Robert Halmi Sr. dies; produced âNeverland,â âDinotopia,â 200 TV projects
- Share via
New York â Prolific TV producer Robert Halmi Sr., has died.
Halmi died Wednesday in his New York City home at 90, said spokesman Russ Patrick.
The Hungarian-born Halmi found success as a magazine photographer after arriving in America in 1951, shooting pictures for such publications as Life and Sports Illustrated.
But in a mid-career switch in the mid-1960s, he turned to moving pictures. During the next half-century he produced more than 200 programs and miniseries for television.
His specialty was family-friendly entertainment, with TV projects including âThe Josephine Baker Story,â the Bette Midler-starring âGypsy,â âMerlin,â âDinotopiaâ and âThe Lion in Winterâ with Glenn Close.
Other projects included TV versions of âThe Odyssey,â âAlice in Wonderland,â âGulliverâs Travelsâ starring Ted Danson, and âIn Cold Bloodâ with Anthony Edwards and Eric Roberts.
Often teaming on his films with his son, Robert Halmi Jr., he claimed every project was a passion project, including the 1994 miniseries version of âScarlett,â Alexandra Ripleyâs sequel to âGone With the Wind,â which he defended as not a rip-off of the worldâs most beloved movie, but âan eight-hour study in American history.â
Still active well into the new millennium, he produced the TV miniseries âNeverlandâ in 2011, and a year later a new version of âTreasure Island,â starring Donald Sutherland and Elijah Wood.
âTodayâs producers are just money people who have X number of dollars, and with them they buy people, mostly on the phone,â Halmi told the Associated Press in 1993. âIâm somebody with pretty good taste who goes one step further. With the creative process, everything has to be nurtured. I know on every project, every day, where it stands dollars-and-cents-wise, but I also know did someone have a cold.â
His projects were honored with 136 Emmy Awards. A Peabody Award citation hailed him as âperhaps the last of the great network television impresarios.â
Halmi recently had begun filming âOlympus,â a mythological series for the Syfy channel.
âThere are two English words which I never could understand or cope with ever since I came to this country,â he told the AP. âOne is âsecurity.â The other is âretirement.â â
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.