- Coincidentally, his work includes the pilot episode of the TV series Combate (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 Terceira Guerra Mundial (1982); for Morrow, it was No Limite da Realidade (1983). Due to the connection, several fans and journalists referred to this incident as "The Combat Curse".
- He was killed early in the production of the TV film Terceira Guerra Mundial (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 O Iluminado (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.
- 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, O Crime É Homicídio (1963).
- Directed one Oscar nominated performance: Nick Adams in O Crime É Homicídio (1963).
- Attended the Yale School of Drama.
- 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.
- Younger brother of Russian actor Daniil Sagal.
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