STEVEN SPIELBERG
G'day folks,
Welcome to some background notes on one of the most famous film makers. Steven Allan Spielberg KBE OMRI is an American filmmaker. He
is considered one of the founding pioneers of the New Hollywood era and one of
the most popular directors and producers in film history.
Academy Award-winning director, screenwriter and producer Steven
Spielberg's films include 'Jaws,' 'E.T.,' 'The Color Purple' and 'Schindler's
List,' among many others.
Who Is Steven Spielberg?
Born on December 18, 1946,
in Cincinnati, Ohio, Steven Spielberg was an amateur filmmaker as a child. He
went on to become the enormously successful and Academy Award-winning director
of such films as Schindler's List, The Color Purple, E.T.: The
Extra-Terrestrial, Saving Private Ryan, Catch Me If You Can, Lincoln and
Bridge of Spies. In 1994, he co-founded the studio Dreamworks SKG, which
was purchased by Paramount Pictures in 2005.
Early Career
Filmmaker, director and
producer Steven Allan Spielberg was born on December 18, 1946, in Cincinnati,
Ohio. An amateur filmmaker as a child, Spielberg moved several times growing up
and spent part of his youth in Arizona. He became one of the youngest
television directors for Universal in the late 1960s. A highly praised
television film, Duel (1972), brought him the opportunity to direct for
the cinema, and a long string of hits have made him the most commercially
successful director of all time.
Cinematic Highlights
Spielberg's films have
explored primeval fears, as in Jaws (1975), or expressed childlike
wonder at the marvels of this world and beyond, as in Close Encounters of
the Third Kind (1977) and E.T. (1982). He has also tackled literary
adaptations, such as The Color Purple (1985) and Empire of the Sun
(1987). And audiences around the world were riveted by the continuing
adventures of his daredevil hero Indiana Jones in such films as Raiders of
the Lost Ark (1981) and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).
Imaginative fantasy is dominant in Spielberg's Peter Pan-inspired Hook
(1991), while Jurassic Park (1993) and its sequel The Lost
World: Jurassic Park (1997) rely on traditional action and monster-horror
sequences.
Spielberg is also known for his impressive historical
films. The Holocaust drama Schindler's
List (1993), starring Liam
Neeson as a businessman who helps save Jewish citizens, won seven
Academy Awards, including Spielberg’s first win as best director. In 1998, he
revisited World War II, this time from the perspective of American soldiers in
Europe in Saving Private Ryan
(1998), which earned him another Academy Award for best director. His first
film company, Amblin Entertainment, which was founded in 1982, produced several
other successful movies, notably Back
to the Future (1985) and its two sequels, and Who Framed Roger Rabbit
(1988).
Dreamworks and Sci-Fi Adventures
In 1994 Spielberg formed a
new studio, Dreamworks SKG with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David
Geffen. (It was later bought by Paramount Pictures in 2005.) In 2001
he completed the science fiction outing AI: Artificial Intelligence,
a project begun by Stanley
Kubrick. Later films include another sci-fi adventure Minority
Report (2002) and the Academy Award-nominated Munich (2005). He also
served as producer for the Clint
Eastwood-directed WWII films Flags of Our Fathers (2006)
and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006).
Spielberg reunited with George
Lucas for the latest installment of the Indiana Jones saga in 2008.
Spielberg directed the film, which featured Harrison
Ford reprising his role as the famed adventurer in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull. Spielberg also helmed 2011's animated The Adventures of Tintin,
based on the popular comic series by Hergé. It was his film version of War Horse (2011), however,
that won him more critical acclaim. The movie received six Academy Award
nominations.
After taking on an adaptation of Roald Dahl's The BFG (2016), Spielberg again tapped Hanks for a leading role in The Post (2017), pairing him on screen with acclaimed actress Meryl Streep for the first time. The movie centers on the actions of The Washington Post publisher (Streep) and editor (Hanks) as they attempt to go public with the Pentagon Papers, a trove of government secrets, over the objections of President Richard Nixon's administration.
Spielberg was strongly drawn to the contemporary relevance of the story, which earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director and an Oscar nod for Best Picture. Along with delving into the issue of governmental cover-ups, The Post explores the treatment of women in the workplace. "I need a motivational purpose to make any movie," Spielberg said. "When I read the first draft of the script, this wasn't something that could wait three years or two years — this was a story I felt we needed to tell today."
Awards and Honors
Along with his three Oscar
wins, Spielberg has received many other honors. He received the Irving G.
Thalberg Memorial Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in
1986. In 2004, Spielberg received the Directors Guild of America Lifetime
Achievement Award and the French Legion of Honor in recognition of his work.
The following year, he was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.
In November 2015, the
iconic filmmaker was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's
highest civilian honor. Among his charitable efforts, after the February 2018
shooting at Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, he announced
he was donating $500,000 to the March for Our Lives protest.
Married twice, Steven
Spielberg has a son from his first marriage to actress Amy Irving. He has five
children and two stepchildren with current wife Kate
Capshaw.
Clancy's comment: We all have special gifts we are born with but many don't look hard enough to find them. Steven Spielberg obviously found his gifts.
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