- He was killed early in the production of the TV film World War III (1982) in a helicopter accident in Oregon. He had just returned from filming aerial shots, his helicopter landing in the parking lot of the Timberline lodge on Mt. Hood (the exteriors location from The Shining (1980)). Preoccupied with his work, he inadvertently turned the wrong way upon getting out of the helicopter, walking directly into the rear rotor blade; he died of severe head and shoulder injuries after emergency surgery 60 miles away in Portland. Astonishingly, filming resumed the very next day with a new director.
- Coincidentally, his work includes the pilot episode of the TV series Combat (1962), which starred Vic Morrow. Two decades after collaborating, Sagal and Morrow would die similarly (struck by a helicopter's rotor blade) within a year of each other, while shooting a movie on location. For Sagal, it was World War III (1982); for Morrow, it was Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983). Due to the connection, several fans and journalists referred to this incident as "The Combat Curse".
- Having directed the pilot for Richard Chamberlain's hit series Dr. Kildare (1961), he was chosen to direct the actor in his first starring role in a movie, The Charge Is Murder (1963).
- Attended the Yale School of Drama.
- Directed one Oscar nominated performance: Nick Adams in The Charge Is Murder (1963).
- Younger brother of Russian actor Daniil Sagal.
- In 1955 he staged a production of the Maxwell Anderson play, "Lost in the Stars" at the Ebony Showcase Theatre, operated by Nick Stewart. Al Freeman Jr. and William Schallert also participated in the production.
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