Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hillard Elkins, American talent manager and film producer (Alice's Restaurant, Richard Pryor: Live in Concert), died from a heart attack he was , 81

Hillard (Hilly) Elkins [1] was an American theatre and film producer died from a heart attack he was , 81.[2]

(October 18, 1929 – December 1, 2010)

Born in Brooklyn in New York City, Elkins attended Erasmus Halland Midwood High Schools and Brooklyn College.[3] At the age of eighteen he already had his degree and was studying law while working in the mail room at the William Morris Agency, quickly moving up the ranks to agent and then head of the theatrical department.[4] After serving in the Korean War by making training films in Manhattan, he returned to agency work, but in 1953[3] left to open his own management company, where he represented James Coburn, Robert Culp, Steve McQueen, Mel Brooks, Herbert Ross, Charles Strouse, and Lee Adams.

Elkins turned to Broadway theatre producing in 1962 with the Garson Kanin play Come on Strong. The following year, he saw former client Sammy Davis, Jr. performing at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London, and approached him about starring in a musical version of Clifford Odets' Golden Boy. When Davis expressed interest, Elkins lured Odets out of semi-retirement to write the book (revised by William Gibson when Odets died) and hired Strouse and Adams to compose the score. The 1964 Broadway production, directed by Arthur Penn, earned him Tony Award nominations for Best Musical and Best Producer of a Musical. Additional Broadway credits include Oh! Calcutta!, The Rothschilds, and Hedda Gabler and A Doll's House, the latter two with his then-wife Claire Bloom (they married in 1969 and divorced in 1972).
Elkin reunited with director Penn for his first film production, Alice's Restaurant (1969) with Arlo Guthrie. This was followed by the Golden Globe-nominated film A New Leaf (1971), screen adaptations of Oh! Calcutta! (1972) and A Doll's House (1973), and Richard Pryor: Live in Concert (1979).
For television, Elkins produced the documentaries Pippin: His Life and Times (1981), Sex, Censorship and the Silver Screen (1996), An Evening with Quentin Crisp (1999), and Steve McQueen: The Essence of Cool (2005).
Elins owned the screen rights to the Kurt Vonnegut novel Cat's Cradle, which currently is in development.
Elkins was the subject of a 1972 book, The Producer by Christopher Davis.[3]

 Additional awards and nominations
  • 1998 Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Special (In His Father's Shoes, winner)
  • 1997 CableACE Award for Best Children's Special, Age 7 and Older (In His Father's Shoes, nominee)
  • 1975 Tony Award for Best Play (Sizwe Banzi Is Dead, nominee)
  • 1975 Tony Award for Best Play (The Island, nominee)
  • 1975 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Foreign Play (Sizwe Banzi Is Dead, nominee)
  • 1975 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Foreign Play (The Island, nominee)
  • 1971 Tony Award for Best Musical (The Rothschilds, nominee)

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