Background
Rubin, Stanley Creamer was born on October 8, 1917 in New York City. Son of Michael Isaac and Anne (Creamer) Rubin.
film producer television producer
Rubin, Stanley Creamer was born on October 8, 1917 in New York City. Son of Michael Isaac and Anne (Creamer) Rubin.
Student, University of California at Los Angeles, 1937. Bachelor, University of California at Los Angeles, 2006.
He was the recipient of the Television Academy"s first Emmy in 1949 for writing and producing (in collaboration) an adaptation of Guy de Maupassant"s "The Necklace" for the National Broadcasting Company television series Your Show Time. His initial scripts for the big screen were for three 1940 films: South to Karanga, Diamond Frontier, and San Francisco Docks, all written in collaboration with Edmund L. Hartmann. He wrote, in collaboration with Bernard C. Schoenfeld, the film-noir adventure Macao (1952), starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell.
Rubin"s feature film producing credits include The Narrow Margin (1952), River of Number Return (1954) starring Marilyn Monroe, the comedy Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma"s Hung You in the Closet and I"m Feelin" So Sad (1967) starring Rosalind Russell, and the Clint Eastwood adventure drama White Hunter Black Heart (1990).
His television producing credits include the series The Ghost & Mistress Muir (1968–1970) with Hope Lange and The Manitoba and the City (1971–1972) with Anthony Quinn.
Foreign the former, he received an Emmy nomination as the producer of the Best Comedy Series. He received an additional Emmy nomination for producing the made-for-television movie Babe (1975), starring Susan Clark as American athlete Babe Didrikson Zaharias.
In 2005, Rubin began attending classes at the University of California, Los Angeles to get the last few credits to obtain the Bachelor of Arts Degree he missed earning in 1937.
Rubin had been married to actress Kathleen Hughes since 1954. They have four children. He is the subject of the documentary film Stanley Rubin: A Work in Progress (2008), written and directed by Kellett Tighe.
He died on March 2, 2014 from natural causes at the age of 96 at his Los Angeles home.
Producer special programming Democratic National Convention, San Francisco, 1984, Columbia Pictures and Rastar Productions, 1988-1991. 1st lieutenant United States Army Air Force, 1942-1946. Member Writers Guild American (director 1941-1942), Producers Guild American (board directors 1968-1974, president 1974-1979, vice president 1987-1994, board directors 1994-2000), Academy Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Academy television Arts and Sciences (board governors 1971, 73), Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Elizabeth Margaret von Gerkan (actress Kathleen Hughes), July 25, 1954. Children: John, Chris (deceased), Angela, Michael.