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Brian
De Palma
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BIOGRAPHY
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Director,
Screenwriter, Producer
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Date
of Birth: |
September
11th, 1940
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Place
of Birth: |
Newark, New Jersey,
USA
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Sign: |
Virgo
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Education: |
Columbia University, New
York; Sarah Lawrence College, New York
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Agent: |
Creative
Artists Agency |
9830
Wilshire Blvd |
Beverly
Hills, CA 90212,
USA |
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Tel.:
(310) 288-4545 |
Fax.:
(310) 288-4800 |
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Business
Manager: |
Julie
Thomson |
Tel:
213-956-4270 |
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Personal
quote: |
The camera lies all the time; lies 24 times/second.
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Brian
De Palma, a controversial motion picture
icon known for such films as Carrie,
Dressed
to Kill, Raising Cain and most recently Mission
to Mars, has often been hailed as the
heir to Alfred Hitchcock’s reign as
“master of the macabre.”
With a career now spanning 5 decades
De Palma as a director, writer, editor,
producer, actor and cinematographer has been
involved in every movie form from low-budget
satire to high budget, action packed
block-busters.
Brian
Russell De Palma was born on September 11,
1940 in Newark New Jersey. He is the
youngest of three sons of Anthony Fredrick
De Palma and Vivenne (Muti) De Palma.
Although his heritage is Italian Roman
Catholic on both sides of the family, De
Palma was reared in the Protestant faith.
In
the mod 1940’s his family moved to
Philadelphia where his dad worked as an
orthopedic surgeon. As a teenager Brian
developed a fascination with his father’s
work, and often watched his father operate
on bones and amputate legs. During his
summer vacations he worked part-time in the
hospital laboratory, and often watched
colleagues of his father operate on other
body parts, including brain and eye
surgeries. These very images may have been
the stepping-stone that lead De Palma
towards the gory, bloody images you see in
many of his films.
One
of his biggest moments in high school was
when he won top prize in the regional
science fair, his project being “An Analog
Computer to Solve Differential Equations.”
He also entered the National Science fair
where he won second prize for his critical
study of hydrogen quantum mechanics through
cybernetics.
After graduating from Friends’
Central School (a small Quaker school
outside of Philadelphia), De Palma was accepted
into Columbia University to study physics.
There he realized what an impact drama had
on him, and he soon joined the Columbia
players, a student theatrical group.
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The
bases were Vietnam-era politics and the
stars were Jill Clayburgh and Robert De Niro,
both in their feature film debuts. |
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De
Palmas’ directorial career began when he
picked up a second hand 16mm camera and
started to film his fellow acting friends in
numerous short movies. One of these movies, Wotan’s
Wake (1962), won an award from the
Rosenthal Foundation as the best film by an
American under the age of twenty-five. It
also earned him a graduate fellowship at
Sarah Lawrence College, which he attended
from 1962-1964 (after graduation from
Columbia in 1962) and was voted the most
popular film at the Midwest Film Festival in
1963.
In
1964 De Palma obtained his M.A. degree from
Sarah Lawrence, then supported himself for a
time by making documentaries and promotional
films for businesses and cultural
institutions and for other organizations
such as the NAACP. Over the next 2 years, De
Palma wrote his first feature film The
Wedding Party. De Palma shot the film in
New York City in 1966 and it cost a mere
$43,000.
The
bases were Vietnam-era politics and the
stars were Jill Clayburgh and Robert De Niro,
both in their feature film debuts. Next De
Palma directed several independent
productions including such film as Murder
a la mod, Greetings and Hi, Mom.
Because the movie Greetings
did relatively well at the box office,
De Palmas next film Get
to know your Rabbit was his first chance
at being financed by a major movie studio.
Unfortunately the film was a box office
failure and the studio dropped De Palma.
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De
Palma admits to referring to Hitchcock films
in his movies |
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Returning
to independence as a filmmaker, De Palma
raised $500,000 to cover the production
costs for
Sisters. Released in the spring of 1973, this film became De
Palma’s first commercial success. This
film began a run of daring movie making for
De Palma and it was controversial. Several
themes became apparent in this film, which
today are considered trademarks of De Palma's
movies. It is agreed by many that the art of
split-screen imaging in this film mark some
of De Palmas most impressive work, while
numerous shocking events and structured
elements occurring throughout the film are
reminiscent of many Hitchcock films. De
Palma admits to referring to Hitchcock films
in his movies but is quick to add he is not
trying to be compared to Hitchcock for he
knows (at least at that point in his career)
he is nowhere near that level yet.
De
Palmas next film venture came only a year
later (1974) with the production of Phantom
of the Paradise. Inspired by Phantom of
the Opera, it tells the tragic story of a
composer of music turned rock palace
haunter. Several passages mark the film as
De Palma’s work including on stage
carnage, split-screen imaging and voyeurism.
De Palma first wrote Phantom in 1969 for
Marty Ransohoff to produce. Due to
production difficulties, De Palma bought the
film back and resold it to Ed Pressman who
ultimately produced the film after Sisters.
For
a long time, lack of interest in the
relationships between his characters was a
big weakness De Palma felt he had as a
director. Arguably his most underrated film,
Obsession was released 2 years later in 1976 to try and correct this
fault. The film did moderately well in the
box office and helped to build De Palmas
reputation as “the new master of
suspense.” The famous composer Bernard
Herrmann wrote the score (as he did other De
Palma films as well as numerous Hitchcock
films), and completed it just months before
his death. One of the biggest problems with
Obsession as a stand out De Palma film is
the fact that Carrie
was released the same year.
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