Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Allison Anders

 
Writer: Allison Anders
  • Born: Nov 16, 1954 in Ashland, Kentucky
  • Occupation: Writer, Director, Actor
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: Grace of My Heart, Sugar Town, Things Behind the Sun
  • First Major Screen Credit: Border Radio (1987)

Biography

The hardships encountered and overcome by director Allison Anders are often reflected in the grittiness and strength of her female characters, a quality that lends her stories a tough but refreshing honesty. Anders cares about her characters, but she refuses to give them falsely happy endings and this refusal distinguishes her from other directors of so-called women's films who make their movies into little more than celluloid Hallmark cards. Anders' approach to this kind of storytelling has given her distinction in the film industry and she continues to make films that challenge conventional attitudes toward both women and films about women.

Born November 16, 1954, in Ashland, KY, Anders had an upbringing that was nothing if not traumatic. At the age of five, she, her mother, and four sisters were abandoned by her father, and were forced into an unstable, itinerant lifestyle. At the age of 12, Anders was raped and then endured abuse from her stepfather, who at one point threatened her with a gun. Anders suffered a mental breakdown when she was 15 years old, after her mother took her daughters to Los Angeles to escape further abuse. Following time in psychiatric wards, later in foster homes and jail, Anders ventured back to Kentucky, then moved to London with the man who would father her daughter.

In her early twenties, after living in London and then on a commune, Anders returned to Los Angeles, where she enrolled at U.C.L.A. after attending junior college and working odd jobs. During her time there, Anders had her second daughter. She graduated from the university's distinguished film school with an industry fellowship, and after a personal correspondence campaign aimed at her favorite director, Wim Wenders, managed to land a job as an assistant on his 1984 film Paris, Texas. Three years later, Anders wrote and directed her first feature, Border Radio, with the assistance of former film school classmates Dean Lent and Kurt Voss. Her solo directorial debut came in 1992, with Gas Food Lodging; starring Ione Skye and Fairuza Balk as adolescent sisters coming of age in a dead-end New Mexico town, the film garnered wide acclaim for Anders, as well as a measure of unexpected financial success.

The following year, Anders made Mi Vida Loca (My Crazy Life), an unflinching exploration of the girl gangs of Echo Park, the L.A. neighborhood where Anders lived. The film was a moderate critical success, although it failed to make much of an impression at the box office. Unfortunately, Anders' next project was the almost universally reviled Four Rooms (1995). The vignette she provided for the anthology film, about a coven of witches who seduce a bellboy in hopes of harvesting a particular bodily fluid for their ritual, was considered one of the weakest segments of the film. Anders rebounded somewhat in 1996, with her next feature, Grace of My Heart, a fictional biography of a female singer/songwriter during the 1960s that was very loosely based on the life of singer/songwriter Carole King. Starring Illeana Douglas, John Turturro, Matt Dillon, and Eric Stoltz, the film received a number of positive reviews, although it sank at the box office.

Anders then turned to executive producing, with the 1997 film Lover Girls, but in 1999 was back in the director's chair, co-directing Sugar Town, with old Border Radio collaborator Kurt Voss. Set against the backdrop of the California music industry, the film explored the intertwining lives of a group of power-brokers, wannabes, and has-beens, and in doing so allowed Anders to return to the themes of loyalty, disillusionment, sex, and put-upon women that she knew so well. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Allison Anders
Top
Allison Anders
Born November 16, 1954 (1954-11-16) (age 54)
Occupation Director, screenwriter
Years active 1987–present

Allison Anders (born November 16, 1954) is an American film and television director. Anders has directed many independent films, on which she frequently collaborates with fellow UCLA film school graduate Kurt Voss.

Contents

Biography

According to an article in Creative Screenwriter Magazine: "Raised in rural Kentucky, Anders spent her teens hitchhiking across the country, resulting in a series of adventures that often ended in jails and foster homes—experiences she credits with giving her raw inspiration for her cinematic portraits of rural Americans."[1] At eighteen, she moved to England, then returned to Los Angeles to raise her first child. She attended the UCLA School of Theater Film and Television and was granted a Nicholl Fellowship by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Her screenplay "Lost Highway" (unrelated to the David Lynch film of the same title) also earned her a Samuel Goldwyn Writing Award.

Her first film effort co-written and co-directed by Kurt Voss and Dean Lent was the punk music-heavy Border Radio, which was nominated for Best Feature of 1989 by the Independent Feature Project. Anders followed up with her popular 1992 film Gas Food Lodging, for which she won a New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best New Director, and for which actress Fairuza Balk won an Independent Spirit Award. The film received five Spirit Award nominations including Best Director and Best Screenplay. Gas Food Lodging also won the Deauville Film Festival Critics Award.

Her next film for Cineville was Mi Vida Loca (My Crazy Life), about girl gangs in Los Angeles; it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 1993, and saw wide release in 1994.

In 1995, she was awarded a "genius grant" by the MacArthur Foundation. Although the 1995 collaborative film Four Rooms in which she participated in was largely panned by critics, it now has a cult following[citation needed]. In 1996, she won more acclaim with Grace of My Heart, the story of a backroom songwriter (Illeana Douglas) who tires of making other people famous. Elvis Costello and Burt Bacharach had their first collaboration on her film and were nominated for a Grammy Award.

In the late 1980s, Anders had become friends with some members of the pop group Duran Duran, and frequently inserted small references to the band in her films (character names, posters on walls, and so on). In 1999, after bassist John Taylor had left Duran Duran and was beginning to launch an acting career, she co-wrote and co-directed the film Sugar Town with Kurt Voss about the Los Angeles film and music industry, which starred several musical friends of hers, including Taylor, X singer John Doe, Spandau Ballet bassist Martin Kemp, and singer/actor Michael Des Barres. The film was nominated for two Independent Spirit Awards, one for Best Film and one for best Newcomer for Jade Gordon. The film won the Fantasportoaward for Best Screenplay for Anders and Voss.

Her 2001 film Things Behind the Sun, dealing with the long-term aftermath of a rape, won an Emmy Award nomination for actor Don Cheadle for Best Supporting Actor, 3 Independent Spirit Award Nominations: Don Cheadle for Best Supporting Actor, Kim Dickens for Best Actress, and Best Film. She and co-writer Kurt Voss received a nomination for the Edgar Award. The film was awarded the SHINE Award as well as the prestigious Peabody Award .

Anders began directing shows for broadcast and cable television in 1999, including several episodes in the second and third seasons of Sex and the City, as well as episodes of Grosse Pointe and Cold Case, The L Word , Men In Trees, and What About Brian?

In 2002 Anders received the Spirit Of Silver Lake Award from the Silver Lake Film Festival and in 2003 Anders became a Distinguished Professor at UC Santa Barbara where she teaches in the Film And Media Studies Department one quarter every year.

In 2006 she participated in a documentary Wanderlust with many other well known names.

2007 saw the DVD release of Border Radio as part of the prestigious Criterion Collection.

Anders is the founder of the Don't Knock The Rock Film And Music Festival in Los Angeles.

Filmography

References

  1. ^ English, Elisabeth, "Interview With Allison Anders", Creative Screenwriter Magazine, 2000.

External links



 
 
Learn More
Highway Hitcher (1998 Thriller Film)
In the Company of Women (2004 Film, TV & Radio Film)
Amanda de Cadenet (Actor, Drama/Romance)

Who is dating actor david anders? Read answer...
Is allison hot? Read answer...
Who is lorraine allison? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What did Anders Celsius discover and when?
What are andering animal herders called?
Where did ander celcius die?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Allison Anders" Read more

 

Mentioned in