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Michael Klinger (producer)


Michael Klinger (1 November 1920 – 15 September 1989) After Tony Tenser, then a publicist became his business partner, the two men created the Compton cinema chain and distribution company and financed Repulsion (1965) and Cul-de-sac (1966) both directed by Roman Polanski. After their association ended, Klinger produced Get Carter (1971), starring Michael Caine, and Gold (1974), with Roger Moore in the lead, and was the executive producer of the 'Confessions' series of sex comedies with Robin Askwith.

Klinger was born in London, the son of a Polish-born tailor. During the Second World War, he worked for the British Government as an inventor. He devised a machine to test bombs without the need to detonate them, however because he was a government employee he earned no money for the invention except a six shilling pay increase.

After the War Klinger worked on the market in the East End of London, before being offered the opportunity to invest in a Soho cinema.

Klinger was initially the owner of a strip club, but began a business association with Tony Tenser in 1960 after they had met following a publicity stunt organised by Tenser at a cinema Klinger managed.

The two men opened a private members cinema, the Compton Club that year, apparently with John Trevelyan, then head of the British Board of Film Censors, as a founder member. A distribution firm Compton Cameo Films was established. Both enterprises were originally dedicated to imported exploitation films, but undertook its own films in the 'nudie' genre, though their first, Naked as Nature Intended (1961), directed by Harrison Marks and starring Pamela Green, was marketed as a documentary. For about eighteen months, Klinger and Tenser's company owned the Windmill Theatre, after its nude reviews had ended, and reverting the auditorium into its earlier use as a cinema, and using it as a setting for Secrets of a Windmill Girl (1966).


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