Barry Spikings (born 23 November 1939) is a British film producer who worked in Hollywood. Spikings is best known as a producer of the 1978 film, The Deer Hunter, which won five Academy Awards.
Biography
Spikings was born in Boston, Lincolnshire. After leaving Boston Grammar School he joined the local newspaper, the Lincolnshire Standard, as a trainee reporter. Later he joined the Farmers' Weekly, where he won a Golden Ear award for a fifteen-minute film that he produced and directed himself.[1]
Spikings then moved to the entertainment world. Initially, he promoted pop music festivals and later films.
In 1985, Spikings formed a Canadian company, Nelson Holdings International, with British financier Richard Northcott, to purchase entertainment firms. Nelson later acquired the home video assets of Embassy Pictures from Coca-Cola and film production companies Galactic Films and the Spikings Corporation, and formed Nelson Entertainment.[4][5] Nelson had the North American home video rights and all international rights to the output from the newly-formed Castle Rock Entertainment. [6]
Spikings served as president of Nelson Entertainment through the early 1990s.
Afterwards, he formed a production partnership with Eric Pleskow.[7]
^feb 24 20 years ago THE producer of an Oscar-winning film went from rural news reporter to movie tycoon in 12 years but, as MONICA PORTER recalls, few at the glittering premiere in 1979 had heard of him Porter, Monica. Daily Mail24 Feb 1999: 64.