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Hannah Weinstein

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Full Name
  
Hannah Dorner

Role
  
Journalist

Name
  
Hannah Weinstein


Ethnicity
  
Jewish

Nationality
  
United States

Children
  
Paula Weinstein

Born
  
June 23, 1911
New York

Occupation
  
television producer journalist publicist political activist

Died
  
March 9, 1984, New York City, New York, United States

Movies
  
Stir Crazy, Claudine, Greased Lightning

Similar People
  
Paula Weinstein, Bruce Jay Friedman, Georg Stanford Brown, Sidney Poitier, Michael Schultz

Hannah Weinstein (née Dorner; 23 June 23, 1911, in New York - March 9, 1984, in New York) was an American journalist, publicist and left-wing political activist who moved to Britain and became a television producer. She is best known for having produced The Adventures of Robin Hood television series in the 1950s.

Contents

Biography

Born to a Jewish family, Weinstein worked for the New York Herald Tribune from 1927. In 1937, she joined Fiorello H. La Guardia's New York mayoral campaign. She was also involved in the presidential campaigns of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry Wallace.

In 1952, she moved to London to avoid the anti-Communist persecution and McCarthyism affecting the US at the time. There she established her own television production company, Sapphire Films, which made series for the British commercial ITV network. Weinstein created and executive produced The Adventures of Robin Hood (1955–59), starring Richard Greene. The series was sold to both British and American television through ITC Entertainment.

Weinstein hired American writers who had been blacklisted by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee hearings (Waldo Salt, Ring Lardner Jr., Ian McLellan Hunter and others), using pseudonyms, and instituted elaborate security measures to ensure that the writers' true identities remained secret. The success of Robin Hood led Weinstein to create a further four television series, The Buccaneers (1956–57), The Adventures of Sir Lancelot (1956-57), Sword of Freedom (1958-60) and The Four Just Men (1959) (as Hannah Fisher). Weinstein returned to America in 1962, and resumed her involvement in politics.

In 1971 she founded the Third World Cinema Corporation to produce films with members of African-American groups. In 1974, she produced the Oscar nominated film Claudine, featuring an all-black cast in a story about an afro-American family struggling through hard times and racism. She later produced Greased Lightning (1977) and Stir Crazy (1980) starring comedian Richard Pryor.

In 1982, she was awarded the Women in Film Crystal Award for outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work over their lifetime, have helped to expand the role of women within the entertainment industry. In 1984, was named for the Liberty Hill Foundation Upton Sinclair Award in honor of her artistic and political accomplishments.

Personal life

She had three daughters, film producers Paula Weinstein, Lisa Weinstein and the eldest, Dina Weinstein.

References

Hannah Weinstein Wikipedia