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John Ridley

 
Writer: John Ridley
  • Born: Oct, 1965 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Crime
  • Career Highlights: Three Kings, Bobby, Undercover Brother
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air: Sooooooooul Train (1994)

Biography

A prodigious writer, infrequent movie director, and commentator for National Public Radio, John Ridley has made his mark penning novels, TV shows, screenplays, and Internet series ranging from the neo-noir scheming of Cold Around the Heart (1997) to the broad, satiric comedy of Undercover Brother's film and online incarnations.

Raised in suburban Milwaukee, Ridley exited the Midwest to attend New York University. Though he got his degree in East Asian languages, and spent a year in Japan, Ridley opted for show business and started doing standup comedy in New York clubs after college. Despite appearing on the late-night talk shows, Ridley quit standup to become a writer, moving to Los Angeles in 1990. Ridley landed his first job writing for Martin Lawrence's sitcom Martin in 1993; he subsequently wrote for The Fresh Prince of Bel Air and The John Laroquette Show. While doing sitcoms, Ridley took a crack at novels with the entertainingly nasty noir Stray Dogs. When the book initially failed to sell, Ridley adapted it as a screenplay which caught the attention of Oliver Stone, who decided to direct it himself. Under the auspices of Stone's production company, Ridley made his own directorial debut when he helmed another of his neo-noir screenplays, Cold Around the Heart (1997). A low-budget crime story starring David Caruso, Kelly Lynch, and Chris Noth, Cold Around the Heart got a minimal theatrical release after playing film festivals. Ridley's work attracted more attention that same year, however, when he had a dispute with Stone over Stray Dogs. Upset that Ridley's novel would come out several months before his movie, Stone publicly objected and then changed his film's title to U-Turn (1997). Regardless of whether the book spoiled the surprise, U-Turn's noir theatrics with Sean Penn, Nick Nolte, and Jennifer Lopez caused little excitement at the box office. Ridley's new career as a novelist, however, hummed along without disruption; he published his fourth novel, A Conversation With the Mann, in 2002.

Prolific as ever, Ridley put the Stone experience behind him and sold an acerbic screenplay about greed and the Persian Gulf War entitled "Spoils of War." By the time it reached the screen via director (and rewriter) David O. Russell, the renamed Three Kings (1999) deviated so much from Ridley's original version, including the lead African-American character becoming George Clooney, that Ridley had only a "story by" credit.

Taking a break from films, Ridley returned to TV in 1999 as supervising producer of NBC's gritty emergency worker drama Third Watch. While doing Third Watch, Ridley crossed over into yet another medium with Undercover Brother, an animated series for UrbanEntertainment.com. A sharp satire of racial stereotypes, Undercover Brother displayed the same mordant wit as Ridley's occasional newspaper articles about his experiences as a black writer in Hollywood, and became the first Internet series to be adapted as a movie. With Ridley aboard as co-writer and executive producer, Undercover Brother (2002) broadly parodied blaxploitation movies with slapstick abandon, yet still managed to land a few savvy jokes about race and politics. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: John Ridley
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John Ridley (born 1965)[1] is an American film director, actor, and writer.

Ridley got his start as a stand-up comedian. He eventually was hired as a writer for sitcoms such as The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and Martin. He began to concentrate on writing and wrote his first novel Stray Dogs which became the basis the 1997 film U-Turn, directed by Oliver Stone. Ridley also provided the original script for the film Three Kings, starring George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg and Ice Cube. But his script was changed so much by director David O. Russell that he only received a credit for the original story. He also tried his hand at directing with the film Cold Around the Heart.

He is one of the creators of Urban Entertainment, showcasing short films and animation from minority filmmakers, including his own works: the animated cartoons Undercover Brother (the basis for the film starring comedian Eddie Griffin) and Those Who Walk in Darkness, featuring the voice of rapper Lil' Kim — which itself was the basis of a novel of the same name written by Ridley. Additionally, Ridley developed Tim Story's 2002 motion picture Barbershop into the short-lived 2005 Showtime comedy Barbershop: The Series.

Ridley was the original co-host on the MSNBC daily morning show Morning Joe upon its premiere in 2007, and was an occasional guest on the network's cancelled nightly program Scarborough Country. He hosted the short-lived Movie Club with John Ridley on American Movie Classics and has written The Authority and The American Way for DC Comics. He has recently become a regular guest commentator on American Public Media's Weekend America in a segment called "Good News, Bad News, No News" which reviews the week's news. He co-produced the film Bobby. He wrote the play Ten Thousand Years about kamikaze pilots in World War II. On the weekend of August 19, 2006, John co-hosted the syndicated program Ebert & Roeper while film critic Roger Ebert was on medical leave. On August 28, 2007, it was announced that George Lucas hired him to pen the script for his upcoming World War II film Red Tails. Currently (December, 2009) Ridley is head writer and co-executive producer of THE WANDA SYKES SHOW.

Contents

Financial Core status

In the recent Writer's Strike of 2007-2008 John Ridley was the only Feature, and/or Primetime Television writer to elect for financial core status. (Several soap writers also did so.) Financial Core status legally allows a person to retain most of the benefits of union membership, including the right to work in jobs requiring union membership, without the obligation to follow strike orders or contribute financially to union political activities. (In 2005/6, this gave a 4.21% reduction in union fees compared to full membership )

Ridley wrote many articles critical of the WGA and its leadership, and cited these criticisms for his choice to go "fi-core". However, some WGA members view Mr. Ridley's motivations as both self-serving and self-promoting.

John Ridley serves as head writer and co-executive producer.

Bibliography

Novels

  • Stray Dogs (1997)
  • Love is a Racket (1998)
  • Everybody Smokes in Hell (1999)
  • A Conversation with the Mann (2002)
  • The Drift (2002)
  • Those Who Walk in Darkness (2003)
  • What Fire Cannot Burn (2006)

Graphic Novels

Stage Plays

  • Ten Thousand Years (World Premiere in 2005)

Screenplays

Teleplays

Magazine Articles

  • "The Manifesto of Ascendancy for the Modern American Nigger" in Esquire, December 2006, Volume 146, Issue 6

References

  1. ^ Birth year provided by Ridley himself on the January 19, 2009 broadcast of MSNBC's Morning Joe.

External links


 
 

 

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