Career Highlights: Halloween, The Fisher King, Escape from New York
First Major Screen Credit: Assault on Precinct 13 (1976)
Biography
Producer and occasional screenwriter Debra Hill worked on many popular and highly regarded films, most notably as the producer of Terry Gilliam's acclaimed The Fisher King (1991), which received five Oscar nominations and one Best Supporting actress award for co-star Mercedes Ruehl. The classic slasher movie Halloween, which Hill produced and co-wrote with director John Carpenter, also remains a high point in her career. In addition to her extensive work in feature films, she was heavily involved in productions for such premium cable television networks as HBO and Showtime. As producer of the Showtime movie series Rebel Highway, she won nominations for eight Cable ACE awards. Her television credits include the HBO movies El Diablo and a remake of Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, as well as the NBC special The Disneyland 35th Anniversary Special. In 1985, Hill teamed up with friend and colleague Lynda Obst and founded Hill/Obst Productions, which was responsible for Fisher King and other films, including Adventures in Babysitting (1987). Debra Hill died after a long fight with cancer on March 7, 2005. Her final film as a producer, Oliver Stone's 9/11 drama World Trade Center, was scheduled to arrive onscreen less than sixth months after the prolific producer's untimely death. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Hill was born in Haddonfield, New Jersey and grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] She entered the movie business in 1975 and was unhappy with the level of condescension she experienced because of her gender. She started as a production assistant on adventure documentaries, and progressed through jobs as a script supervisor, assistant director and second unit director. Hill first worked with John Carpenter in 1975, as the script supervisor and assistant editor of Assault on Precinct 13. This led not only to further professional collaborations between Hill and Carpenter, but also marked the beginning of their personal relationship.
She was honored by Women in Film in 2003. After years of having people not taking her seriously because she was a woman, Hill became one of the most powerful producers in Hollywood. She recalled the transition from being called "sweetheart" and "darling" in her early years as a producer to the respectful "ma'am" many years later on the DVD commentary for Escape From New York with production designer Joe Alves.[2]
Health
Despite being diagnosed with cancer in February 2004, Hill continued to work on several projects. She worked with John Carpenter and actor Kurt Russell on a comic adaptation of the Snake Plissken character as well as a proposed Snake Plissken video game. She reunited with Carpenter to produce the remake of The Fog. At the time of her death in 2005 she was working on the Oliver Stone film World Trade Center.
After her death Carpenter told Associated Press working with Hill was "one of the greatest experiences of my life - she had a passion for not just movies about women or women's ideas but films for everybody".