industry”.
Dick Zanuck’s parents were the legendary movie mogul Darryl Zanuck and actress Virginia Fox.
After his father made him 20th Century Fox’s head of production, the younger Zanuck went on to oversee the release of some of the era’s classics, including The Sound of Music and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
Richard Zanuck went on to run his own production company after several big-screen musicals for Fox flopped and his father fired him, spending most of his career as an independent producer.
He collaborated with Steven Spielberg on the blockbuster jaws and several other films.
“He taught me everything I know about producing. He was one of the most honorable and loyal men of our profession and he fought tooth and nail for his directors,” Steven Spielberg said in a statement.
His 1989 film Driving Miss Daisy won four Oscars, including best picture for Richard Zanuck and his wife and collaborator Lili Fini Zanuck.
In his later years, Dick Zanuck collaborated closely with director Tim Burton on a number of fillms, including Planet of the Apes, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Alice in Wonderland.