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1-3 of 3
- Producer
- Director
Zeberiah Newman was born on 16 December 1980 in Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. He is a producer and director, known for Unexpected, Right to Try (2021) and Relighting Candles: The Tim Sullivan Story (2023).- Producer
- Writer
- Actor
Dick Randall was a jolly and colorful film producer who specialized in blithely trashy low-budget exploitation pictures. Randall was born as Irving Reuben on March 3, 1926, in the Catskill Mountains, New York. He started his show-business career as a writer: he penned gags for Milton Berle and contributed to various 1950s television quiz shows. Randall initially got into films as a distributor, then began producing his own features. Dick made a slew of movies all over the world in such diverse genres as mondo documentaries (Mondo Inferno (1964) The Wild Wild World of Jayne Mansfield (1968)), low-rent horror (Kong Island (1968), The Mad Butcher (1971), Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks (1974), Crocodile (1979)), giallo murder mystery thrillers (The Girl in Room 2A (1974), The French Sex Murders (1972)), martial-arts action (Snake Fist Fighter (1973), Zui she xiao zi (1980), Challenge of the Tiger (1980)), secret agent action thrillers (Death Dimension (1978), Y'ur Height Only (1981)), soft-core sleaze (Le journal érotique d'une Thaïlandaise (1980), The Daughter of Emanuelle (1975), The Erotic Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1976)) and slasher schlock (Pieces (1982), Don't Open Till Christmas (1984), Slaughter High (1986)). Moreover, Randall also either wrote the story or co-wrote the scripts for several of his films and occasionally appeared in quirky small roles. He was married to singer Corliss Randall, who appeared in a few of his pictures and worked behind the scenes on several of them as well. His last film was the twisted horror black comedy Living Doll (1990). Dick Randall died from a stroke at age 70 on May 14, 1996, in London, England.- Additional Crew
- Producer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Aaron Sadovsky grew up in the Catskill Mountains of New York, and spent his childhood working with his family's horses at Monticello Raceway. Aaron moved to New York City in 1980 and graduated from Martin Van Buren H.S. in Queens. After attending college and graduating from the Connecticut School of Broadcasting, he began his show business career as a morning drive announcer on radio station WPCN-960 in Pennsylvania, He conducted interviews of athletes and politicians: Sugar Ray Leonard, Mike Schmidt, PA Governor Bob Casey, U.S. Senator John Heinz and others.
A chance to work on the Ozzy Ozbourne "Metal Madness" Pay-Per-View drove Aaron from radio to multi-camera television and film production. He worked on several episodic TV series: "The Equalizer (final season)", "Law and Order (1st season)","H.E.L.P. (only season)", "The Cosby Mysteries", and many movies: "Black Rain", "Ghost", "29th Street", "Frankie and Johnnie","Home Alone 2", "The Cowboy Way", and "The Last Action Hero". His first Assistant Director assignment was on the 1990 film "Songs For Drella" about Andy Warhol starring Lou Reed. He has gone on to serve as Assistant Director for several films including "Vendetta - Secrets of a Mafia Bride" starring Carol Alt, "Season of the Hunted" (the worst film ever made), "Taylor Made" with Erik Estrada, and "National Lampoon's Pledge This" starring Paris Hilton.
Aaron has worked on numerous multi-camera music specials including "The New Kids On The Block", "Bob Dylan's 30th Anniversary Concert", "Tony Bennett Live By Request", and "Verve Records at 50". He has produced music TV programs including the 1992 season of ABC-TV's weekly series "In Concert", as well as segments for "Woodstock 1994", "John Mellencamp Ain't That America", "Bruce Hornsby and Friends", "Woodstock 1999" and the mini-series "The History of Rock and Roll". Aaron has appeared as an actor in several plays, TV segments, and movies including Paul Bernard's "Loose Women" with Charlie Sheen, "Pot Luck", "Fallen" and the Korean TV soap opera "Beautiful Vacation".
A first chance as Director came in 1992 on "The Halloween Jam at Universal Studios" when he got to direct Ozzy Ozbourne in a re-creation of the shower murder scene in "Psycho". Later that year he Directed Emerson Lake and Palmer's "Affairs of the Heart" music video and went on to produce several music videos in Jamaica with Mike Malloy including The Mystic Revealers' "Religion", The Mighty Diamonds'"What Goes Bad in the Morning" and Yellowman's "Have Mercy". Aaron has Directed many host segments, voice-overs, and promos for television music specials and has Directed interview segments with James Brown, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam, Vanessa Williams, Michael McDonald, Bob Weir, and Les Paul. In 2003, Aaron was Creative Director for the very funny cable start-up "Jokevision".
Aaron Sadovsky is a Member of The Directors Guild of America and The Screen Actors Guild.