About: Albert S. Ruddy   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/lesbJXEoE7wctI3mVQtOKA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Ruddy also won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 2005 for the film Million Dollar Baby, which was produced by him and directed by Clint Eastwood.

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  • Albert S. Ruddy
rdfs:comment
  • Ruddy also won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 2005 for the film Million Dollar Baby, which was produced by him and directed by Clint Eastwood.
  • Albert S. Ruddy is a Canadian-born film and television producer. He was a co-creator of the television series "Hogan's Heroes" (CBS, 1965–1971), which was a critical success and ran for six seasons. In 1972, he produced The Godfather and won his first Oscar for Best Picture. In 1974, Ruddy produced The Longest Yard, which has been described as "the first successful modern sports movie".
  • Albert S. Ruddy (born March 28, 1930) is a Canadian-born filmmaker. Born in Montreal, but raised in New York, Ruddy attended Brooklyn Tech before earning a scholarship to study chemical engineering at City College of New York. After graduating from the School of Architecture at the University of California, he went back east to work in the construction industry.
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  • Montreal, Quebec, Canada
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Role
  • Producer
Name
  • Albert S. Ruddy
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  • 2(xsd:integer)
Caption
  • Ruddy at the 77th Academy Awards
First
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Birthdate
  • 1930-03-28(xsd:date)
Nominations
  • 2(xsd:integer)
Born
  • 1930-03-28(xsd:date)
  • Montreal, Quebec, Canada
abstract
  • Ruddy also won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 2005 for the film Million Dollar Baby, which was produced by him and directed by Clint Eastwood.
  • Albert S. Ruddy is a Canadian-born film and television producer. He was a co-creator of the television series "Hogan's Heroes" (CBS, 1965–1971), which was a critical success and ran for six seasons. In 1972, he produced The Godfather and won his first Oscar for Best Picture. In 1974, Ruddy produced The Longest Yard, which has been described as "the first successful modern sports movie".
  • Albert S. Ruddy (born March 28, 1930) is a Canadian-born filmmaker. Born in Montreal, but raised in New York, Ruddy attended Brooklyn Tech before earning a scholarship to study chemical engineering at City College of New York. After graduating from the School of Architecture at the University of California, he went back east to work in the construction industry. After working at Warner Brothers, thanks to a chance meeting with Jack Warner, Ruddy started working as a programmer trainee at the Rand Corporation. He returned to entertainment, becoming a television writer at Universal Studios, but left when he was hired by Marlon Brando, Sr., the father of the legendary actor, to produce the film, Wild Seed in 1965. After the film's completion, Ruddy helped create the 1960s television sitcom, Hogan's Heroes with Bernard Fein (CBS, 1965-1971). When the show ended six years later, he produced his second film, Making It, the story of a sexually triumphant high school student who had sex with the gerontophobic wife of his gym teacher. In 1972, Ruddy produced the first of The Godfather films and won the first of his two Oscars for best picture. After the success of the original Godfather film, Ruddy produced a string of films that, in most cases, either failed to make money, or were unliked by the critics, usually both. His next major film success was with Cannonball Run, although it was a poor film bogged down by pointless cameos and listless performances from the film's two main stars. After the dismal failures of two action flicks, Death Hunt and Megaforce, the later of which received a nomination for the Worst Picture of the year in 1983 from the Golden Raspberry Awards, he produced Cannonball Run 2, which mimicked its predecessor in artistic quality, thus receiving a total of eight Razzies nominations, including one for Worst Picture. After producing Speed Zone! and Miracle in the Wilderness, Ruddy was involved in the television action series, Walker, Texas Ranger, for which he was both co-creator and executive producer. After making Bad Girls, which was a failure in the box office, he produced a few more films and television movies, before producing, with Clint Eastwood as director, the critically acclaimed Million Dollar Baby. The film won the Oscar for Best Picture for 2004. The following year, he produced the box office hit, The Longest Yard, a remark of a similar film made in 1974. The latest film that he had produced was Cloud Nine.
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