Rod Daniel, Director of Michael J. Fox's 'Teen Wolf,' Dies at 73
He was not on the list.
He helmed other light comedies like 'K-9,' 'The Super' and
'Beethoven's 2nd' as well as several episodes of 'WKRP in Cincinnati.'
Rod Daniel, who directed Michael J. Fox in the 1985
box-office hit Teen Wolf, died Saturday at his home in Chicago, his family
announced. He was 73.
Daniel specialized in light comedies, also helming Like
Father Like Son (1987), starring Kirk Cameron and Dudley Moore; K-9 (1989),
with James Belushi and a German Shepherd; The Super (1991), toplined by Joe
Pesci; the dog-filled Beethoven's 2nd (1993); and the 2002 ABC telefilm Home
Alone 4 (minus Macaulay Culkin).
Born and raised in Nashville, Daniel got his start in
television, where he produced and directed several episodes of the 1979-82 CBS
sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati.
Daniel made his feature debut with Teen Wolf, which starred
Fox — then 24 and on a break from NBC's Family Ties — as a high school
basketball player who learns he's a werewolf. (His father, played by James
Hampton, is a werewolf as well.)
In a 2011 interview with the Chicago Tribune, Daniel said he
landed the gig after Fox asked a bunch of potential directors what the movie
was about. While everyone else said, "A werewolf," Daniel's reply
was, "It's about a father and son."
Released on Aug. 23, 1985, Teen Wolf debuted at No. 2 in its
opening weekend with $6.1 million, second only to Back to the Future, which
also starred Fox and was in its eighth week in theaters. Made for just $1.4
million, Teen Wolf grossed about $80 million
worldwide.
A Vietnam veteran and the son of a surgeon, Daniel also
directed episodes of such TV series as Newhart; Everybody Loves Raymond;
Magnum, P.I.; Mary; Caroline in the City; Boston Common; and Men Behaving
Badly. He retired from filmmaking in 2003.
Survivors include his wife Marti, whom he married in 1968,
children John and Lucas and grandson Ethan.
The family requested that donations in Daniel's memory can
be made to the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research.
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