Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Alan Ball

 
Writer: Alan Ball
 
  • Born: May 13, 1957 in Atlanta, Georgia
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy Drama, Drama
  • Career Highlights: American Beauty, Six Feet Under, Towelhead
  • First Major Screen Credit: American Beauty (1999)

Biography

The screenwriter and co-producer of American Beauty, Alan Ball earned almost overnight acclaim and recognition for his screenplay for the film, which won a Best Original Screenplay Oscar and Golden Globe, as well as numerous other honors. Ball's success was a long time coming; much of the frustration and anger felt by American Beauty's protagonist, Lester Burnham, was inspired by the screenwriter's own dissatisfaction with his years spent working as a television writer and producer.

Born in Atlanta in 1957 and raised in the neighboring community of Marietta, Ball studied Theatre with an emphasis on acting and playwriting at Florida State University. After graduating, he moved to New York, where he became a noted playwright. Among the plays he penned were The Amazing Adventures of Tense Guy, Your Mother's Butt, Made for a Woman, and Five Women Wearing the Same Dress; when the latter premiered in 1993 at the Manhattan Class Company, it featured Allison Janney, with whom Ball would later work on American Beauty.

After moving to Hollywood, Ball began working on the TV sitcom Grace Under Fire, and then became a writer and eventually an executive co-producer for the sitcom Cybill for three seasons. While working in television, he channeled his frustration into the script for American Beauty, which was eventually picked up by DreamWorks. Working closely with director Sam Mendes, Ball was given a remarkable degree of control over his screenplay, and American Beauty premiered in 1999 to ecstatic reviews and a host of award nominations. A cynical but ultimately redemptive story about a man's mid-life crisis and journey to rediscover his passion for living, it reflected Ball's own outlook, which he has described as "equal parts brutally cynical and achingly romantic." The film earned a number of international awards, including Oscars for Best Original Screenplay, Best Actor (for Kevin Spacey), Best Director, and Best Picture.

When his latest ABC sitcom, Oh, Grow Up, died a quick death in the fall of 1999 just as Beauty began to take off, Ball was determined to escape the language and content constraints of network TV. Fending off many other offers, the writer-producer chose to align himself with HBO's immensely successful original programming department to release Six Feet Under in June of 2001. Inspired in part by Tony Richardson's 1965 satire The Loved One, the hour-long series focused on a family of morticians brought together by the untimely death of their father and featured Ball's now-trademark mix of ironic situations with sardonic dialogue. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Alan Ball (screenwriter)
Top
Alan Ball
Born May 13, 1957 (1957-05-13) (age 52)
Atlanta, Georgia
Occupation Screenwriter, playwright, director, actor, producer

Alan E. Ball (born May 13, 1957) is an American writer, director, actor and producer for film, stage and television. He is noted for writing American Beauty, and creating and producing the HBO television shows Six Feet Under and True Blood. For his work in television and film, Ball has received critical acclaim and numerous awards, including an Academy Award, an Emmy and a Golden Globe.

Contents

Biography

Ball was born in Atlanta, Georgia to Frank and Mary Ball, an aircraft inspector and a homemaker. He attended high school in Marietta, and went on to attend the University of Georgia and Florida State University, from which he graduated in 1980 with a degree in theater arts. After college, he began work as a playwright at the General Nonsense Theater Company in Sarasota, Florida.

Personal life

Alan Ball is openly gay and has been called "a strong voice for [the] LGBT community."[1]

Filmography

Television

Year Show Episode Notes
2009 True Blood "Frenzy" Season 2, episode 11; writer
"Shake and Fingerpop" Season 2, episode 4; writer
2008 "You'll Be the Death of Me" Season 1, episode 12; director
"Mine" Season 1, episode 3; writer
"The First Taste" Season 1, episode 2; writer
"Strange Love" Season 1, episode 1; writer/director
2005 Six Feet Under "Everyone's Waiting" Season 5, episode 12; writer/director
2004 "Untitled" Season 4, episode 12; director
"Can I Come Up Now?" Season 4, episode 4; writer
2003 "I'm Sorry, I'm Lost" Season 3, episode 13; director
"Nobody Sleeps" Season 3, episode 4; writer (with Rick Cleveland)
"Perfect Circles" Season 3, episode 1; writer
2002 "The Last Time" Season 2, episode 13; director
"Someone Else's Eyes" Season 2, episode 9; writer
"In The Game" Season 2, episode 1; writer
2001 "Knock, Knock" Season 1, episode 13; writer/director
"An Open Book" Season 1, episode 5; writer
"Pilot" Season 1, episode 1; writer/director

Film

Year Film Role
2008 Towelhead Writer/director
1999 American Beauty Writer/co-producer

Awards and nominations

Awards
  • 2000 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay – American Beauty
  • 2000 Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay-Motion Picture – American Beauty
  • 2000 Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay – American Beauty
  • 2002 Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement – Six Feet Under
  • 2002 Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series – Six Feet Under
  • 2004 Producers Guild of America Award for Dramatic Series – Six Feet Under
Nominations
  • 2000 BAFTA Film Award – American Beauty
  • 2002 Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement – Six Feet Under
  • 2004 Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement – Six Feet Under
  • 2006 Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series – Six Feet Under
  • 2006 Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series – Six Feet Under

References

  1. ^ Alan Ball speaks with OUTTAKEs Charlotte Robinson

External links

This article about a television writer from the United States is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Alan Ball (screenwriter)" Read more

 

Mentioned in