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  1. Hannah Weinstein

    Hannah Weinstein

    American television producer

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

    • American
    • Hannah Dorner, June 23, 1911, New York City, U.S.
    • Pete Weinstein (m. 1938-1955; divorced)
    • 3; including Paula
  2. Hannah Weinstein (1911–1984) was a pioneer in promoting diversity and social issues in filmmaking. She co-founded Third World Cinema, produced Claudine, Greased Lightning, and Stir Crazy, and was a liberal political leader and antiwar advocate.

  3. Mar 11, 1984 · Hannah Weinstein, a Hollywood film producer and a political activist, died of a heart attack Friday at her home on Park Avenue. She was 72 years old. Among the many feature and television films ...

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  5. Mar 29, 2024 · Activism was the family business: Her mother, Hannah Weinstein, was a journalist and speechwriter who in 1950 took her three young daughters to live in Paris and then London, fleeing the grim and ...

  6. Hannah Weinstein was a producer who worked on films like Stir Crazy and Claudine. She was also a leftist activist and a co-founder of Third World Cinema Corporation.

    • June 23, 1911
    • March 9, 1984
  7. Hannah Weinstein was a blacklisted writer who left the US in 1950 with her three young daughters and founded Sapphire Films in England, a company that went on to inaugurate the costume drama craze of the fifties before returning to the US in the 1960s and, with Ossie Davis, James Earl Jones, and Rita Moreno, founding Third World Cinema Corporation.

  8. Sep 21, 2023 · One of the things I found really interesting in Red Sapphire was reading about who Hannah Weinstein was before she went to Europe. Most people familiar with the history of the Truman era know the story of Henry Wallace’s 1946 anti-Containment speech at Madison Square Garden that got him fired as Secretary of Commerce.

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