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Kimberly Peirce

 
Writer: Kimberly Peirce
  • Born: 1968 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
  • Occupation: Writer, Director, Actor
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Film, TV & Radio
  • Career Highlights: Boys Don't Cry, This Film Is Not Yet Rated, Stop-Loss
  • First Major Screen Credit: Boys Don't Cry (1999)

Biography

A photographer, animator, and writer as well as a director, Kimberly Peirce made her mark in the film industry with her passionate version of a true-life tragedy, Boys Don't Cry (1999).

Originally from Harrisburg, PA, Peirce also lived in Miami and Puerto Rico before heading off to college at the University of Chicago. Majoring in English and Japanese literature, Peirce subsequently spent two years in Kobe, Japan, doing photography. Merging her interests in storytelling and images, Peirce returned to the U.S. and enrolled in the graduate film program at Columbia University. While in grad school, Peirce became transfixed by the well-publicized rape and murder of Brandon Teena, a young woman living as a man in Falls City, NE. Peirce headed to Nebraska during the trials of the two men eventually convicted of the brutal crime, and befriended a court reporter who helped Peirce gain access to court documents. Fascinated by Brandon's courage and imagination in re-creating his identity in such a conservative environment, and Lana Tisdel, the woman who loved him, Peirce made the story the subject of her thesis film for Columbia.

After she finished her M.F.A., Peirce approached esteemed independent producer Christine Vachon about transforming her work into a feature. Peirce subsequently spent three years readying the film and searching for an actress to play Brandon, finally casting Brandon candidate Chloe Sevigny as Lana and little-known Beverly Hills, 90210 alum Hilary Swank as Brandon in 1998. All of the preparation, including Peirce's suggestion that Swank live as a boy for several weeks prior to production, paid off when Boys Don't Cry premiered to great acclaim in 1999. Earning raves at film festivals for Swank's career performance and Peirce's sensitive yet unstinting examination of how Brandon lived and died, Boys Don't Cry became a critical and art house success. After Swank and Sevigny racked up critics' prizes, the pair were nominated for Oscars, with Swank taking home the Best Actress statuette. Weathering lawsuits from several of the actual people portrayed, including a skittish Tisdel, Peirce then turned to big studio Hollywood for her next directorial job, an adaptation of Arthur C. Clarke's novel Childhood's End. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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Kimberly Peirce (born September 8, 1967), is an American film director, notable for her debut feature film, Boys Don't Cry (1999). Her second feature, Stop-Loss, has been released by Paramount Pictures on March 28, 2008 in the USA and in Canada.

Contents

Biography

Early life and career

Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Peirce grew up in a trailer park.[citation needed] She graduated from Miami Sunset High School in Miami, Florida and attended the University of Chicago,[1] earning a degree in English and Japanese Literature.[citation needed] She moved for several years to Kobe, Japan, working as a photographer and model.[citation needed] Upon returning to America, she enrolled at Columbia University,[1] earning an MFA in film.[1] Initially, Peirce pursued a story about a female soldier in drag during the American Civil War for her thesis,[citation needed] but eventually nixed the plan due to a lack of personal connection with the story.[citation needed]

While attending Columbia, Peirce read a Village Voice article[citation needed] about Brandon Teena, a transman raped and murdered in Falls City, Nebraska.[1] Switching from her original thesis project, Peirce traveled to Falls City, where she researched and attended the trial of the two homicide suspects.[1] The subsequent film short she made for her thesis in 1995 was nominated by Columbia faculty for a Princess Grace Award, and received an Astrea Production Grant.[1] That grant and her involvement with the Sundance Institute;'s 1997 Sundance Filmmakers, Writers and Producers Labs helped her develop the short into the 1999 feature film Boys Don't Cry.[1]

Later life and career

Since then, she has directed an episode of the Showtime television series The L Word, and the Paramount Pictures feature Stop-Loss.

Canceled projects she worked on in the interim included co-writing the script Silent Star, about the murder of silent movie director William Desmond Taylor, for the studio DreamWorks; a David Mamet script she would direct about gangster John Dillinger; directing the adaptation of author Dave Eggers' memoir A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius; and research for a Columbia Pictures film she would direct about the execution of the Israeli spy Eli Cohen.[2]

As of 2008, Peirce was co-writing a feature title Sex, Secrets and Taboo in Suburbia,[1] a romantic comedy with a "gender twist",[1] and a New Orleans gangster movie.[1] As of April 2008, Peirce lives with her partner Evren Savci.

Filmography

  • "The Last Good Breath" (1994) (16mm short - director & writer)
Leopard of Tomorrow Program at 1994 Locarno International Film Festival[1]

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stop-Loss press notes, Paramount Pictures
  2. ^ Four projects per Valby, Karen, "War & Pierce", Entertainment Weekly #985, April 4, 2008, p. 38

External links


 
 
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