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  1. Sol C. Siegel was born on March 30, 1903, in Kalvarija, Lithuania. In the early 1930s, Siegel was sales manager of the Brunswick - Columbia record label. [1] In 1934, he began his Hollywood career by assisting his brother, Moe Siegel, with the merger of six small production studios into Republic Pictures.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0797012Sol C. Siegel - IMDb

    Sol C. Siegel. Producer. Production Manager. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Sol C. Siegel grew up on the East side of Manhattan. He arrived in Los Angeles in 1934 to begin a career as a producer that extended to 1968. Mr. Siegel was married to Ruth Siegel and is survived by three sons, Norman (b.1937), Richard (b.1938) and Andrew (b.1941).

    • Producer, Production Manager
    • March 30, 1903
    • Sol C. Siegel
    • December 29, 1982
  3. In October 1966 it was announced that Sol C. Siegel had signed a three-picture deal with Paramount Pictures, of which the first was to be an adaptation of No Way to Treat a Lady. In December Siegel hired John Gay to adapt the novel into a screenplay. (Jack Smight later said Goldman refused to do the screen adaptation claiming that a novelist ...

    • March 20, 1968
  4. It wasn't until 1956 that Sol. C Siegel purchased the rights to The Purple Cloud and The World, The Flesh and The Devil would finally be produced. With this film, Siegel held a strong ideal and hope that blending the issues of race and nuclear war would catalyze audiences to find some kind of resolution.

    • $1,659,000
  5. Dec 31, 1982 · Mr. Siegel became M-G-M's first independent producer in 1955 and from 1958-62 was vice president in charge of production. During his tenure, the studio produced ''How the West Was Won,'' one of ...

  6. Sol C. Siegel is known as an Producer, Associate Producer, and Executive Producer. Some of his work includes Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Monkey Business, High Society, A Letter to Three Wives, Panic in the Streets, I Was a Male War Bride, Some Came Running, and There's No Business Like Show Business.

  7. Sol C. Siegel (March 30, 1903 – December 29, 1982) was an American film producer. Two of the numerous films he produced, A Letter to Three Wives (1949) and Three Coins in the Fountain (1954), were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.

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