Producer Gale Anne Hurd on Women in Film.
Film producer Gale Anne Hurd. She started out in Hollywood as an executive assistant to filmmaker Roger Corman, going on to become his co-producer. She then left to form her own production company, where she was executive producer of such films as "The Terminator," "Aliens," "The Abyss," and the current "Tremors."
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Other segments from the episode on February 8, 1990
The Implications of the End of the Cold War and the Fall of the Soviet Union.
Richard Barnet, co-founder of the Institute for Policy Studies. Barnet discusses the end of the Cold War and the implications for U.S. domestic and foreign policy. His new book is "The Rocket's Red Glare." (It's published by Simon and Schuster).
Country Music: The Last Refuge of the "Rocker."
Rock critic Ken Tucker reviews two new albums by rock groups who are doing country music, Southern Pacific's "County Line," and "Pages of Life" by the Desert Rose Band.
A Film Harmed, but not Ruined, by its Conventionality.
Film critic Stephen Schiff reviews "Men Don't Leave," starring Jessica Lange as a recently widowed mother trying to make it on her own.
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