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Gerald W. Abrams has produced over 70 films. He is best known for Houdini (2014), Nuremberg (2000), and Family of Spies (1990). Houdini is Cable Television's top rated Miniseries of 2014. Abrams has been nominated for two Emmys, the most recent was for Nuremberg, a dramatized account of the war crime trials following the defeat of Nazi Germany in WWII. Nuremberg was a four-hour mini-series for Turner Network Television starring Alec Baldwin and Christopher Plummer and directed by Yves Simoneau. Premiered in July 2000, the film was one of the highest rated cable mini-series in history; it received three Golden Globe nominations, a PGA Award nomination and four Primetime Emmy nominations; it won the award for Outstanding Single Camera Sound Mixing for a Miniseries or a Movie and Brian Cox won for the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie for his performance. The film also won 4 Gemini Awards (Canada's equivalent of the Emmys) out of several nominations. Abrams graduated from Penn State University and began his television career with WCBS-TV as an account executive. He worked his way up through CBS Television national sales to head the West Coast Sales. Shortly thereafter, he was appointed general sales manager of KCBS-TV, the CBS-owned station in Los Angeles. In 1976, Abrams executive produced The Secret Life of John Chapman. The film starred Ralph Waite, Susan Anspach and Richard Arnold. It is the true story of John Chapman, a college president who took a sabbatical and went out and got a job as a general laborer, to try to experience life outside his well-ordered but insulated college environment. The Secret Life of John Chapman was produced for CBS and generated a 44 share. The Defection of Simas Kudirka was executive produced by Abrams in 1978. It is based on the true story of the attempted defection in 1970 by a Lithuanian seaman seeking political asylum in the United States. Kudirka was denied asylum and returned to the Soviets, charged with treason, and sentenced to ten years of hard labor. It was later discovered and verified that his mother had been born in Brooklyn and gone to Lithuania at a young age, which meant she was a U.S. citizen. As a result, Kudirka was declared a U.S. citizen and in 1974 released by the Soviets. The Defection of Simas Kudirka was nominated for five Emmys; David Lowell Rich won for Outstanding Directing in a Special Program, and John A. Martinelli won for Outstanding Film Editing for a Special. Abrams formed his own company, Cypress Point Productions, in 1978. Through Cypress Point, he executive produced Letters From Frank, starring Art Carney and introducing Michael J. Fox, The Gift, starring Glenn Ford and Julie Harris, Act Of Love, starring Ron Howard and Mickey Rourke, Berlin Tunnel 21, starring Richard Thomas and Horst Buchholz, Marian Rose White, starring Katherine Ross and Valerie Perrine, the CBS series Cutter To Houston, starring Alec Baldwin, Found Money, starring Dick Van Dyke and Sid Caesar, Scorned And Swindled, starring Tuesday Weld, Florence Nightingale, and the Emmy Award-winning A Woman Called Golda, starring Ingrid Bergman for Operation Primetime.[3] Flesh & Blood was executive produced by Abrams in 1979, starring Tom Berenger, Denzel Washington, and John Cassavetes. The film is about a convict that takes up boxing in prison, which brings a new meaning to his life. Once out, his trainer motivates him to become a professional boxer. He cares about only two other things, his uncomfortably close mother and absent father. Cassavetes was nominated for an Emmy as an Outstanding Supporting Actor. Berlin Tunnel 21 was executive produced by Abrams in 1981. The film starred Richard Thomas, Horst Buchholz, and José Ferrer. An American soldier and a German engineer join forces, in Berlin, 1961, to build a tunnel under the Berlin Wall in order to smuggle out refugees, including the soldier's East German girlfriend. Abrams formed Phoenix Entertainment Group with Gerald Isenberg in July 1985. In February 1989, Phoenix was acquired by The Hearst Corporation and renamed Hearst Entertainment Productions, where he served as the co-chairman for eight years. In 1996, Jennifer Alward, who was of Morgan Hill Films and Gerald W. Abrams formed Evolve Entertainment, folding Morgan Hill Films with them. They later part ways in 1999. Based on the best-selling novel by Pulitzer Prize winner Anna Quindlen, Abrams executive produced Black and Blue. The film was written and adapted by April Smith, and starred Mary Stuart Masterson and Anthony LaPaglia for CBS and debuted in 1999. The film is about Frances Benedetto, a victim of domestic violence. The movie follows Frances's relationship to her increasingly abusive NYCPD officer husband, who has the police force on his side, and her eventual escape to Florida with her son. In 2003, Abrams executive produced 44 Minutes: The North Hollywood Shoot-Out, the FX Network's highest-rated show in its nine-year history. In 2003, Abrams executive produced the Emmy-nominated television movie Out of the Ashes for Showtime, shot in Vilnius, Lithuania, starring Christine Lahti, and directed by Joseph Sargent. Based on a true story, the film follows the journey of Gisella Perl, a Hungarian-Jewish doctor who survived Auschwitz but was later accused of collusion with the Nazis while applying for U.S. citizenship. In March 2004, ABC aired The Mystery of Natalie Wood shot in Sydney, Australia, directed by Peter Bogdanovich, executive produced by Abrams and based on Suzanne Finstad's biography of Natalie Wood. Additionally, Abrams made See Arnold Run about the historic California recall election for A&E. In 2005, Abrams and Bud Greenspan produced Four Minutes for ESPN, written by legendary Sports Illustrated writer Frank Deford, and it starred Christopher Plummer, which chronicled Roger Bannister's feat of being the first to run the mile in under four minutes. Four Minutes was nominated for an Emmy and an ESPY award. Abrams also executive produced Daniel's Daughter starring Laura Leighton in 2008 and Fairfield Road starring Jesse Metcalfe in 2010 for the Hallmark Channel; both were written by his daughter, Tracy Rosen. In 2011 he executive produced The Pastor's Wife, starring Rose McGowan, for Lifetime Television and The National Tree, starring Andrew McCarthy, and Duke, starring Steven Weber, for the Hallmark Channel in 2009 and 2012 respectively. Gerald W. Abrams has executive produced over 70 films, most recently Love, Again, Christmas Shepherd, and Houdini, cable television's top-rated miniseries of 2014. Houdini, a two-part, four-hour miniseries for History was written by Academy Award-nominated Nicholas Meyer and directed by Uli Edel. It premiered on September 1, 2014, starring Adrien Brody as Harry Houdini and co-starring Kristen Connolly (House of Cards) and Evan Jones. The film tells the story of the legendary illusionist and escape artist who rose from poverty to worldwide fame and fortune. Love, Again is Abrams' next TV movie to debut. It was shot for the Hallmark channel in 2015 and stars Teri Polo. Abrams produced the four-hour miniseries, Monte Carlo, shot entirely on location in France, and was executive producer of A Father's Revenge, for ABC, which was filmed in Berlin, starring Brian Dennehy and Joanna Cassidy. He executive produced the two-hour movie for ABC and London Weekend Television, Jekyll & Hyde, starring Michael Caine and Cheryl Ladd, filmed on location in England, which was followed by Daughter Of Darkness, starring Anthony Perkins, which was filmed in Budapest, Hungary, for CBS. Second Honeymoon was produced with his late wife, Carol Abrams, and starred Roma Downey and Tim Matheson for CBS and was shot in Puerto Rico. Following the critical success of those films, Abrams executive produced the Hallmark Channel's A Christmas Visitor. In addition to his television credits, Abrams was also the executive producer of Hearts Of Fire, a theatrical film for Lorimar, starring Bob Dylan and Rupert Everett.