In November 1982,
20th Century Fox acquired rights to document the
1984 Olympic Games, paying the
International Olympic Committee $1 million in royalties for “exclusive film, cable, videocassette, disc and other exploitation rights.” Fox then held a luncheon in February 1983 for 56 Olympic gold medallists, where they announced that
Bud Greenspan had been hired to produce and direct the documentary, assigned a budget of $3 million, with his wife Cappy Petrash Greenspan serving as a writer and associate producer. Although the couple intended to immediately start interviewing athletes training for the games, Cappy died of cancer less than four months later on June 3, 1983; the documentary was dedicated to her memory. By July 1984, apparently fearing that the budget would balloon over the allotted $3.5 million, Fox had transferred rights to the project to Greenspan and
Milt Okun, each of whom reportedly funded $2.7 million out of their own pockets, with Greenspan deferring director's fees; the amount spent was revealed to be $1 million for film rights and an additional $4 million in production costs. Athletes were interviewed in eleven countries, and 150 technicians shot over 200 hours of footage spanning over a million feet of film using 18 cameras at the Olympic Games’ 21 Los Angeles area venues. ==Releases==