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Randall Wallace

 
AMG AllMovie Guide:

Randall Wallace

Biography

Randall Wallace planned on becoming a minister or a songwriter, not a filmmaker. After leaving the seminary to write music, he worked as a novelist and television scribe before penning the award-winning script to Braveheart (1995) and embarking on a directing career. Raised in Tennessee, Wallace began writing stories at the age of seven. He majored in religion at Duke University before joining a seminary, but took various writing classes all through school. He even opened his own record company to release his original songs, which were played on local radio stations throughout the Carolinas and Virginia. After exiting the seminary, Wallace moved to Nashville to try his hand at a music career. He ran the animal shows at Opryland while trying to establish himself as a songwriter. Unfortunately, because he did not write country music (the city's primary genre), he experienced very little success. In 1980, Wallace moved to Los Angeles where he began writing novels, such as Blood of the Lamb and Where Angels Watch. He earned rave reviews for his work -- critics compared him to Robert Penn Warren and Charles Dickens -- but his sales were disappointing. With the help of producer Stephen J. Cannell, Wallace tried his hand at television writing, composing teleplays for Hunter, J.J. Starbuck, Sonny Spoon, and Broken Badges. A Scottish American, Wallace formulated the idea for Braveheart -- the true story of medieval Scottish patriot William Wallace -- while visiting Edinburgh Castle in Scotland. After writing the screenplay, he developed the film with his own funds before teaming with its director and star, Mel Gibson. An extraordinary success, Braveheart garnered several Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. Wallace earned a Writer's Guild of America Award, a Golden Globe nomination, and an Oscar nod for his screenplay. Three years later, Wallace made his directing debut with Man in the Iron Mask (1998), an adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' novel about the Three Musketeers' struggle to replace Louis XIV with a more worthy king. Despite its star-studded cast -- Leonardo Di Caprio, Gabriel Byrne, Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich, and Gerard Depardieu -- the film was not the blockbuster Wallace had hoped it would be. Shortly afterward, Wallace met director Michael Bay, who asked him to write the script for Pearl Harbor (2001). Though it began well, their collaboration hit a snag when Bay called in several script doctors to add more action sequences to the film. Disagreeing with Bay's decision, Wallace quietly quit the project, though he is still Pearl Harbor's only credited scriptwriter. He immediately started pre-production on his sophomore directing effort, the Vietnam drama We Were Soldiers (2002). After discovering its source material -- a memoir written by Lieutenant General Hal Moore and war correspondent Joseph Galloway -- in an airport bookstore, he bought the rights to the film adaptation with his earnings from Braveheart. Wallace spent several years writing and developing the project himself before joining forces with star Mel Gibson's Icon Productions. Released in 2002, We Were Soldiers also featured Greg Kinnear, Chris Klein, and Marc Blucas and was Wallace's most favorably reviewed film since Braveheart. He quickly went to work on polishing his pet combat script, a World War II film based on his father-in-law's experience as a German P.O.W. at the end of the war. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi
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Randall Wallace

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Randall Wallace
Born July 28, 1949 (1949-07-28) (age 62)
Jackson, Tennessee
Occupation Film director, screenwriter, producer and songwriter

Randall Wallace (born July 28, 1949) is an American screenwriter, director, producer, and songwriter who came to prominence by writing the screenplay for the 1995 film Braveheart. His work on the film earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay and a Writers Guild of America award for Best Screenplay Adapted Directly for the Screen. His other films include The Man in the Iron Mask, Pearl Harbor, We Were Soldiers, and Secretariat.

Contents

Early life

Born in Jackson, Tennessee, Wallace began writing stories at the age of seven. Wallace graduated from E.C. Glass High School in Lynchburg, Virginia, where he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He attended Duke University, where he studied Russian, religion, and literature. He put himself through a graduate year of seminary by teaching martial arts. Wallace holds a black belt in karate.[1]

Career

After managing an animal show at Nashville’s Opryland, Wallace moved to Hollywood to pursue a career in singing and songwriting. He soon began writing short stories, novels and scripts for movies. Wallace was taken under the wing of leading television producer Stephen J. Cannell and spent several years writing for television in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

He gained recognition and commercial success by penning the screenplay for Braveheart (1995), which was inspired by a trip to Scotland to better get to know his roots as a Scottish American. It was there he learned about the true legend of medieval Scottish patriot William Wallace. Braveheart became Wallace’s first produced screenplay when it drew the interest of director and star Mel Gibson, and ended up as the film success story of 1995, earning the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director and garnering Oscar and Golden Globe nominations as well as the Writers Guild Award for Best Screenplay for Wallace.

Wallace made his directorial debut with his own screenplay in The Man in the Iron Mask, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, John Malkovich, Gabriel Byrne, Jeremy Irons and Gérard Depardieu. Shortly after, he wrote the screenplay for Pearl Harbor (2001), directed by Michael Bay and starring Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and Kate Beckinsale.

This was followed by Wallace’s second film as director We Were Soldiers. Moved by its starkly honest account of a singular battle in the Vietnam War, Wallace re-teamed with Mel Gibson to star in the film. Wallace trained with career soldiers at U.S. Army Ranger School in order to understand the motivation of his characters.

In 2010, Wallace directed Disney’s Secretariat, the true story of the racehorse that won the Triple Crown in 1973. The film chronicled the struggles and courage of owner Penny Chenery-Tweedy, portrayed by Academy Award-nominated actress Diane Lane. Wallace also wrote the end title song, It’s Who You Are, which was released with the Secretariat soundtrack.[2]

Other work

Wallace is also the New York Times bestselling author of seven novels and the lyricist of the acclaimed hymn "Mansions of the Lord", performed as the closing music for President Ronald Reagan's national funeral.

In 2008, Wallace wrote several songs with singer/songwriter Richard Marx. One of those songs, "Flame In Your Fire", appears on Marx's album Emotional Remains.

In interviews he has acknowledged a deep commitment to Christianity, which he credits as an influence on his approach to filmmaking.[1][3]

He appeared in the seventh season of HBO’s hit comedy series Entourage as himself.

In addition to his work as a filmmaker, Wallace is the founder of Hollywood for Habitat for Humanity and the father of two sons. In 1999, he formed his own company, Wheelhouse Entertainment, which is focused on creating entertainment for worldwide audiences based on the classic values of love, courage and honor.

Wallace was the speaker at the Fellowship Foundation National Prayer Breakfast on 3 February 2011.[4]

Wallace also served as the commencement speaker at the Liberty University graduation ceremony on May 14, 2011.[5]

Filmography

References

External links


 
 
Related topics:
The Last Pharaoh (2010 Drama Film)
Atlas Shrugged (2008 Drama Film)
We Were Soldiers (2002 War Film)

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