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  1. James B. Harris (born August 3, 1928) is an American film screenwriter, producer, and director. Born in New York City, he attended the Juilliard School [1] before entering the film industry. He worked with film director Stanley Kubrick as a producer on The Killing (1956), Paths of Glory (1957), and Lolita (1962).

  2. In 1992, Jet published “James Cleveland Infected L.A. Youth with HIV, $9 Mil. Lawsuit Claims,” which detailed how the Chicago‐born gospel musician had not only allegedly sexually abused his foster son, Christopher B. Harris, but had also “[given] him the AIDS virus.”

    • GLQ
    • English (US)
    • 29
    • 115-143
  3. Nov 13, 2017 · Harris (as subject) and Feeney (as director) are currently in-production on a feature-length documentary titled Harris Kubrick: Genius Takes Two, about the shared life of friendship and collaboration between the two men who together made three enduring films.

  4. The son of a businessman and a Broadway producer. Was one the first people to recognize the talent of then-unknown Stanley Kubrick. Harris liked his film Killer's Kiss (1955) and immediately formed Harris-Kubrick Pictures partnership with him, which produced three critically praised films: The Killing (1956), Paths of Glory (1957) and Lolita ...

    • August 3, 1928
  5. But Hooks was great—his son went on to become a director, he directed Passenger 57 with Wesley Snipes. Oh, Kevin Hooks? Yeah! And his sister, Maxine Weldon, is a terrific jazz singer. Quite the family. So we had a terrific cast. Hooks and Weldon were terrific, and Tim McIntire, too.

  6. Apr 3, 2015 · The Kubrick producer and director of Some Call It Loving and Cop talks about lessons learned, Timothy Carey, self-deception, and Richard Pryor.

  7. James B. Harris uniquely kept the spirit of pulp alive at the dawn of Tarantino’s PoMo Pulp Fiction, in no small part because he knew the genuine article firsthand.

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