Peter Samuelson
Peter Samuelson | |
---|---|
Born | Peter Samuelson 16 October 1951[1] |
Occupation | Motion picture producer |
Years active | 1971-present |
Peter Samuelson is an American and British TV and film producer and educator, and founder of the Starlight Children's Foundation.[2]
Career
Peter Samuelson is a serial pro-social entrepreneur, and president of Film Associates, Inc[3] a media consultancy and production company. He is mainly a film and television producer, but has also been a production manager, senior corporate executive, and starred in The Return of the Pink Panther as the Clothing Thief. He was previously president of Spashlife, Inc[4] and Chairman of the Executive Committee of Panavision, Inc.[5] After serving as a production manager on films such as The Return of the Pink Panther, he emigrated from London to Los Angeles and produced Revenge of the Nerds, Tom & Viv, Wilde, Arlington Road and other films.[6]
Peter also served on the initial three-person advisory board for Jeff Skoll's Participant Productions.[7] He was the first managing director of the Media Institute for Social Change (MISC) at the University of Southern California.[8]
Social entrepreneurship
As a social entrepreneur, in 1982 Peter and his cousin, actress Emma Samms, were inspired by a boy battling an inoperable brain tumor, and started the Starlight Children's Foundation, building it into a charity that now provides psycho-social services to six million seriously ill children a year, in six countries.
In 1990, Peter brought together leaders including Steven Spielberg and General Norman Schwarzkopf to create the STARBRIGHT Foundation,[9] a charity dedicated to developing media and technology-based programs to educate and empower children to cope with the medical, emotional and social challenges of their illnesses. Five years later, they launched the interactive social network Starbright World that helps seriously ill children meet and develop relationships with peers through video, sound, text, and avatar based communication.[10]
In 1999, Samuelson founded First Star Inc,[11] a charity headquartered in Washington, D.C. that works to improve the public health safety and family life of America's abused and neglected children. First Star operates seven college prep Academies where high-school aged foster youth are educated and encouraged on college and university campuses. First Star Academies operate at UCLA, URI, UConn, GW in Washington DC, Loyola in Chicago, UCF in Florida and Rowan University in New Jersey First Star Academy Program
In 2004, Starlight and STARBRIGHT completed a formal merger and became the Starlight Starbright Children's Foundation, where Samuelson served for 7 years as the international chairman of the organization.[12]
In 2005, he founded Everyone Deserves A Roof (EDAR) to develop and distribute mobile, single-user structures which in the daytime serve as purpose-built recycling vehicles while at night time transform into tented bed enclosures.[13]
In 2014, Peter Samuelson founded ASPIRE, the Academy for Social Purpose in Responsible Entertainment www.aspirelab.org a national 501(c)(3) charity that teaches media for social change to undergraduate and graduate students across the university, regardless of their Major. ASPIRE’s new kind of digital literacy was first piloted at UCLA http://www.uei.ucla.edu/aspire.htm and is now expanding to other universities and colleges.
Background
Peter was born in London, England, and has a Master's degree in English Literature from the University of Cambridge.[14] He is the son of Sir Sydney Samuelson and has two brothers. He currently lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two children. He is the fourth of five generations employed in the film industry.[citation needed]
Projects
Samuelson has a career in the film industry that started in the early 1970s.[15]
Producer and Executive Producer
- Man in the Chair (2006) (Executive Producer)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_in_the_Chair
- The Last Time (2006) (Producer)
- Stormbreaker (2006) (Producer)
- aka Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker (USA)
- Things To Do Before You're 30 (2006) (Producer)
- Chromophobia (2005) (Executive Producer)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromophobia_(film)
- Need (2005) (Producer)
- The Libertine (2004) (Executive Producer)
- The Pact (2002) (TV) (Executive Producer)
http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/276074/The-Pact/overview
- The Gathering (2002) (Producer)
- Gabriel & Me (2001) (Producer)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel_%26_Me
- Guest House Paradiso (1999) (Executive Producer)
- Arlington Road (1999) (Producer)
- The Commissioner (1998) (Co-Producer)
- aka Der Commissioner – Im Zentrum der Macht (Germany)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Commissioner_(film)
- This Is The Sea (1997) (Executive Producer)
- Wilde (1997) (Producer)
- aka Oscar Wilde (Germany)
- Dog's Best Friend (1997) (TV) (Executive Producer)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog's_Best_Friend
- Tom & Viv (1994) (Producer)
- Playmaker (1994) (Producer)
- aka Private Teacher (Philippines)
- Turk 182! (1985) (Executive Producer)
- Revenge of the Nerds (1984) (Producer)
- A Man, a Woman and a Bank (1979) (Producer)
Production Manager
- Shoot the Sun Down (1981) (Associate Producer & Production Manager)
- High Velocity (1976) (Production Manager)
- The Return of the Pink Panther (1975) (Production Manager & uncredited acting part of the Clothing thief)
- One by One (1975) (Production Manager)
- aka Quick and the Dead (USA)
- Le Mans (1971) (Assistant Production Manager)
References
- ^ "Peter Samuelson". IMDB. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
- ^ Our History | Starlight Children's Foundation
- ^ Peter Samuelson
- ^ Splashlife, Inc.: Private Company Information - Businessweek
- ^ Peter Samuelson: Executive Profile & Biography - Businessweek
- ^ Peter Samuelson - IMDb
- ^ Participantproductions.com
- ^ Archived 2012-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Starbright World :: Home
- ^ Archived 1998-05-30 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Firststar.org
- ^ "Starbright Foundation", Business Week. Retrieved 3/21/09.
- ^ EDAR - Everyone Deserves a Roof
- ^ Groves, M. (10 December 2008) "Upgrading from a cardboard box for the homeless", LA Times. Retrieved 3/21/09.
- ^ Peter Samuelson, Variety. Retrieved 3/21/09.