Robert Houston | |
---|---|
Born | 1955 (age 68–69) California, U.S. |
Other names | Robert Huston |
Occupation(s) | Film actor, director |
Known for | The Hills Have Eyes (1977) Mighty Times: The Children's March (2004) |
Awards | Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Film (2005) Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Special (2005) |
Robert "Bobby" Houston (born 1955) is an American filmmaker and actor. He made his acting debut in The Hills Have Eyes (1977) before becoming a film director and screenwriter. His films include Shogun Assassin (1980) and Bad Manners (1984). Later in his career, Houston became a successful documentarian. He won an Emmy Award for the film Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks (2002) and an Academy Award for the film Mighty Times: The Children's March (2004) in 2005.
Houston first came to prominence with his performance of the character Bobby in Wes Craven's 1977 horror film The Hills Have Eyes . [1] He would reprise his role in the sequel The Hills Have Eyes Part II (1984).
In 1977, Houston modeled for pop artist Andy Warhol at his Factory in New York. Warhol's silkscreen painting Torso (1977) is based on a Polaroid photo he took of Houston as part of his "landscapes" series depicting nude males. [2] In the book The Andy Warhol Diaries , Warhol mentioned in a November 7, 1977 entry that Houston was writing a movie he had assigned to him about "kids who commit suicide." [3]
Houston and film producer David Weisman acquired the rights for the film Baby Cart at the River Styx, which had been adapted from the Lone Wolf & Cub Japanese action film. [4] They re-edited, re-scored, and co-wrote a script for the English-dubbed film they retitled Shogun Assassin (1980). Houston also wrote and directed several independent films in the 1980s, including the teen comedy Bad Manners (1984). [5]
Houston is also the author of the novel Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, which served as the basis for the 1986 film A Killing Affair .[ citation needed ]
Houston studied documentary filmmaking at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts before moving to Los Angeles. [6] He transitioned from writing to directing until his partner died of AIDS in 1995. [6] He then opened up a bookstore in Ojai, California, and to finance the store he would direct documentaries. [6]
Houston and his partner Robert Hudson formed their own company, Tell The Truth Pictures, to promote and distribute the documentary film Rock The Boat (1998). [7] It had screened at film festivals titled The Human Race. The film follows a crew of HIV+ sailors who enter the Trans-Pacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii. [7]
He would go on to direct Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks (2002) and Mighty Times: The Children's March (2004). Both films were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Film, which the latter won in 2005. [8] [9] The Legacy of Rosa Parks won the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Special after airing on HBO in 2005. [6]
After he was fired from HBO, he moved to the Berkshires. [6] There he met his current partner Eric Shamie, owner of Moon in the Pond Farm in Sheffield, Massachusetts. Houston started buying homes and fixing them up. [6] He also developed The Green Houses, a sustainable co-housing community, and opened Scout House, a boutique in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. [6]
Houston won an Academy Award for the documentary film Mighty Times: The Children's March (2004) in the category Documentary Short Film at the 77th Academy Awards in 2005. [10]
Year | Title | Actor | Director | Writer | Distribution | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | The Hills Have Eyes | Yes | No | No | Vanguard | credited at Robert Huston |
1979 | Cheerleaders Wild Weekend | Yes | No | No | ||
1979 | 1941 | Yes | No | No | Universal Pictures | |
1980 | Shogun Assassin | No | Yes | Yes | New World Pictures | |
1984 | Bad Manners | No | Yes | Yes | New World Pictures | credited as Bobby Houston |
1985 | The Hills Have Eyes Part II | Yes | No | No | Castle Hill Productions | |
1986 | A Killing Affair | No | No | Yes | Prism Entertainment | based on a novel by Houston |
1998 | Rock The Boat | No | Yes | Yes | documentary | |
2002 | Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks | No | Yes | Yes | Teaching Tolerance | documentary short |
2004 | Mighty Times: The Children's March | No | Yes | Yes | HBO | documentary short |
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Shogun Assassin is a 1980 jidaigeki film directed by Robert Houston. It was edited and compiled from the first two films in the Lone Wolf and Cub series, using 12 minutes of the first film, Lone Wolf and Cub: Sword of Vengeance, and most of Lone Wolf and Cub: Baby Cart at the River Styx, both released in 1972 and based on the long-running 1970s manga series Lone Wolf and Cub created by the writer Kazuo Koike and the artist Goseki Kojima.
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Mighty Times: The Children's March is a 2004 American short documentary film about the Birmingham, Alabama civil rights marches in the 1960s, highlighting the bravery of young activists involved in the 1963 Children's Crusade. It was directed by Robert Houston and produced by Robert Hudson. In 2005, the film won an Oscar at the 77th Academy Awards for Documentary Short Subject. The film was co-produced by the Southern Poverty Law Center and HBO.
Mighty Times can refer to:
Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks is a 2002 American short documentary film directed by Robert Houston and produced by Robert Hudson about the 1955/56 Montgomery bus boycott led by Rosa Parks.
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Bad Manners is a 1984 American black comedy teen film released by New World Pictures. Written and directed by Robert Houston and produced by Kim Jorgensen, the film follows a group of juvenile delinquents who escape the oppressive Catholic orphanage where they live in order to rescue one of their fellow "inmates". While the film's adult stars Martin Mull, Karen Black, Anne De Salvo, and Murphy Dunne received top billing in promotional materials, the story is told through the perspective of the adolescent protagonists; played by Georg Olden, Pamela Segall, Michael Hentz, Joey Coleman, and Christopher Brown.
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