Maurice Ostrer

Maurice Ostrer (1896-1975) was a British film executive. He was best known for overseeing the Gainsborough melodramas. He was head of production at Gainsborough Studios from 1943-46. He resigned from the studio in 1946 after a disagreement with J. Arthur Rank who had taken over the studio.[1]

He left the film industry and went to work in textiles.[2]

According to writer Robert Murphy, "Maurice’s subsequent disappearance from the film industry... makes it easy to dismiss him as a dilettante whose success owed more to luck than judgement. The break-up of the partnership with [producer Ted] Black was unfortunate and Gainsborough became severely debilitated in terms of acting, writing and directing talent. But of the ten films Maurice Ostrer was directly responsible for, seven were big box-office successes and his vision of an efficiently run studio dedicated to medium budget entertainment films with the emphasis on a particular genre was unique and it was to provide a model for Hammer a decade later."[3]

Select Credits

As Head of Production at Gainsborough

Executive Producer

gollark: No, that would probably be hard to support and I don't really like them.
gollark: I think msgpack is technically superior, but potatOS doesn't actually ship code for it right now.
gollark: It supports a msgpack-based encoding instead, but none of the clients except the JS-based test one actually use that.
gollark: You can actually use the older v1 protocol (there are no v2 and v3, it's complicated) really easily with wscat or something. There's just no interesting traffic mostly.
gollark: In PotatOS? Nope, the client code is all there, the server doesn't dynamically send extra ones.

References

  1. MR. M. OSTRER RESIGNS: "Difference with the Rank Organisation" The Manchester Guardian (1901-1959) [Manchester (UK)] 30 Apr 1946: 6.
  2. New chairmen on top, U.K. textile industry on bottom The Irish Times (1921-Current File) [Dublin, Ireland] 22 Dec 1975: 14.
  3. Murphy p 17

Notes

  • Murphy, Robert (1997). "Gainsborough's producers". In Pam Cook (ed.). Gainsborough Pictures. Cassell.
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