Miramax Books

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Miramax_Books an entity of type: Thing

Miramax Books was an American publishing company started by Bob and Harvey Weinstein of Miramax Films to publish movie tie-ins. Between 2000 and 2005, while Jonathan Burnham was its president and editor-in-chief, the imprint published the memoirs of many major celebrities, including David Boies, Madeleine Albright, Rudy Giuliani, and Tim Russert, as well as Helen DeWitt's The Last Samurai. It later published the first three books of the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series before being folded into Hyperion Books in late 2007. rdf:langString
Miramax Books était une maison d'édition américaine qui fut créée par Bob et Harvey Weinstein, fondateurs de Miramax Films. Elle a été rachetée en 1993, avec l'ensemble de Miramax par la Walt Disney Company. En 2005, après le départ des frères Weinstein, le catalogue de cette maison d'édition a été rattaché à Hyperion. Le 29 juillet 2010, Disney annonce la vente de Miramax, filiales, catalogue de films et projets inclus, pour 660 millions de $ au groupe Filmyard Holdings comprenant , et Colony Capital. La transaction doit se finaliser après septembre 2010. rdf:langString
Miramax Books foi uma editora da Walt Disney Company. Em novembro de 1998, foi criada a Miramax / Talk Media Books, uma divisão da da Miramax, iniciando-se com a nomeação de seu presidente Jonathan Burnham e editor-chefe. A Miramax Books foi dissolvida nesta nova unidade. Burnham começaria em 7 de dezembro. A Miramax / Talk publicaria de 10 a 15 livros por ano, ficção e não-ficção, a partir de 2000. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Miramax Books
rdf:langString Miramax Books
rdf:langString Miramax Books
rdf:langString Miramax Books
rdf:langString Miramax Books
xsd:integer 9289085
xsd:integer 1123639579
xsd:integer 2005
xsd:integer 1979
rdf:langString Bob and Harvey Weinstein
rdf:langString New York City, New York, U.S.
rdf:langString Jonathan Burnham, Tina Brown, Harvey Weinstein
rdf:langString Paramount Global
rdf:langString The Walt Disney Company
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Defunct
rdf:langString Miramax Books était une maison d'édition américaine qui fut créée par Bob et Harvey Weinstein, fondateurs de Miramax Films. Elle a été rachetée en 1993, avec l'ensemble de Miramax par la Walt Disney Company. En 2005, après le départ des frères Weinstein, le catalogue de cette maison d'édition a été rattaché à Hyperion. Le 29 juillet 2010, Disney annonce la vente de Miramax, filiales, catalogue de films et projets inclus, pour 660 millions de $ au groupe Filmyard Holdings comprenant , et Colony Capital. La transaction doit se finaliser après septembre 2010. Les publications de Miramax Books étaient centrées sur le cinéma avec essentiellement des mémoires de célébrités tel que , Madeleine Albright, Rudolph Giuliani et Tim Russert. Les nouvelles publications des frères Weinstein sont publiés chez , maison d'édition dirigée par , l'ancien directeur de Miramax Books et filiale de The Weinstein Company.
rdf:langString Miramax Books was an American publishing company started by Bob and Harvey Weinstein of Miramax Films to publish movie tie-ins. Between 2000 and 2005, while Jonathan Burnham was its president and editor-in-chief, the imprint published the memoirs of many major celebrities, including David Boies, Madeleine Albright, Rudy Giuliani, and Tim Russert, as well as Helen DeWitt's The Last Samurai. It later published the first three books of the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series before being folded into Hyperion Books in late 2007. Burnham was appointed in December 1998, planning to publish 10 to 15 books a year, both fiction and non-fiction, starting in 2000. Between 2000 and 2002, it was a division of Miramax's Talk Media, known as Talk Miramax Books. Tina Brown, chair of Talk Media, recruited a number of high-profile authors for the imprint, such as historian Simon Schama and British novelist Martin Amis. Rudy Giuliani was paid $3 million in advance for his autobiography (prior to 9/11). By April 2002, Talk Miramax had published 30 books, five of which had made national bestseller lists. The unit generated $10 million in revenue in 2001 and was profitable. After Brown left Talk Media in 2002, it was again renamed to Miramax Books. In 2004, Miramax Books won the auction for Riordan's The Lightning Thief manuscript. When the Weinsteins broke from Disney in 2005, five years before Miramax Films went for sale by Disney, the book division was still partly owned by the Weinsteins. A joint operation agreement for the company was made ending on September 30, 2007. Weinstein Brothers brought in CEO Rob Weisbach, for Miramax Books while he also ran the Weinstein Books imprint at The Weinstein Company. Hyperion Books president Robert Miller, and Disney Publishing Worldwide president, Deborah Dugan, would be acquiring new books. Also, a financial stake in any books on the publication schedule from April 2005 to September 2007 would remain with the Weinsteins.
rdf:langString Miramax Books foi uma editora da Walt Disney Company. Em novembro de 1998, foi criada a Miramax / Talk Media Books, uma divisão da da Miramax, iniciando-se com a nomeação de seu presidente Jonathan Burnham e editor-chefe. A Miramax Books foi dissolvida nesta nova unidade. Burnham começaria em 7 de dezembro. A Miramax / Talk publicaria de 10 a 15 livros por ano, ficção e não-ficção, a partir de 2000. Tina Brown, presidente da Talk Media recrutou uma série de autores de alto perfil, o historiador britânico Martin Amis e Simon Schama para a impressão. O prefeito Rudolph W. Giuliani recebeu US $ 3 milhões adiantados por sua autobiografia antes do 11 de setembro. Em abril de 2002, a Talk Miramax Books publicou 30 livros, cinco dos quais fizeram listas nacionais de best-sellers. A unidade gerou US $ 10 milhões em receita em 2001 e foi rentável.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5364
xsd:gYear 1979

data from the linked data cloud