Robert Halmi

Robert Halmi (Sr.) (Hungarian: Halmi Róbert; 1924–2014) was a Hungarian-born photographer for LIFE and other magazines. After 1974, with the decline in magazine photojournalism he became an Emmy Award-winning producer of movies and mini-series for television.[1]

Early life

Robert Halmi was born in Budapest on 22 January 1924. His father, Béla Halmi, was a photographer and brought up his son after he divorced while Robert was young. He had photographic commissions with the Habsburg royal family and the Vatican. Consequently, Robert was familiar with photographic processes from an early age.

Photographer

A freedom fighter for Hungary during the Second World War, Halmi was jailed by the Nazis. After the war, in 1946, he graduated in economics from the University of Budapest and, with his knowledge of English, got work assisting and translating for a Time-Life reporter in Budapest. He took up photography, freelancing for American newspapers, but this brought him under suspicion from the Communist government and was briefly jailed again. On release he worked for Radio Free Europe in Austria as a broadcaster.[2] There, he photographed black-shrouded women mourners, a picture later selected by Edward Steichen for MoMA's world-touring The Family of Man exhibition.

Halmi went to the United States in 1950, arriving in New York, and after establishing himself as a commercial photographer he approached LIFE and other magazines, including Sports Illustrated, and was commissioned for adventure and travel stories, often participating in the events he would document,[3] including an African road rally for a story “The Wildest Auto Ride on Earth”. For True magazine, he photographed Sam Snead and the Shah of Iran.

Film producer

After Life ceased weekly publication, Halmi made documentaries for television. From his experience covering a LIFE story on a 1962 visit with his 9-year-old stepson Kevin Gorman to a Masai tribe in Kenya, he conceived his first feature film, Visit to a Chief’s Son (1974), starring Richard Mulligan.

With his son Robert, Halmi started a production company, RHI Entertainment, (later Sonar Entertainment), in 1979 and adapted literary classics for television including The Odyssey (1997), Alice in Wonderland (1999), Moby Dick (1997) and Gulliver's Travels (1996).[4]

Still working at 90, he died on July 30, 2014 in Manhattan, survived by son Robert Jr., and his fifth wife, Caroline Gray; another son, Bill; his stepson, Kevin Gorman; a step-daughter, Kim Sampson; and two sisters, Julie Costello and Jorgie Lask.

Books written and/or illustrated by Robert Halmi

References

  1. Selznick, Barbara J (2008), Global television : co-producing culture, Temple University Press, ISBN 978-1-59213-503-5
  2. Halmi, Robert (2015), American dreamer : my story of survival, adventure, and success, Lyons Press Guilford, Connecticut, ISBN 978-1-4930-0908-4
  3. O'Shea, Paul (1957), A guide to competition driving, Sports Car Press, ISBN 978-0-87112-035-9
  4. Chapman, James (2015), Swashbucklers : the costume adventure series, Manchester Manchester University Press, p. 165, ISBN 978-0-7190-8881-0
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