Seymour Nebenzal | |
Birth Date: | 1899 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Death Place: | Munich, West Germany |
Occupation: | Film producer |
Yearsactive: | 1927–1961 |
Seymour Nebenzal (22 July 1899 - 23 September 1961) was an American-born Jewish-German film producer.[1] [2] He produced 46 films between 1927 and 1961.
He got into film production through his father Heinrich Nebenzahl (1870–1938), who, in the early 1920s, worked with German action star Harry Piel.
In 1926, Heinrich Nebenzahl and director-producer Richard Oswald founded the company Nero-Film. As head of this company Seymour Nebenzal became one of the most important producers of the transition period from silent to sound film in Germany. He worked with the directors Georg Wilhelm Pabst, Arthur Ripley, Douglas Sirk, Harold S. Bucquet, Edgar G. Ulmer, Léonide Moguy, Paul Czinner and Fritz Lang among others. In 1933, he was forced into exile, fleeing the Nazis.[3]
In Paris he produced films by other exiles from Germany such as his cousin Robert Siodmak and Max Ophüls as well as Anatole Litvak, Fedor Ozep, and Raymond Bernard.
In 1939, he went on to Hollywood where he became one of the first independent producers. He made films with Edgar G. Ulmer, Douglas Sirk, Léonide Moguy, Arthur Ripley, and Albert S. Rogell. He produced remakes of his successes from the early 1930s: Siren of Atlantis with Maria Montez and M (1951), that was directed by Joseph Losey.[4]
In October 1946, he paid $150,000 for the world rights to Madame Butterfly.[5] He signed Jean-Pierre Aumont to a three-film contract following Atlantis.[6] He had screen rights to Look Homeward, Angel but the film was not made.[7] Maria Montez successfully sued Seymour for unpaid salary for Atlantis.[8]
Seymour Nebenzal died of a heart attack at his Munich home.[3]
Harold Nebenzal (born 31 March 1922, Berlin - died 14 February 2019 in Los Angeles), associate producer of M (1951), was his son. Harold became a script writer (The Wilby Conspiracy), film producer (Cabaret, Gabriela) and novelist (Cafe Berlin). Harold, husband of actress Rita Corday, was in charge of foreign film production for many years for MGM, and also worked on many of the films of Billy Wilder including Fedora. Seymour Nebenzal had, many years earlier, made possible Wilder's first film, People on Sunday, by borrowing the needed funds to make the picture from his own father, Heinrich Nebenzahl, the first Nebenzal film producer.