Laura Conde Bickford (born September 30, 1968 in New York City, New York, USA) [1] is an Academy Award nominated and Emmy Award nominated film and television producer who produced Traffic , Che , Duplicity , Arbitrage , and Beasts of No Nation . She was nominated for an Academy Award and BAFTA Award for Best Picture for Traffic in 2001 and an Emmy Award for Citizen X in 1996. She has been a member of Producers Branch of The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences since 2002. She is a member of the Producers Guild of America and was on the board of the writers and human rights organization PEN USA in Los Angeles from 2012-2018 until their merger with PEN America and is a current member of PEN's LA committee. [2]
Bickford is a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College and began her career as a production assistant to Robert Altman in Paris on the 1987 film Beyond Therapy . Altman became a lifelong influence and friend. She consulted unaccredited on the financing for Altman's final film A Prairie Home Companion . After working with Altman, Bickford moved to London and went on to produce over fifty music videos, both in the US and in Europe for Vivid Productions. [3]
She produced her first feature Citizen X for HBO Pictures in 1996. The film was written and directed by Chris Gerolmo with Stephen Rea, Donald Sutherland, and Max von Sydow. Bickford was nominated for the Emmy and Golden Globe and won the Cable Ace Award for best film made for television.
Bickford optioned the film rights to the British television mini series about the heroin trade in the UK & Pakistan [4] and spent four years researching the war on drugs in the US, South America, and Mexico for a US adaptation. The film, Traffic, won four Academy Awards for Best Director for Steven Soderbergh, Best Supporting Actor for Benicio Del Toro, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Editing. [5] The film was nominated for over 300 awards internationally and Del Toro also won the BAFTA Award, Golden Globe Award and Screen Actors Guild Award.
In the two-part epic Che, Bickford again worked with Soderbergh and Del Toro. Del Toro and Bickford worked with Terrence Malick on the script for Part 2 [6] and spent years traveling around the world interviewing the last living members of the Cuban Revolution and researching the life of Che Guevara. The film was selected for competition at Cannes in 2008 and Del Toro won the Best Actor award.
Bickford produced El Yuma, directed by Del Toro and part of the omnibus 7 Days In Havana which was selected for Un Certain Regard at Cannes in 2012.
In 2012, she produced Arbitrage with Richard Gere which was the highest grossing day and date released film. [7] In 2015, Bickford and Fiona Druckenmiller backed Cary Fukunaga’s film Beasts of No Nation that sold to Netflix and became their first theatrically launched film [8]
Bickford is married to Stephen M. Graham who is a literature professor at Bard College, founder of New York Theater Workshop, [9] and the son of the late Katharine Graham, publisher of The Washington Post. [10] She was married to the actor Sam Bottoms, [11] who died in 2008. She is the sister of Emily Bickford Lansbury and sister-in-law of George Lansbury. [12]
Her mother, Jewelle Bickford, was an investment banker in New York City until 2008 and is currently a partner at Evercore Wealth Management. [13] She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, C200, board member emeritus of Women for Women International and Women's Media Center, and a co-chair Paradigm for Parity movement, which is committed to achieving gender parity at the senior level of all major corporations by 2030.
Her father, Nathaniel Bickford, was a partner at the law firm Lankenau Kovner & Bickford for 25 years and then Windels Marx Laine & Mittendorf until he retired in 2002. [14] He wrote the memoir Late Bloomer: A Memoir of School Days in 2008. [15] In the 1970s, her father represented contemporary artists introduced to him by Bickford's godfather, Klaus Kertess, and traded art for fees most notably with Brice Marden, David Novros, Joanna Pousette-Dart, and Lynda Benglis.
She is a descendant of passengers from the Mayflower, Francis Cooke and Peter Browne, on both her maternal and paternal side. [16]
Steven Andrew Soderbergh is an American film director, producer, screenwriter, cinematographer, and editor. A pioneer of modern independent cinema, Soderbergh later drew acclaim for formally inventive films made within the studio system.
Traffic is a 2000 American crime drama film directed by Steven Soderbergh and written by Stephen Gaghan. It explores the illegal drug trade from several perspectives: users, enforcers, politicians, and traffickers. Their stories are edited together throughout the film, although some characters do not meet each other. The film is an adaptation of the 1989 British Channel 4 television series Traffik. The film stars an international ensemble cast, including Don Cheadle, Benicio del Toro, Michael Douglas, Erika Christensen, Luis Guzmán, Dennis Quaid, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Jacob Vargas, Tomas Milian, Topher Grace, James Brolin, Steven Bauer, and Benjamin Bratt. It features both English and Spanish-language dialogue.
Benicio Monserrate Rafael del Toro Sánchez is a Puerto Rican born Spanish actor. He has garnered critical acclaim and numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe, and a Silver Bear for his portrayal of the jaded but morally upright police officer Javier Rodriguez in the film Traffic (2000). Del Toro's performance as despairing ex-con turned zealot Jack Jordan, in Alejandro González Iñárritu's 21 Grams (2003), earned him a second nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Alejandro González Iñárritu (; American Spanish: ; credited since 2014 as Alejandro G. Iñárritu; is a Mexican filmmaker. He is primarily known for making modern psychological drama films about the human condition. His projects have garnered critical acclaim and numerous accolades including five Academy Awards with a Special Achievement Award, three Golden Globe Awards, three BAFTA Awards, two Directors Guild of America Awards. His most notable films include Amores perros, 21 Grams, Babel, Biutiful, Birdman, The Revenant, and Bardo.
Che is a two-part 2008 epic biographical film about the Argentine Marxist revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara, directed by Steven Soderbergh. Rather than follow a standard chronological order, the films offer an oblique series of interspersed moments along the overall timeline. Part One is titled The Argentine and focuses on the Cuban Revolution from the landing of Fidel Castro, Guevara, and other revolutionaries in Cuba to their successful toppling of Fulgencio Batista's dictatorship two years later. Part Two is titled Guerrilla and focuses on Guevara's attempt to bring revolution to Bolivia and his demise. Both parts are shot in a cinéma vérité style, but each has different approaches to linear narrative, camerawork and the visual look. It stars Benicio del Toro as Guevara, with an ensemble cast that includes Demián Bichir, Rodrigo Santoro, Santiago Cabrera, Franka Potente, Julia Ormond, Vladimir Cruz, Marc-André Grondin, Lou Diamond Phillips, Joaquim de Almeida, Édgar Ramírez, Yul Vazquez, Unax Ugalde, Alfredo De Quesada, Jordi Mollá, Matt Damon, and Oscar Isaac.
Laura Elizabeth Dern is an American actress, who is the recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, a BAFTA Award, and five Golden Globe Awards.
Stephen Mirrione is an American film editor. He is best known for winning an Academy Award for his editing of the film Traffic (2000).
Drug Wars: The Camarena Story is a 1990 American crime drama television miniseries based on the life of Enrique 'Kiki' Camarena, an undercover DEA who was abducted and killed by the Guadalajara Cartel in 1985. The series is directed by Brian Gibson and stars Steven Bauer in the titular role and Benicio del Toro as cartel leader Rafael Caro Quintero, alongside Elizabeth Peña, Miguel Ferrer, Treat Williams and Craig T. Nelson. The teleplay is based on Elaine Shannon’s non-fiction book Desperados and the Time magazine article of the same name. Filmmaker Michael Mann served as an executive producer, as well as co-writing one of the episodes.
Vanessa Taylor is an American screenwriter and television producer. She is best known for writing the screenplay for the films Hope Springs, Divergent, and The Shape of Water. For her work on The Shape of Water, Taylor was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.
Mark Johnson is an American film and television producer. He won the Academy Award for Best Picture for producing the 1988 film Rain Man.
Alberto Iglesias Fernández-Berridi is a Spanish composer. He was first noticed as a score composer for Spanish films, mostly from Pedro Almodóvar and Julio Medem. His career became more international with time and he eventually started to work also in Hollywood. Since then, he has been nominated four times for an Academy Award for his work in the films The Constant Gardener (2005), The Kite Runner (2007), Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011), and Parallel Mothers (2021). His other film credits include soundtracks for Steven Soderbergh's Che. and Hossein Amini's The Two Faces of January (2014). Iglesias also has worked for ballet and has done other classical music work.
Guillermo Jorge Navarro Solares, AMC, ASC is a Mexican cinematographer and television director. He has worked in Hollywood since 1994 and is a frequent collaborator of Guillermo del Toro and Robert Rodriguez. In 2007, he won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography and the Goya Award for Best Cinematography for del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth. His subsequent filmography runs the gamut from lower-budget arthouse and genre films to high-profile blockbusters like Hellboy, Zathura: A Space Adventure, Night at the Museum, and Pacific Rim.
Silvana Paternostro is a journalist who has written extensively on Cuba and Central and South America. She specializes in women’s issues, and has also written comprehensively about AIDS, revolutionary movements, underground economies and the intersection of literature, music and other cultural forms with politics and economics.
Donna Gigliotti is an American film producer. She is best known for producing Shakespeare in Love, Hidden Figures, Silver Linings Playbook, 80 For Brady, and The Reader.
Casey Silver is an American film executive and producer.
Álvaro Longoria is a film director, executive producer, and actor. He produces indie films for several distributors including Cinema Libre and Morena Films. He is perhaps best known for producing the film Everybody Knows directed by Asghar Farhadi and Che starring Benicio Del Toro and directed by Steven Soderbergh as well as Looking for Fidel directed by Oliver Stone. He won a Goya Award for Best Documentary Film for Hijos de las Nubes, a story about the decolonization of the Sahara region of western Africa, starring Javier Bardem. He received the Cinema for Peace International Green Film Award in 2020 for his film Sanctuary, and the Award for Justice in 2019.
Susanna Fogel is an American director, screenwriter and author, best known for co-writing the 2019 film Booksmart and for co-writing and directing the 2018 action/comedy The Spy Who Dumped Me. Her many accolades include a DGA Award and nominations at the BAFTA Film Awards, the Primetime Emmy Awards and the WGA Awards.
Michael Sugar is an American film and television producer and principal at Sugar23, best known for producing Spotlight, 13 Reasons Why, Maniac and The Knick.
Jennifer Fox is an American film producer. From 2001 to 2007, she was president of Section Eight Productions; before that she was Vice President of Production at Universal Pictures. Fox was nominated for an Oscar in 2008 for her production work in Michael Clayton.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)