He was raised in Beverly Hills and joined the U.S. Army Air Forces to fight in World War II, serving in the First Motion Picture Unit.
[1] While serving under Ronald Reagan at Culver City's Hal Roach Studios, Levy met Arthur Gardner and Arnold Laven, and the three men formed a production company, Levy-Gardner-Laven.
Serving in various producer capacities from the early 1940s to the mid-1970s, Levy was involved with such films as the 1967 Elvis Presley musical Clambake.
[2] Though he produced over 30 films in the course of his career, Levy is best known for his involvement in the hit television programs The Rifleman, The Big Valley, and The Detectives.
He is buried in Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery, Los Angeles (Garden of Abraham).