Kimberly Peirce | |
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Born | Kimberly Ane Peirce September 8, 1967 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Education | University of Chicago (BA) Columbia University (MFA) |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1994–present |
Spouse | Evren Savci (m. 2008) |
Kimberly Ane Peirce [2] (born September 8, 1967) is an American filmmaker, best known for her debut feature film, Boys Don't Cry (1999), which won Hilary Swank her first Academy Award for Best Actress. Peirce's second feature, Stop-Loss , was released by Paramount Pictures in 2008. Her third film Carrie was released on October 18, 2013. In addition to directing and writing, she is a governor of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences and a National Board member of the Directors Guild of America. [3] [4]
Peirce was born on September 8, 1967, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to Sherry and Robert A. Peirce (originally Materazzi), who owned a construction company. [2] When Peirce was three, she and her family moved to New York City, and at age eleven, they moved to Miami, Florida, where she eventually graduated from Miami Sunset Senior High School. [5]
While attending the University of Chicago, Peirce moved to Kobe, Japan for two years to work as a photographer and teach English. [6] She then moved to New York City to work as a photography intern for Time magazine under photojournalist Alfred Eisenstaedt. She returned to the University of Chicago to graduate with a degree in English and Japanese Literature. [7] Peirce then enrolled at Columbia University to pursue an MFA in film. [8] While at Columbia, Peirce completed an experimental short film called The Last Good Breath, where two star-crossed lovers are caught amidst a world war in which one lover always lives and the other always dies. The short screened as part of the Leopards of Tomorrow program at the Locarno International Film Festival. [9]
While at Columbia working on an idea for her thesis film about a female soldier in drag during the American Civil War, [10] Peirce read a Village Voice article [11] about the life and death of Brandon Teena, a transgender man from Nebraska who was brutally raped and murdered when his gender history was discovered. Switching from her original thesis project, Peirce traveled to Falls City, Nebraska, where she conducted research, interviewed a number of people from the town, including Lana Tisdale (Brandon's girlfriend) and Lana's mother, and attended the murder trial of the two homicide suspects. The subsequent short film she made for her thesis in 1995 was nominated by Columbia faculty for a Princess Grace Award, and received an Astrea Production Grant. [8]
After film producer Christine Vachon saw a version of the short, Vachon and Peirce began working on a feature film. In order to fund the writing and development of the feature, Peirce worked as a paralegal on the midnight shift, as a 35mm film projectionist and received a New York Foundation for the Arts grant. [12] With help from the Sundance Institute's Filmmakers, Writers and Producers Labs in 1997, Peirce completed the feature film in 1999. Peirce said, “To make a movie like Boys, I had to be classically trained in film, but I also had to be schooled in terms of gender and sexual identity.” [13]
Upon its release, Boys Don't Cry became one of the most acclaimed and talked about films of the year, opening at the Venice, Toronto and New York Film Festivals and earning many honors, including the Best Actress Oscar, Golden Globe, Independent Spirit award and many other awards for the film's star, Hilary Swank. Chloë Sevigny was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar, a Golden Globe and won the Independent Spirit Award, among many other awards for her role as Lana Tisdale.
The film received the International Critics prize for Best Film at both the London and Stockholm Film Festivals, the Satyajit Ray Foundation Award for Best First Feature at the London Film Festival, and was named "Best American Feature," by Janet Maslin. Peirce won honors as Best Debut Director from the National Board of Review and Best New Filmmaker from the Boston Society of Film Critics. [14] [15]
In 2005, inspired by the real-life stories of American soldiers, including her own brother, fighting in Iraq and coming home, Peirce began work on Stop-Loss . Peirce traveled the country interviewing soldiers about their experiences and worked with novelist and screenwriter Mark Richard to turn the research into a screenplay. [16]
Released in 2008, Stop-Loss received positive reviews from critics. Peirce was honored with the Hamilton Behind the Camera True-Grit Directing Award as well as the Andrew Sarris Directing Awards for the film. [17] [18] In association with the film, Peirce created a website called SoundOff and gave soldiers and their families cameras to record and share their stories and opinions. Shortly after the film's release, Peirce spoke before the National Press Club and members of Congress on behalf of Soldiers and the Stop-Loss Compensation Act, which financially compensated soldiers for multiple tours of duty served because of the stop-loss policy. [19] The measure subsequently passed. [20]
Much of the inspiration for her two films was said to come from her love of The Godfather : "It showed me that I can take that love of the gangster movie and I can screen it through a family drama. In both my movies family is really important, violence is really important. I'm really interested in the psychological and the authentic portrayal of violence—particularly violence that comes out of emotions. Before The Godfather, I don't know that you could have such a violent psychological film that was that broadly entertaining." [21]
Peirce directed a remake of the 1976 horror film Carrie , which was released on October 18, 2013. An adaptation of Stephen King's novel of the same name, it starred Chloë Grace Moretz in the lead role, with Julianne Moore and Ansel Elgort in supporting roles.
The film won the 2014 People's Choice Award for Favorite Horror Movie. [22] It grossed at $35,266,619 in the US and Canada and at $84,790,678 worldwide. [23]
Kimberly Peirce has directed episodes of John Ridley's American Crime, AMC's Halt and Catch Fire and Turn , WGN's Manhattan , Bill Broyle's A&E History Channel's Six , Joey Soloway's I Love Dick , Justin Simien's Dear White People,Starz' P-Valley, Game of Silence, Halt and Catch Fire, and Kidding.
On February 16, 2011, it was announced that Peirce would direct the crime thriller The Knife, [24] about two men from opposite sides of the law who must overcome their mistrust of one another and risk their lives in order to infiltrate the organization of a ruthless gang leader threatening to spread armed violence across Los Angeles and the urban centers of America. [25] Peirce was also in negotiations to direct and executive-produce The Enclave, a limited series for USA Network written by Andre Jacquemetton and Maria Jacquemetton ( Mad Men ). [26]
Peirce co-wrote the script for Silent Star, a murder mystery about the 1922 death of Hollywood director William Desmond Taylor and the scandals that nearly destroyed the film industry. However, the project stalled. [16]
Peirce is set to direct a new Amazon movie titled This is Jane. The storyline is about an activist in Chicago who is unsatisfied with the state of health services available in the US during the 1960s who forms a group that provides education and counseling for women seeking abortions. [27]
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources .(July 2021) |
Peirce is a founding member of ReFrame, an industry-wide effort to end discrimination against women and people of color in Hollywood as well as the head of the Diversity Committee for Directors for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She gave the 2014 Yale Transgender Week keynote, the 2015 Outfest keynote, and the 2016 AFI Keynotes, and spoke at the 2017 Women's March in Park City. She received the GLAAD Media, Lambda Legal Defense, People for the American Way, Lesbian Anti-Violence Project and the 2013 OUTFEST Career Achievement Awards. In 2018, she was honored with a Women in Film award for her activism.
Peirce is Jewish and genderqueer. [28] In 2008, she married Evren Savci, [1] who is a queer feminist and Assistant Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Yale University. [29]
Short film
Year | Title | Director | Writer |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | The Last Good Breath | Yes | Yes |
1995 | Boys Don't Cry | Yes | Yes |
Feature film
Year | Title | Director | Writer | Producer |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Boys Don't Cry | Yes | Yes | No |
2008 | Stop-Loss | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2013 | Carrie | Yes | No | No |
TBA | This Is Jane | Yes | No | No |
Television
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
2006 | The L Word | Episode "Lifeline" |
2015 | Turn: Washington's Spies | Episode "Valley Forge" |
Impact | TV movie | |
Manhattan | Episode "33" | |
2015–2016 | Halt and Catch Fire | Episodes "Play with Friends" and "One Way or Another" |
2016 | American Crime | 1 episode |
Game of Silence | Episode "The Uninvited" | |
2017 | I Love Dick | Episode "The Conceptual Fuck" |
2017–2018 | Six | Episodes "Tour of Duty", "Ghosts" and "Danger Close" |
2018–2019 | Dear White People | Episodes "V2: Chapter IV" and "Vol. 3: Chapter III" |
2020 | Kidding | Episodes "I'm Listening" and "I Wonder What Grass Tastes Like" |
P-Valley | Episode "Scars" |
Brandon Teena was an American transgender man who was raped and later, along with Phillip DeVine and Lisa Lambert, murdered in Humboldt, Nebraska, by John Lotter and Tom Nissen. His life and death were the subject of the films The Brandon Teena Story and Boys Don't Cry. Teena's murder, along with that of Matthew Shepard nearly five years later, led to increased lobbying for hate crime laws in the United States.
Chloë Stevens Sevigny is an American actress. Known for her work in independent films, often appearing in controversial or experimental features, Sevigny is the recipient of several accolades, including a Golden Globe Award, as well as a nomination for an Academy Award.
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Boys Don't Cry is a 1999 American biographical film directed by Kimberly Peirce, and co-written by Peirce and Andy Bienen. The film is a dramatization of the real-life story of Brandon Teena, an American trans man who attempts to find himself and love in Nebraska but falls victim to a brutal hate crime perpetrated by two male acquaintances. The film co-stars Chloë Sevigny as Brandon's girlfriend, Lana Tisdel.
The 71st National Board of Review Awards, honoring the best in filmmaking in 1999, were announced on 7 December 1999 and given on 18 January 2000.
The 65th New York Film Critics Circle Awards, honoring the best in film for 1999, were announced on 16 December 1999 and presented on 9 January 2000 by the New York Film Critics Circle.
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The 20th Boston Society of Film Critics Awards honored the best films of 1999. The awards were given on 12 December 1999.
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