Henry G. Saperstein: Difference between revisions

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|notable        =''[[Invasion of Astro-Monster]]'' (1965)
|notable        =''[[Invasion of Astro-Monster]]'' (1965)
|imdb          =https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0764549/
|imdb          =https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0764549/
|wikipedia     =https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_G._Saperstein
|wikipedia-en  =https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_G._Saperstein
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'''Henry Gahagen "Hank" Saperstein''' was an [[United States|American]] film producer and distributor. As a young man, Saperstein inherited his father's cinema chain in Chicago before moving on to television distribution. He moved to Hollywood in [[1955]], and purchased [[UPA|United Productions of America]] in [[1960]]. At UPA, Saperstein produced the successful ''[[wikipedia:Mister Magoo|Mister Magoo]]'' television series and its spinoff television specials and series. Saperstein formed a relationship with Japanese studio [[Toho]] in the 1960s, co-producing three of its [[kaiju]] movies in [[1965]] and [[1966]] and arranging for American actors [[Nick Adams]] and [[wikipedia:Russ Tamblyn|Russ Tamblyn]] to appear in the films (Adams in the first and second films and Tamblyn in the third film). Saperstein would subsequently work with Toho in the 1970s and 1980s and attempt to put together several ''[[Godzilla (franchise)|Godzilla]]'' projects which never materialized. Saperstein was part of the negotiations with Hollywood studios in the early 1990s that attempted to get a Hollywood ''Godzilla'' film made. He passed away from cancer in Beverly Hills on June 24, 1998, at the age of 80. He is survived by his daughter, Pat.
'''Henry Gahagen "Hank" Saperstein''' was an [[United States|American]] film producer and distributor. As a young man, Saperstein inherited his father's cinema chain in Chicago before moving on to television distribution. He moved to Hollywood in [[1955]], and purchased [[UPA|United Productions of America]] in [[1960]]. At UPA, Saperstein produced the successful ''[[wikipedia:Mister Magoo|Mister Magoo]]'' television series and its spinoff television specials and series. Saperstein formed a relationship with Japanese studio [[Toho]] in the 1960s, co-producing three of its [[kaiju]] movies in [[1965]] and [[1966]] and arranging for American actors [[Nick Adams]] and [[wikipedia:Russ Tamblyn|Russ Tamblyn]] to appear in the films (Adams in the first and second films and Tamblyn in the third film). Saperstein would subsequently work with Toho in the 1970s and 1980s and attempt to put together several ''[[Godzilla (franchise)|Godzilla]]'' projects which never materialized. Saperstein was part of the negotiations with Hollywood studios in the early 1990s that attempted to get a Hollywood ''Godzilla'' film made. He passed away from cancer in Beverly Hills on June 24, 1998, at the age of 80. He is survived by his daughter, Pat.

Revision as of 21:25, 9 February 2024

Henry G. Saperstein
Henry G. Saperstein
Born June 2, 1918
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Died June 24, 1998 (aged 80)
Beverly Hills, California, United States
Occupation Film producer; president of UPA, Henry G. Saperstein Enterprises, Benedict Pictures, etc.
First work Mister Magoo (TV 1960-1961)
Notable work Invasion of Astro-Monster (1965)
Imdb.pngWp EN.png

Henry Gahagen "Hank" Saperstein was an American film producer and distributor. As a young man, Saperstein inherited his father's cinema chain in Chicago before moving on to television distribution. He moved to Hollywood in 1955, and purchased United Productions of America in 1960. At UPA, Saperstein produced the successful Mister Magoo television series and its spinoff television specials and series. Saperstein formed a relationship with Japanese studio Toho in the 1960s, co-producing three of its kaiju movies in 1965 and 1966 and arranging for American actors Nick Adams and Russ Tamblyn to appear in the films (Adams in the first and second films and Tamblyn in the third film). Saperstein would subsequently work with Toho in the 1970s and 1980s and attempt to put together several Godzilla projects which never materialized. Saperstein was part of the negotiations with Hollywood studios in the early 1990s that attempted to get a Hollywood Godzilla film made. He passed away from cancer in Beverly Hills on June 24, 1998, at the age of 80. He is survived by his daughter, Pat.

Selected filmography

Executive producer

Videos

"Nick Adams & Henry Saperstein in Japan" Kaiju Masterclass panel, with
Pat Saperstein and Allyson Adams


External links

Comments

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