Richard D. Zanuck
So, Darryl F. Zanuck’s kid—Richard—didn’t just coast on the family name. He actually started out hustling during college breaks, doing all sorts of grunt work at Fox Studios. No cushy office gig, just learning the ropes from the inside out. One summer, he tagged along to every single production and business meeting with his dad. That’s some serious immersion therapy. Not long after, he’s right there in the trenches as a story and production assistant for movies like Island in the Sun and The Sun Also Rises. The guy’s practically getting a masterclass in filmmaking, straight from his old man.
Then fate throws him a curveball. While his father’s off in Africa, busy with Roots of Heaven, Richard suddenly gets put in charge of a project he’d been involved with, but never thought he’d actually run—Compulsion. No pressure, right? Except the thing ends up snagging the Cannes Festival Award for its male leads and pulls in real money at the box office. That’s when people stop seeing him as just the boss’s kid and start recognizing him as a legit producer.
Fast forward to 1969—Richard’s only 34 and lands the gig of senior executive vice president at Twentieth Century Fox. Youngest corporate president in Hollywood history, no big deal. Over the next eight years, he basically whips Fox back into shape, turning it into one of the hottest, most respected studios in the game. And he doesn’t stop there—he drags the whole operation into the modern era, pushing Fox to the front lines of both TV and film production. The dude knew how to make things happen.