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Steven Allan Spielberg KBE (born on December 18,
1946 in Cincinnati, Ohio but raised in the suburbs of Haddonfield, New Jersey
and Scottsdale, Arizona), is an American film director and producer whose films
range from science fiction to historical drama to horror. He is noted in recent
years for his willingness to tackle emotionally powerful issues, such as the
horrors of the Holocaust in Schindler's List, the inhumanity of slavery
in Amistad, and the hardships of war in Saving Private Ryan. One
consistent theme in his work is a childlike, even naïve, sense of wonderment and
faith, as attested by works such as Close Encounters of the Third Kind,
E.T., Hook and A.I..
The director, the man
Spielberg is the most financially successful
motion picture director of all time. He has directed and/or produced an
astounding number of feature films that have become enormous box-office hits,
and this has given him enormous influence in Hollywood. As of 2004, he has been
listed in Premiere and other magazines as the most "powerful" and
influential figure in the motion picture industry. He is seen as a figure who
has the influence, financial resources, and acceptance of Hollywood studio
authorities to make any movie he wants to make, be it a mainstream
action-adventure movie (Jurassic Park) or a three-hour-long black and
white drama about a controversial historical subject (Schindler's List).
His beginnings
Spielberg is known by film historians as one
of the famous "movie brats" of the 1970s: along with fellow filmmakers (and
personal friends) George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, John
Milius, and Brian De Palma, Spielberg grew up making movies. He was making
amateur 8mm "adventure" movies with his friends as a teenager (scenes from these
amateur films have been included on the DVD edition of Saving Private Ryan),
and he made his first short film for theatrical release, Amblin', in 1968
at the age of twenty one. (Spielberg's own production company, Amblin
Entertainment, was named after this short film.) His maiden directorial work was
a segment of the pilot film to Rod Serling's Night Gallery. While working
on this segment its star Joan Crawford collared a production executive and said,
"Keep an eye on this kid, he's going places." After directing episodes of
various TV shows, including some early Columbo TV movies, Spielberg
directed his first well-known feature with a 1971 TV "movie-of-the-week"
entitled Duel (later released to theatres overseas and eventually in the
U.S.). This film, about a truck mysteriously terrorizing an average citizen, has
become a cult classic, having been released on video several times over the
years.
Move to theatrical films
Spielberg's debut theatrical feature film,
The Sugarland Express (takes place and filmed on location in Sugar Land,
Texas and is about a husband and wife attempting to escape the law), won him
critical praise and enough studio backing to be chosen as the director of a
summer movie that would secure him a place in the history of motion pictures.
Jaws, a horror film based on the Peter Benchley novel about a killer shark
that attacks people off the coast of a small island. Jaws won four
Academy Awards (for editing and sound), and grossed over USD$100 million at the
box office, setting the domestic record for box office gross.
In 1976, Spielberg was asked by Alexander
Salkind to direct Superman, but decided instead to expand on a pet
project he had had in mind since his youth: a film about UFOs, which became
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977). The film remains a cult sci-fi
classic among its fans.
The success Spielberg was beginning to enjoy,
as well as his eventual tendency to make films with wide mainstream and
commercial appeal, also subjected him to disdain in critical circles by film
reviewers. For example, Spielberg's next film was 1941, a big-budgeted
World War II comedy farce set in L.A. days after the attack on Pearl Harbor,
with the two top stars from Saturday Night Live, Dan Aykroyd and John
Belushi, along with other all-stars. Although the film did make a small profit,
it is considered by some to be Spielberg's first flop, although today it is also
considered a cult classic. An expanded version has been shown on network
television and later on Laserdisc and DVD.
Spielberg at his pinnacle
Indiana Jones
But what some would consider Spielberg's
greatest film work was still to come, beginning in the 1980s. In 1981, Spielberg
teamed up for the first time with his friend George Lucas to make Raiders of
the Lost Ark, his homage to the cliff-hanger serials of the Golden Age of
Hollywood, with Harrison Ford (whom Lucas directed in Star Wars) as the
dashing hero Indiana Jones. Raiders itself spawned two sequels, also
directed by Spielberg and executive produced by Lucas.
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
One year later, Spielberg returned to his
alien visitors motif with E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, a Disney-inspired
story of a boy and the alien whom he befriends (and is trying to get back "home"
to outer space). E.T. went on to become the top-grossing film of all time
for many years.
When E.T. was released, Steven
Spielberg, a Porsche 928 aficionado, had his car's moon-roof button re-designed
with the movie's logo as both a gag for passengers, and a tribute to the movie's
success. Despite their enormous appeal, few film scholars and critics place such
Spielberg films as Raiders or E.T. in the same class as The
Godfather, Citizen Kane, or many other classics of the cinema.
The Color Purple
In 1985, Spielberg made The Color Purple,
an adaptation of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Many critics were
unsure of whether or not Spielberg could handle such serious material, as his
output to that point had been viewed as "lighter" entertainment. The film was
released to great acclaim and proved Spielberg's ability as a serious, dramatic
filmmaker. It received 11 Academy Award nominations in 1986, but Spielberg was
snubbed in the Best Director category, which sent shockwaves through Hollywood.
However, Spielberg was awarded the Directors Guild Award for his work on the
film.
Although nominated throughout his career for
an Academy Award, the gold statuette had long eluded Spielberg, although in 1986
he was awarded The Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award for his work as a creative
producer up to that point.
Hook & Jurassic Park
Spielberg had tried numerous times to film a
live-action version of Peter Pan without success. He eventually decided
to create his own take on the Pan legend in 1991. Hook focused on a
middle-aged Pan (played by Robin Williams), who returns to Neverland to face the
title character (Captain Hook, played by Dustin Hoffman). However, by the time
the film began shooting, innumerable rewrites and creative changes made by the
numerous major Hollywood players attached to project over the process of its
creation resulted in a film regarded by most critics as hit-and-miss at best.
The over-budget film was not a box-office success.
In 1993, Spielberg decided to once again
tackle the adventure genre, as he directed the movie version of Michael
Crichton's novel Jurassic Park, about killer dinosaurs rampaging through
a tropical island resort. The adaptation muted somewhat the novel's message
about the consequences of mankind tampering with nature, instead focusing on the
adventure aspects of the story. With the aid of revolutionary special effects
provided by friend George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic, the film became an
instant classic. It would eventually overtake E.T. as the all-time top
grossing film-- a position it held for several years (until James Cameron's
Titanic).
Schindler's List & Saving Private
Ryan
It was in that same year that Jurassic Park
was released that Spielberg finally won the critical acclaim he had long sought
for making Schindler's List (based on the true story of Oskar Schindler,
a man who sacrificed everything to save 1,100 people from the wrath of the
Holocaust). That film earned him his first regular Academy Award for Best
Director (it also won Best Picture).
Another of Spielberg's most critically
acclaimed films, the World War II drama Saving Private Ryan, was released
in 1998. Spielberg considered it one of his finest works, yet in a highly
publicized "showdown", it lost the Best Picture Oscar at the 1999 Academy Awards
to Shakespeare in Love; Spielberg would still win his second Academy
Award for his direction in the war epic.
Into a new century
2001-2004
In 2001, Spielberg filmed fellow director and
friend Stanley Kubrick's final project, A.I.: Artificial Intelligence, a
project planned by the two directors for many years but which Kubrick was unable
to finish during his lifetime. The futuristic story of a humanoid android
longing for love, A.I. featured groundbreaking visual effects, but
unfortunately was not the blockbuster film Spielberg had hoped for. The film
polarized both critics and audiences, some stating that the film was overly long
and pretentious, while others believed it to be Spielberg's masterpiece.
In recent years, Spielberg has consolidated
his popularity with more mainstream fare such as Minority Report (2002),
starring Tom Cruise as a futuristic cop on the run from his own fate; and
Catch Me If You Can (also in 2002), a bittersweet comedy about a con-man
(with Leonardo di Caprio and Tom Hanks). Spielberg used Hanks again in 2004 for
The Terminal, the story of an East European traveller who has to live in
a terminal at JFK International Airport.
War of the Worlds
Spielberg's latest released film, a modernized
adaptation of War of the Worlds, featuring Tom Cruise, was released in
the U.S. on June 29, 2005. As with past Spielberg films, Industrial Light and
Magic (ILM) provided the special effects.
In his films E.T. and Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, Spielberg portrayed alien visitors as
potentially friendly for human beings willing to connect with them. War of
the Worlds marked a departure from those optimistic themes; more violent
alien invaders visiting havoc on the earth.
Upcoming projects
On the same day as the release of War of
the Worlds, Spielberg began shooting Munich, a film about the events
following the Munich Massacre. The film, formerly known as Vengeance, is
written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner and screenwriter
Charles Randolph. The movie is said to be an examination of the murder of eleven
Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, followed by the event's aftermath
in which Israel's intelligence agency hunted down and killed each of the
perpetrators. The project is predicted to be extremely controversial due to the
sensitivity of the Israel-Palestine conflict, and may be upsetting to the Jewish
American community, which has generally respected Spielberg's work in the past.
Because of the controversial nature of his subject, Spielberg has consulted a
wide range of authorities to avoid the threat of causing possible agitation and
further violence in the Middle East. New York Times columnist David Halbfinger
notes: "Mr. Spielberg has sought counsel from advisers ranging from his own
rabbi to the former American diplomat Dennis Ross, who in turn has alerted
Israeli government officials to the film's thrust. Mr. Spielberg has also shown
the script to Mr. Ross's old boss, former President Bill Clinton. Mr. Clinton's
aides said Mr. Spielberg reached out to him first more than a year ago and again
as recently as Tuesday. Mr. Spielberg is also being advised by Mike McCurry, Mr.
Clinton's White House spokesman, and Allan Mayer, a Hollywood spokesman who
specializes in crisis communications." The Internet Movie Database categorizes
the film as "In Production," and is therefore subject to change and could even
be dropped completely.
He is also serving as the executive producer
of Memoirs of a Geisha, an adaptation of the best-selling novel by Arthur
Golden, a film he was previously attached to as director. Spielberg is also an
executive producer on the critically acclaimed 2005 TV miniseries Into the
West.
In 2005, Empire magazine created a list
of the 50 greatest film directors of all time. Spielberg was number one on the
list.
Currently, he has won two Academy Awards for
Best Director, one for Schindler's List and another for Saving Private
Ryan.
Films by Spielberg
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1941 (film)
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A.I. (film)
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Always (film)
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Amistad (1997 film)
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Catch Me If You Can
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Close Encounters of the Third Kind
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The Color Purple
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Duel (movie)
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E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
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Empire of the Sun
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Hook (movie)
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Indiana Jones 4
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Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
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Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
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Jaws (film)
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Jurassic Park
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The Lost World: Jurassic Park
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Minority Report (film)
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Munich (film)
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Poltergeist movie series
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Raiders of the Lost Ark
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Saving Private Ryan
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Schindler's List
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The Terminal
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The Sugarland Express
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War of the Worlds (2005 film)
Salaries
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Schindler's List (1993) $0 (Asked not
to be paid)
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Jurassic Park (1993) $250,000,000
(gross and profit participations)
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Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
$1,500,000 + % of gross
Side projects
Spielberg has produced (without directing) a
considerable number of films, and can be credited with launching the career of
Robert Zemeckis. He is also a lover of animated cartoons, and has produced
several hit cartoons (and a few flops), including Tiny Toon Adventures,
Animaniacs, and Freakazoid.
He was also, for a short time, the executive
producer of the long-running medical drama ER which currently airs on NBC.
He is one of the co-founders of DreamWorks
Pictures (DreamWorks SKG, with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen providing the
other letters in the company name), which has released all of his movies since
Amistad in 1997.
Following the critical and box office success
of Schindler's List in 1993, Spielberg founded and continues to finance
the Shoah Project, a non-profit organization with the goal of providing
an archive for the filmed testimony of as many survivors of the Holocaust as
possible, so that their stories will not be lost in the future.
Personal
Spielberg is married to actress Kate Capshaw,
whom he cast in Indiana Jones and the Temple Of Doom. He has seven
children—four biological: Max Spielberg (from his former marriage to actress Amy
Irving), Sasha, Sawyer, and Destry Spielberg (from his current marriage to
Capshaw); two adopted (Theo and Mikaela Spielberg); and one stepdaughter
(Jessica Capshaw).
Trivia
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While the films that Steven Spielberg
directed have won numerous awards, no actor or actress has won an Academy Award
for a performance for one of his films.
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Spielberg had a cameo role as the Cook County
assessor in the last minutes of the 1980 film The Blues Brothers.
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In 1982 Ben Kingsley won Best Actor and
Richard Attenborough won Best Director for the film Gandhi, which beat
Steven Spielberg's film E.T. for Best Picture. Eleven years later, in
1993, Steven Spielberg cast Richard Attenborough as the grandfather in
Jurassic Park (his first performance in 13 years) and Ben Kingsley in
Schindler's List. Steven Spielberg won Best Director and Best Picture Oscars
that year.
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Spielberg, an Eagle Scout, designed the
requirements for the Boy Scout Cinematography merit badge.
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While attending college, Spielberg was a
member of Theta Chi fraternity. Fraternity rumour states that many of his films
have very low key signs referring to the ritual of the fraternity.
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The asteroid 25930 Spielberg is named in his
honour.
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Supports the Democratic Party of United
States.
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Attended Arcadia High School in Scottsdale,
AZ and graduated from Saratoga High School in California.
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On attending Saratoga High School, he said
that it was the "worst experience" of his life and "hell on Earth".
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In 2002 Spielberg was awarded a B.A. in Film
Production and Electronic Arts with an option in Film/Video Production from
California State University, Long Beach. He first enrolled at Long Beach State
in 1965.
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Applied to, and was rejected by, the
University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television three separate
times. The prominent school later awarded Spielberg an honorary degree in 1994.
Two years later, Spielberg became a Trustee of the University and has since
tirelessly devoted himself to supporting USC, despite its many snubbings.
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The A&E Network is expected to announce that
it will produce a two-hour drama about the relationship between filmmakers
George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. According to Daily Variety, the
biopic, tentatively titled Celluloid Titans, is being executive produced
by Jody Brockway.
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For his work on the Survivors of the Shoah
Visual History Foundation since 1994, he was awarded with the Great Cross of
Merit with Star, the German version of the Great Officer's Cross, in
September 1998 for "a very noticeable contribution to the issue of the
Holocaust".
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Spielberg is expected to make a cameo
appearance within an episode of the second season of Extras, the BBC comedy TV
series written and directed by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant (previously
responsible for The Office).
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Steven Spielberg is recreated as a LEGO mini
figure in the LEGO Studios series of sets.
Urban legends
Spielberg started a fanciful story of how he
broke into Hollywood by sneakily squatting in an unoccupied office on the
Universal Studios lot. In fact, he had an unpaid summer job on the lot. |