James Paris (1921 – 26 May 1982), born Dimitris Paraschakis, was a Greek film producer. Born in 1921 in the village of Vatoussa, Lesvos, he studied at the Agricultural School of Thessaloniki and the Agricultural Institute of the University of Beirut in Lebanon. In 1948 he emigrated to America and during his first years in the US he studied at the 20th Century Fox Film School, obtained American citizenship and became director of the advertising department of United Artists (1948-1952). After working as a production manager on 20th Century Fox films, he returned to Greece in the late 1950s, giving a new lease of life to film productions. In about a decade, he produced 54 Greek films, many of which were distinguished at the Thessaloniki Film Festival (5 Best Film Awards) and were box office successes. His first film was The Company of Miracles (1963) directed by Stefanos Stratigos. James Parris, the producer thanks to whom the concept of "overproduction" became known in the Greek cinema, died in 1982 at the age of 61.
Production
23
Male
Unknown
Batousa, Lesvos
Τζαίημς Πάρις, Τζέιμς Πάρις
1821 at the Cinema
The Brightest Star
Armida, the Tragedy of a Wife
At the Battle of Crete
The Wild Pussycat
The Deserter
Dangerous Cargo
Serenity
The 201 Canaries
Company of Miracles
Lesbian August
Persecution
Antigone
The last of the Komitadjis
I Blame My Body
Papaflessas
Hippocrates And Democracy
Ο 13ος
Mikaela, The Sweet Temptation
For a Handful of Tourist ladies
Αγώνας χωρίς τέλος