|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Woody
Allen
|
BIOGRAPHY
|
Director, Writer, Screenwriter,
Actor, Producer, musician
|
|
Date
of Birth: |
December 1st, 1935
|
Sign: |
Sagittarius
|
Place
of Birth: |
Brooklyn, New
York, USA
|
Education: |
City College of New York
|
Agent: |
John Burnham
ICM
8942 Wilshire Blvd.
Beverly Hills CA 90211
310.550.4000
Fax: 310.550.4100
|
Manager: |
Stephen Tenenbaum
MBST Entertainment
345 N. Maple Drive
Suite 200
Beverly HIlls CA 90210
Phone: 310.385.1820
Fax: 310.295.1834
|
Publicist |
Leslee Dart
PMK/HBH New York
650 Fifth Ave.
33rd Floor
New York NY 10019
Phone: 212.582.1111
Fax: 212.582.6666
|
Personal
quote: |
I'm not afraid of dying...I just don't want to be there when it
happens.
|
|
|
|
Woody
Allen is one of the most well known and respected names in the movie industry. His
career of being a writer, director, actor and producer spans over 30
years and still thrives. His films have linked the boarders of drama
and comedy, while continually being entertaining and honest. A very
quiet man, Woody frequently declines the offer to make an appearance
to promote his upcoming films. Details to his films are also kept
relatively quiet, the trailers viewed in the theaters usually being
the only information the viewer will see before the movie is
released into the theaters. Although this is the case, most Woody
Allen films are well worth the wait, time and money.
Woody was born on December 1st, 1935 in Brooklyn New
York and was given the name Allen Stewart Konigsberg. Woody is the
son of Martin and Nettea Cherrie Konigsberg, both of whom were
Orthodox Jews. His father was continually changing jobs, from waiter
to cab driver and even became involved in organized crime for a time
being, while his mother was a book-keeper in a flower shop. With his
one sibling Letty, his sister, Woody was raised in the Flat bush
section of Brooklyn.
|
|
Even as a little child, before he could even read,
he was making up stories. |
|
The first film he ever saw was Disney’s Snow
White at the age of three, although his first real memories of
film were when his parents would take him to the movies around the
age of five. He lived in a lower-middle class section of Brooklyn
where he recalls being in walking distance of 25 or so movie
theaters. He was entranced by movies and spent endless hours at the
theaters, especially during the summers when there was no school. In
the winter he would spend his entire weekend at the theaters, taking
in pictures with such faces as James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart and the
Marx Brothers and loving every minute of it.
It was at the age of 7 or 8 while watching a movie
called The Black Swan, when it first occurred to Woody that
he could make a film, although at that time it was more of a passing
thought. What he really wanted to do was write, and even as a little
child, before he could read, he was making up stories. The only
subject in school that really interested him was English
Composition.
|
|
At the age of 15, he changed his name to Woody
Allen. |
|
Once in his teens, Woody began to grow more conscious
of directors and the roles that they played in the movie
industry. Specifically interested in foreign directors and
films, Woody and a group of friends from school became very
devoted to European Cinema. These films seemed more “grown
up,” and not only got them more interested in directors,
but in film history as well.
At the age of 15, he changed his name to Woody Allen,
and at 16 while still in school, Woody was hired to write
jokes for radio and television performers. In 1957 he joined
the cast of Sid Caesar.
From 1961-1964, Woody himself worked the cabaret
circuit as a stand-up comedian, writing his own material
along with a few short stories on the side. While performing
his routine in a club one night, Woody drew the attention of
a producer who later approached him and asked him to write a
film script. They hired him and in 1965 Woody wrote and
acted in his first film, What’s
New, Pussycat? After writing what he felt was a pretty
good script, the producers took it and rearranged it, making
it into a film that Woody was very unhappy with but could
not do anything about. Although he had no experience in
directing films, Woody vowed at that time that he would
never write another script unless he was the director of the
film.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|