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Frank Price (born May 17, 1930) [1] is an American retired television writer and film studio executive. He held a number of executive positions including head of Universal TV; president, and later chairman and CEO, of Columbia Pictures; and president of Universal Pictures. [2] In the 1960s, he is credited with helping to develop the "made-for ...
Frank Price. Producer: Matinee Theatre. One of the few Hollywood executives to come out of a writing background, Price interrupted his early TV career (where he was story editor and writer for CBS-TV from 1951-53) with a stint as story editor at Columbia Pictures (1953-57), which he would later head at two separate times.
- January 1, 1
- Producer, Writer, Production Manager
- Decatur, Illinois, USA
- Frank Price
Frank Price. Producer: Matinee Theatre. One of the few Hollywood executives to come out of a writing background, Price interrupted his early TV career (where he was story editor and writer for CBS-TV from 1951-53) with a stint as story editor at Columbia Pictures (1953-57), which he would later head at two separate times. As the head of Universal TV in the 1970's, he developed or supervised ...
- May 17, 1930
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Apr 14, 2021 · Frank Price, who serves as Chairman and CEO of Price Entertainment Inc., is retiring from his role as Chair of the USC School of Cinematic Arts Board of Councilors at the end of spring semester ...
- Matt Grobar
Apr 14, 2021 · Frank Price, who serves as Chairman and CEO of Price Entertainment Inc., is retiring from his role as Chair of the USC School of Cinematic Arts Board of Councilors at the end of spring semester ...
- Matt Grobar
Oct 21, 2015 · Price got a call from his pal McElwaine one day, and the latter studio chief was in a panic. He had green lit Big Trouble, a film that Andy Bergman had written and was set to direct.McElwaine had ...
Mar 29, 2022 · One person that manages to be forgotten about is Frank Price, who in 1983 was Columbia’s chairman, and chose to take a 30 million dollar gamble on the Bill Murray-led comedy. Given Reitman’s previous history with Columbia (which produced Stripes), the director pitched the idea to Price with a one-sentence pitch, “Ghost janitors in New ...