Jerry Weintraub | |
---|---|
Weintraub in 2012.
|
|
Born |
Jerome Charles Weintraub September 26, 1937 Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Died | July 6, 2015 Santa Barbara, California, U.S. |
(aged 77)
Cause of death | Heart attack |
Occupation | Film producer, talent agent, concert promoter, actor |
Years active | 1974–2015 |
Spouse(s) | Jane Morgan (m. 1965–2015) |
Partner(s) | Susie Ekins (1995–2015; his death) |
Children | 4 |
Jerome Charles "Jerry" Weintraub (September 26, 1937 – July 6, 2015) was an American film producer, talent agent and actor whose television films won him three Emmys.
He began his career as a talent agent, having managed relatively unknown singer John Denver in 1970, developing Denver's success through concerts, television specials and film roles, including Oh, God! (1977). Weintraub has been credited with making "show business history" by being the first to organize and manage large arena concert tours for singers. Among the other performers whose tours he managed were Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, The Four Seasons, Neil Diamond, Bob Dylan, and Led Zeppelin, The Carpenters.
Following his years as a concert promoter, he began producing films. Among them were director Robert Altman's Nashville (1975), Barry Levinson's Diner (1982), the original version of The Karate Kid (1984) and its 2010 remake, as well as the remake of Ocean's Eleven (2001), and its two sequels. Later, Weintraub was executive producer of HBO's series The Brink and HBO's Behind the Candelabra in 2013, which won an Emmy. In 2014, he won another Emmy as co-producer of Years of Living Dangerously, a television documentary about global warming. In 2011, HBO broadcast a television documentary about Weintraub's life, called His Way.