
Production
Born July 7, 1927 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Martin Ransohoff (born November 30, 1926) is a cinema and television producer, and member of the Ransohoff family. He graduated from Colgate University in 1949 and is on a list of Distinguished Alumni. He founded the film production company Filmways, Inc. in 1960 and remained with the company until 1972. Filmways started making TV commercials, moved into documentaries then sitcoms; by 1963 Filmways were making $13 million a year. In 1972 he became an independent producer. He attempted to "create" female movie stars during the 1960s; the actresses who achieved the greatest success under his tutelage were Ann-Margret, Tuesday Weld and Sharon Tate, who featured in several of his films from 1964 until her death in 1969. He is a cousin of neurosurgeonJoseph Ransohoff. The Beverly Hillbillies brought Ransohoff his first success in 1962 and thereafter he turned his attention to films. Ransohoff went on to produce such films as American Pop.

Sharon Tate: Murdered Innocence
Self

Turbulence

Guilty as Sin

Welcome Home

Physical Evidence

Switching Channels

The Big Town

Jagged Edge

Class

Hanky Panky

American Pop

A Change of Seasons

The Wanderers

Nightwing

Silver Streak

The White Dawn

Save the Tiger

Fuzz

See No Evil

10 Rillington Place

The Moonshine War

Catch-22

Hamlet

Castle Keep

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Ice Station Zebra

Our Mother's House

Don't Make Waves

Eye of the Devil

All Eyes on Sharon Tate
Self

The Cincinnati Kid

The Loved One

The Sandpiper

The Big Sur
Self

The Americanization of Emily

The Wheeler Dealers

Boys' Night Out