Jennings Lang (May 28, 1915, New York City – May 29, 1996, Palm Desert, California) was an American film producer,[6] screenwriter, and actor.
The following spring, he set up an office as a talent agent, together with his future wife, Flora Pam.
[8] In 1940 Lang joined the Jaffe agency and within a few years became the company's president, and came to be known as one of Hollywood's leading agents.
[citation needed] He produced and executive-produced movies from 1969 to 1986; in the mid-1970s, Lang produced a series of major epics, including Airport 1975 and Earthquake; the latter picture used Sensurround to augment the onscreen action with sound waves that sent tremors throughout the theater.
[12][13] Although Mrs. Lang publicly supported her husband,[14] one reporter who had covered the original scandal, Will Fowler,[15] recalled: But the one person who was only fleetingly mentioned in the torrid front page affair, the one who publicly stated that she refused to believe her husband had been unfaithful, Mrs. Pam Lang, was driven into deep depression and a few months after the story quieted down, she died of a heart attack.