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Native New Yorker Bill Condon has been a film buff since childhood. After earning a degree in philosophy, he began contributing to such publications as American Film and Millimeter. In the early 1980s, he teamed with director Michael Laughlin as co-scenarist on a pair of cult thrillers, "Dead Kids/Strange Behavior" (1981), which focused on the mysterious murders of teenagers in a Midwestern town, and "Strange Invaders" (1983), a spoof of 50s sci-fi films that received generally positive notices....

Filmography

Sugarland - ( Screenplay / / Announced / )
Venus of the Delta - ( Director / / Announced / )
Shortcut to Happiness - ( Screenplay / 2007 / Released / )
Dreamgirls - ( Director / 2006 / Released / )
Dreamgirls - ( Screenplay(- Writer for the Screen) / 2006 / Released / )
Kinsey - ( Director / 2004 / Released / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment )
Kinsey - ( Screenplay / 2004 / Released / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment )
Chicago - ( Screenplay / 2002 / Released / )
Gods and Monsters - ( Director / 1998 / Released / Televix )
Gods and Monsters - ( Screenplay / 1998 / Released / Televix )
Apollo 13 - ( Special Thanks / 1995 / Released / )
Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh - ( Director / 1995 / Released / Svensk Filmindustri (SF) )
FX2 - The Deadly Art of Illusion - ( Screenplay / 1991 / Released / )
Sister, Sister - ( Director / 1988 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Sister, Sister - ( Screenplay / 1988 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Strange Invaders - ( Screenplay / 1983 / Released / Columbia-EMI-Warner )
Strange Behavior - ( Screenplay / 1981 / Released / Greater Union Distributors )
Strange Behavior - ( Associate Producer / 1981 / Released / Greater Union Distributors )
TV Credits
Dreamgirls: Divas Drama and Destiny ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
Behind the Movie ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
The Others ( 2000 / Released ): Director
The Man Who Wouldn't Die ( 1995 / Released ): Co-Executive Producer / Director
Deadly Relations ( 1993 / Released ): Director
Dead in the Water ( 1991 / Released ): Director
Murder 101 ( 1991 / Released ): Director / Screenplay
White Lie ( 1991 / Released ): Director
Full Biography (Back to top)

Native New Yorker Bill Condon has been a film buff since childhood. After earning a degree in philosophy, he began contributing to such publications as American Film and Millimeter. In the early 1980s, he teamed with director Michael Laughlin as co-scenarist on a pair of cult thrillers, "Dead Kids/Strange Behavior" (1981), which focused on the mysterious murders of teenagers in a Midwestern town, and "Strange Invaders" (1983), a spoof of 50s sci-fi films that received generally positive notices. Moving to the director's chair, Condon steered the atmospheric, "Sister, Sister" (1987), a Southern gothic tale about two siblings who have converted their family's Louisiana plantation into a bed-and-breakfast. While many critics carped over the story (deemed too derivative of Hitchcock's work), there was grudging admiration for the lead performances of Judith Ivey and Jennifer Jason Leigh.

As "Sister, Sister" was a critical and box-office disappointment, Condon retreated to cable TV, helming a trio of 1991 films for the USA Network. In interviews, the writer-director has stated "that's where I learned to make movies. You have to do them in 20 day, you have $2 1/2 million, including the money they spend on 'stars', so you don't have much money to make them. Other than that, they leave you alone. I worked in all these different genres and put together a team. I got to learn how to do it all." Indeed, "Murder 101" focused on a mystery author and college professor (Pierce Brosnan) who finds himself framed for a murder. "White Lie" was a provocative story about a contemporary political aide (Gregory Hines) who returns to the South and looks into the 1961 lynching of his father. "Dead in the Water" was a taut thriller featuring a murder plan than goes awry. Moving to network television, Condon helmed the based-on-fact "Deadly Relations" (ABC, 1993), about an abusive and controlling father, as well as the unsold pilot "The Man Who Wouldn't Die" (ABC, 1995) which teamed a crime writer (Roger Moore) with a psychic waitress (Nancy Allen) in the search for a master criminal (Malcolm McDowell).

Having served his apprenticeship, Condon returned to feature films first as one of the screenwriters on "FX2 - The Art of the Deadly Flesh" (1991) and later as director of the middling sequel "Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh" (1995). His previous work hardly prepared audiences and reviewers for what proved to be a triumph, "Gods and Monsters" (1998). In adapting "Father of Frankenstein" Christopher Bram's 1995 novel about the last days of British expatriate filmmaker James Whale, Condon fashioned a minor masterpiece, melding a gay theme with historical Hollywood and eliciting a towering central performance from Ian McKellen as the ailing director. Deliberately invoking Whale's style and making numerous inside references to the moviemaker's work, Condon brought wit and style to the material. This complicated, emotional story of, in the writer-director's words, "somebody in his decline, facing the loss of power ... and coming face to face with certain regrets and failures in his life" ranked as one of the year's best films and earned Condon a well-deserved Academy Award for his script.


Profession(s):
director, screenwriter, producer
Sometimes Credited As:
William Condon

Horizontal Line
Education
Regis High School New York, New York
Columbia College, Columbia University New York, New York BA philosophy
Awards (Back to top)
Golden Satellite Best Motion Picture Screenplay (Adaptation) "Gods and Monsters" 1998
Oscar Best Adapted Screenplay "Gods and Monsters" y 1998 1998

Milestones (Back to top)
2006 Wrote the screenplay for, and directed the film adaptation of "Dreamgirls," the acclaimed Broadway musical loosely based on the career of the musical group The Supremes; earned a nomination from the D
2004 Helmed "Kinsey" a look at the life of Alfred Kinsey (Liam Neeson), a pioneer in the area of human sexuality research, whose 1948 publication "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" was one of the first re
2002 Wrote screenplay adaptation of the stage musical "Chicago"; received nominations for both a Golden Globe and an Oscar for Best Screenplay (Adapted)
1998 Wrote and directed the superior "Gods and Monsters", a fictionalized meditation on the last days of expatriate British director James Whale; executive produced by Barker; received Oscar for Best Adapt
1995 Helmed the feature thriller sequel "Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh"; initial screen collaboration with Clive Barker
1993 Made network debut as director with the ABC drama "Deadly Relations"
1991 TV debut as director with first of three USA Network movies, "Murder 101"; also scripted
1988 Feature directorial debut, "Sister, Sister"; also co-wrote screenplay
1983 With Laughlin, co-wrote the sci-fi spoof "Strange Invaders"
1981 Screenwriting debut, co-wrote the thriller "Dead Kids/Strange Behavior" with director Michael Laughlin; billed as William Condon
Raised in NYC
Wrote for such publications as American Film and Millimeter


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