[1][2][3] He then served as the Chairman of Sleight & Hellmuth Inc., Pressed Metals of America, Struthers Wells Corp. and the Platinum Mining Co.[2][3] Later, he served as the President of the New England Life Insurance Co.[1][2][3] Hutner was chairman of the President's Advisory Committee on the Arts from 1982 to 1990,[5] serving under Ronald Reagan and George H. W.
[1][3][4] Hutner made charitable contributions to the Jules Stein Eye Institute at UCLA and the Young Musicians Foundation.
[2] Additionally, he was a co-founder of the Los Angeles Music Center.
[2] He married his third wife Juli Reding (1936), an actress, on her 33rd birthday, November 28, 1969.
[1][2] Hutner died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on December 7, 2008, at age 99, two weeks shy of his 100th birthday.