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Eliot Hyman

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Name
  
Eliot Hyman

Role
  
Film producer

Children
  
Kenneth Hyman


Eliot Hyman Eliot Hyman WikiVisually

Died
  
July 1980, New York, United States

Similar People
  
Oswald Morris, James B Harris, Stanley Kubrick, Vladimir Nabokov, Anthony Harvey

Eliot Hyman (1904–1980) was an American film executive who helped co-found Seven Arts Productions.

Biography

Eliot Hyman was the Chairman of Warner Brothers - Seven Arts from 1967 to 1969.

Mr. Hyman entered the film production business in 1948, when he co-founded Associated Artists. Producing motion pictures for theater exhibition through other companies that he formed. He became the sole owner of AAP two years later.

In 1953, he began syndicating films to television through AAP, acquiring the entire library of 750 feature films of Warner Brothers made before 1949, as well as 1,500 short subjects and 337 cartoon films. He also began investing in films, including two major films of the director John Huston, Moulin Rouge (1953) and Moby Dick (1956). He helped fund and played an important role in the financing of the first horror film from Hammer Film Productions, The Curse of Frankenstein (1957).

In 1958 Hyman sold Associated Artists Productions to United Artists and became President of United Artists Associated, for whom he bought the screen rights to several successful theatrical properties, e.g. plays and musicals, that became major films, including "West Side Story", "The World of Suzie Wong", and "Two For The Seesaw". He also produced other motion pictures for theater exhibition through other companies that he formed.

In 1960 Mr. Hyman went on his own again to form the Seven Arts Associated Corporation Seven Arts Productions and engaged in worldwide distribution of feature films for television. At the same time Seven Arts directly financed and produced a number of films, including "Lolita", "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?", and "Seven Days in May". He also guided Seven Arts into stage production, including Broadway presentations of "The Night of the Iguana", "Funny Girl", "The Owl and the Pussycat" and several other shows.

In 1967, Seven Arts acquired Warner Bros. and the company became Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.

In 1969, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts was sold to Kinney National Company which dropped the Seven Arts name. Hyman retired from the company and became a private investor.

His son was the film producer Kenneth Hyman.

References

Eliot Hyman Wikipedia