Richard P.
Rubinstein
is an established and broadly diversified
producer of Feature Films, Event Miniseries, TV
movies and anthology formatted television
series. Mr. Rubinstein is also known for
his willingness to take a chance on directors, writers and actors early in their
careers.
In 1979, Mr.
Rubinstein took Laurel Entertainment, the
production company that he had founded with
director
George A. Romero, public. (NASDQ: LAUR) The
objective was to raise sufficient capital to
allow the company to internally finance
development in order to retain a higher degree
of creative control and financial participation
in the feature film and TV programming that the company created.
In 1984, Mr. Romero resigned from the company to
pursue his creative interests without public
company responsibilities. In 1988, with
respective shareholder approval, Mr. Rubinstein and
Aaron Spelling agreed to merge Laurel and
Spelling Television as subsidiaries of a new
American Stock Exchange listed company, The
Spelling Entertainment Group. Under Mr.
Rubinstein’s continued management as CEO, Laurel
became the NYC based East Coast development and
production arm of the new public company. As
part of the same merger, Spelling also acquired Worldvision, a television distributor with a
large library of programming.
In 1992, Spelling
and its subsidiaries, including Laurel, were
acquired by Blockbuster Entertainment and in
1994, Viacom acquired Blockbuster and Laurel
became an operating unit of Viacom. In 1995,
seeking a small-company working environment, Mr.
Rubinstein resigned from Laurel/Viacom and
founded another NYC based production
company,
New Amsterdam
Entertainment, Inc.
More recently
in 2008 New
Amsterdam announced that the company would
develop a new feature film version of Frank
Herbert's science fiction classic "Dune" for
Paramount Pictures with Mr. Rubinstein and Kevin Misher
attached to produce.
In 2004, New
Amsterdam provided the services of Mr.
Rubinstein as producer for a remake of the
Rubinstein produced 1979 horror film classic,
“George A. Romero’s Dawn
of the Dead”.
The
2004 “Dawn of the Dead”
remake was directed by first-time
feature director Zack Snyder and starred
Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames and
Mekhi Phifer. Distributed by Universal, the
remake has grossed in excess of
$110M
worldwide and was critically honored as an
“Official Selection”
of the
2004 Cannes Film
Festival.
Mr. Rubinstein's feature
film producer credits also include his 1989 production of
Stephen King’s “Pet
Sematary”
(Paramount), based on the novel and screenplay
by Stephen King, and directed by second-time
feature director Mary Lambert. The $10
million film earned $57 million in domestic box
office gross and earned over $120 million
worldwide. Other Stephen King based features produced
by Mr. Rubinstein include
“The Night Flier”
(New Line, 1998),
"Thinner"
(Paramount, 1997), and
“Creepshow”
(Warner Bros., 1982), with a cast that included Leslie
Nielsen, Hal Holbrook, E.G.
Marshall and Ted Danson (before he
went on to star in "Cheers"). In 1990, Mr. Rubinstein produced
"Tales from the Darkside:
The Movie" (Paramount) directed
by John Harrison in his first feature
film assignment. The ensemble cast
included Julianne Moore in her first
feature film appearance, Steve Buscemi,
Christian Slater and Debby Harry.
Mr. Rubinstein was a producer of
several other
George A. Romero
directed films including
“Martin”
(Libra Films, 1977) and
“Knightriders”
(United Artists, 1981), which starred
Ed Harris
in his first feature leading role.
Under the New Amsterdam
banner, Mr. Rubinstein’s Executive Producer
credits for television include the highly rated
and critically acclaimed miniseries
“Frank Herbert’s Dune”.
Produced in association with Disney the six-hour Emmy-award
winning miniseries premiered on the Sci Fi
Channel in December 2000 with first-time
miniseries writer/director John Harrison
choreographing an ensemble cast led by
William Hurt and photographed by three-time Academy Award
winning Cinematographer Vittorio Storaro.
Emmy-winning
“Frank Herbert’s Children
of Dune”
directed by Greg Yaitanes
and scripted by John Harrison followed soon after.
Adapted from the 2nd and 3rd
novels in Frank Herbert’s saga and produced in
association with Disney and Hallmark, the
six-hour tv event was the first high profile
major miniseries to be shot with “24P”
High Definition digital cameras. The mini
premiered in March 2003 on the Sci Fi Channel
with Susan
Sarandon
leading an ensemble cast which included the now
well known
James McAvoy.
("The Last King of Scotland" and "The Chronicles
of Narnia")
Mr. Rubinstein’s Executive
Producer credits for television include
Stephen King’s “The Stand”
(1994) an eight-hour miniseries for ABC (20.3
rating, 30 share) starring Gary Sinise
(before "Forest Gump" and "Apollo 13" best
supporting actor nominations) and
Stephen King’s “The
Langoliers”
(1995) a four-hour ABC miniseries starring
Patricia Wettig, Dean Stockwell, Bronson Pinchot
and David Morse (19.4
rating/30 share). Both miniseries were the
highest rated long form movies on any network in
their respective broadcast years.
“The Stand”
also garnered Mr. Rubinstein and Mr. King
nominations for Best Miniseries. Earlier in the 90's
Mr. Rubinstein Executive Produced
"Stephen King's Golden
Years,"
an eight-hour miniseries for CBS which
co-starred Felicity Huffman ("Desperate
Housewives") in her first
leading role on television.
Mr. Rubinstein Executive
Produced, (with Aaron Spelling
and David Brown), the hit CBS Miniseries
“A Season in Purgatory”
(1996), starring Patrick Dempsey and
Brian Dennehy based on the
Dominick Dunne
best seller;
“Kiss & Tell”
(1996), a two-hour movie for ABC starring
Cheryl Ladd;
and
“Precious Victims”
(1993), a two-hour CBS TV movie based on a true
crime novel.
Mr. Rubinstein
also Executive Produced (with
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)
“The Vernon Johns Story,”
a 1994 two-hour TV movie starring
James Earl Jones,
which received four
Monte Carlo TV Festival
Awards
and a
Christopher Award
for “A TV Program Affirming the Highest Values
of the Human Spirit.”
Rubinstein has also served as Executive
Producer on two very successful syndicated
anthology TV
series distributed by
Tribune Entertainment,
“Tales From The Darkside”
(90 episodes) and
“Monsters”
(72 episodes), with many well known
actors in the lead role including Jerry Orbach and Jerry
Stiller as well as then up-and-coming talent
like Chris Noth ("Law & Order"), Lisa Bonet and
Marcia Cross ("Desperate Housewives").
Born in
Brooklyn, NYC,
Mr. Rubinstein received his undergraduate BS. degree
from The American University in Washington, D.C.
and received his M.B.A. from Columbia
University in NYC. He began his film
career as a production assistant for a producer
of TV commercials, and he received his first credit as
Associate Producer of
“A Night with Nicol
Williamson,”
a made-for-pay-cable one-hour special produced
by Dore
Schary. In
1974, Rubinstein independently produced and
licensed to the ABC Network a one-hour special
profiling
O. J. Simpson
at the height of his football career. He then
produced
“The Winners,”
a syndicated TV series of twelve one-hour
biographical profiles of other well-known sports
heroes including
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
Mario Andretti, Reggie Jackson,
and Franco
Harris.
Mr. Rubinstein is
a member of the Producers Branch of the
Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences
and the Academy of Television Arts &
Sciences. He is also a Benefactor of the
Film Society of Lincoln Center,
a former twenty-year member of the National
Advisory Board of the Sundance Film
Festival and a member of the “Third
Decade Council” of the American Film
Institute. In addition, he served for
six years on the Board of Directors of the New
York founding chapter of
The
Independent Feature Project. Mr. Rubinstein is also on the Board of Directors
of
Chashama, a
non-profit, that matches up emerging artists in
need of studio and exhibition space with
commercial landlords who have short term
vacancies to donate. Mr. Rubinstein regularly
guest lectures about his experience in the
entertainment industry. He also developed
and co-taught a course in “Entrepreneurial
Producing” for two semesters at the
NYU/Stern
Graduate School of Business. In
September of 2007, Mr. Rubinstein became a
trustee of
"THE
TOWN HALL", one of
New York City's preeminent performance venues.