Yehuda Talit
Yehuda Talit (Hebrew: יהודה טלית, born on 2 December 1944) is an Israeli businessman, record producer and talent agent.
Biography
Childhood, teenage years and early career stages
Talit was born in Tel Aviv where he studied at Balfour Elementary School and later at the Agricultural High School at Mikve Israel. He first stepped into the business world with the production, promotion and selling of key chains with celebrity portraits imprinted on them, which were very popular during the 60’s.
A producer and an agent
In 1966 Talit met Haim Saban who was a member of “The Lions” band. Talit offered Saban to sell key chains with The Lions’ portraits, a move which was their first business partnership. The two of them went on and established a company that represented The Lions and other known Israeli performers of that time like Arik Einstein and The Churchils.[1]
In 1977 Talit founded “Talit Productions”. During the 1980s the company produced large concerts and brought international artists to Israel such as Bob Dylan, Tracy Chapman, Dire Straits, Sting, Leonard Cohen, Billy Joel, Boy George, Bryan Adams, Joe Cocker, Julio Iglesias, Duran Duran, David Bowie, The Eurythmics and many others. The company also initiated a line of Opera productions, Musicals, theater shows and sport events. The most prominent of them were The Bolshoy Theater, 42nd Street, Walt Disney’s World on Ice and the Harlem Globetrotters.
Among other things Talit was also responsible for the Night of Love performance which was held in Tzemach, on the banks of the Sea of Galilee, The Magician, a musical based on The Wizard of Oz, which ran since 1994 and had more than 600 shows. During the past few years, Talit has been responsible in a joint production with the Beit Lesin Theater in Israel, for the hit one man show starring Avi Kushnir, Returning the Cave Man.
At the same time, the company has represented many artists and Israeli performers from Kaveret and Shalom Hanoch to Avi Kushnir and Danny Sanderson. Some of them still represented by the agency until this day.
The TV business
In 1997 Talit expanded his company when he got into the television business and founded “Talit Communications”, which later became “Talit Productions” founder. At the same time, he joined a business partnership with Ron Isaac and founded "Iguana Productions". In 1998, a year later, Talit added the broadcast rights for FTV. In 1999, together with Tamira Yardeni and Haim Slotzki, he founded “Synergy Communications”, which went on to win the rights to operate the Israeli Satellite Channel of YTV. Talit also started a co partnership with EM.TV, the German content giant, which brought to the Israeli television children’s classics like Maya the Bee, The Muppet Show, Marco, Pinocchio, Niles Holgerson and Pippee Long stocking.
Although Talit sold half of the Talit group to the same German Company a few years later he bought back all of it from EM. TV.
In 2000 Talit created yet another partnership with Jim Hanson’s production company and reserved the Israeli rights for The Muppet Show. A year later, Talit went into sports with his Group Channel that broadcast the games of Maccabi Haifa and Manchester United.
In 2003 Talit got the rights of representation for the French channel, TV5, and established the baby channel, Baby TV. In 2007 Fox Broadcasting Company purchased 50% of the ownership of the baby channel from the European firm holding the rights to the channel. Two years later Talit received the broadcast rights for the National Geographic Channel in Israel.[2] Today “Talit Communications” owns and represents 20 channels broadcast in Israel.
Family life
Talit lives in Herzliya with his wife Batia who’s also his business partner. He has three children: Liran, the director of the Baby Channel who is currently residing in London, Liat and Elinor who work at “Talit Communications” in Israel.
References
- ↑ יאיר מנדלסון (2011-06-23). "מהפחון בבת ים לווילה בהוליווד TheMarker". Themarker.com. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
- ↑ "ערוצי נשיונל ג'אוגרפיק ייוצגו בישראל ע"י טלית תקשורת". B.walla.co.il. Retrieved 2011-09-14.