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ABOUT THE CAST
A natural
talent, with a striking presence and undeniable energy, Academy Award®
winner JENNIFER LAWRENCE (Katniss Everdeen) is one of Hollywood's most
gifted actresses.
Most
recently, Lawrence starred in David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook,
alongside Bradley Cooper and Robert DeNiro. Her portrayal of ‘Tiffany’ in the
film garnered Lawrence an Academy Award® in addition to wins at both
the Golden Globes® and Screen Actors Guild Awards® for
lead actress. Lawrence recently completed production on X-Men: Days of
Future Past where she will reprise her role as ‘Mystique’ opposite Michael
Fassbender and James McAvoy. Next up, she can be seen in David O. Russell’s American
Hustle co-starring Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Bradley Cooper. The film
is set to be released by Sony Pictures on December 25, 2013.
Lawrence has
also signed on to star in and produce The Rules of Inheritance, an
adaptation of Claire Bidwell Smith's recent memoir about a woman who loses both
her parents to cancer as a young adult. Susanne Bier is set to direct the film
which will be written by Abi Morgan and distributed by Film Nation.
Previously,
Lawrence starred in Drake Doremus' Like Crazy opposite Anton Yelchin and
Felicity Jones. The film won the Grand Jury Prize at the 2011 Sundance Film
Festival. In 2011, Lawrence also starred alongside Mel Gibson and Anton Yelchin
in The Beaver directed by Jodie Foster.
Lawrence's
performance in Winter’s Bone garnered her a 2011 Oscar®
nomination for Best Actress in addition to nominations from the Screen Actors
Guild Awards®, Golden Globe® Awards, Independent Spirit
Awards and Critic's Choice Awards. Additionally, she was honored with the
Breakthrough Actress Award by the National Board of Review, the Rising Star
Award at the Palm Springs Film Festival and the New Hollywood Award at the 2010
Hollywood Film Awards®. The critically acclaimed film, directed by
Debra Granik also received an Oscar® nomination for Best Picture,
Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor in addition to winning the
2010 Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
Other film
credits include a lead role in Guillermo Arriaga's directorial debut The
Burning Plain, opposite CharlizeTheron and Kim Basinger. The film premiered
at the 65th Venice Film Festival where Lawrence won the Marcello Mastroianni
Award for Best Young Actor. She also starred in Lori Petty's Poker House
opposite Selma Blair and Bokeem Woodbine, for which she was awarded the prize
of Outstanding Performance in the Narrative Competition at the 2008 Los Angeles
Film Festival. Lawrence also starred in Relativity's Houseat the End
of The Street opposite Elisabeth Shue and Max Thieriot.
On
television, Lawrence co-starred on three seasons of the TBS series The Bill
Engvall Show. Written and created by Bill Engvall and Michael Leeson, The
Bill Engvall Show is set in a Denver suburb and the comedy follows the life
of ‘Bill Pearson' (played by Engvall), a family counselor whose own family
could use a little dose of counseling.
Reigning from Louisville, Kentucky and a childhood of local
theatre experience to her credit, Lawrence traveled to New York at age 14 to
explore a professional career in acting. She quickly caught the eye of casting
directors and started acting in film and television during the summer of 2005
and hasn't looked back.
At 20 years old, JOSH HUTCHERSON (Peeta Mellark) has
quickly become one of Hollywood's most accomplished young actors. In 2012, he was honored with CinemaCon’s
award for Breakthrough Actor, the MTV Movie Award for Best Male Performance,
Logo’s New Now Next Award for the Next Mega Star and GLAAD’s Vanguard Award.
Last year,
Hutcherson was also seen starring in Red
Dawn, a remake of the 1984 classic about a group of teenagers trying to
save their town from foreign soldiers, Journey
2: Mysterious Island alongside Michael Caine and Dwayne Johnson, the
independent feature film Detention,
in which Hutcherson also served as Executive Producer and an omnibus film
entitled Seven Days in Havana, which features seven shorts directed by
seven different directors.
This summer,
Hutcherson will lend his voice to the character of ‘Nod’ in the animated film Epic. The film tells the story of a
teenage girl in a secret universe amidst a battle in the forest and also
features the voices of Amanda Seyfried, Beyonce Knowles, Steven Tyler and Colin
Farrell. He also recently finished filming Paradise
Lost; a drama about the notorious kingpin, Pablo Escobar, which also stars
Benicio Del Toro.
In 2010,
Hutcherson co-starred alongside Annette Bening and Julianne Moore in Lisa
Cholodenko’s Academy Award® nominated feature film The Kids are All Right. The film debuted
at that year’s Sundance Film Festival, where it was acquired by Focus Features in one of the festival’s
biggest deals and premiered to
rave reviews. The film went on to garner
the feature film prize at the Berlin International Film Festival’s Teddy Awards
in addition to Screen Actors Guild®, Independent Spirit Awards and Golden Globe® nominations.
Additional film credits includeThe Vampire’s Assistant, opposite John C. Reilly and Salma Hayek;Carmel; Journey to the Center of the Earth 3-D,
the first ever high definition 3-D live performance feature; Bridge To Terabithia;Winged Creatures; Firehouse Dog;RV; Little Manhattan; Zathura; Kicking and Screaming; Howl's Moving CastleandThe
Polar Express. Hutcherson won a
Young Artist Award for Leading Young Actor for his roles in Zathura and Bridge to Terebithia.
LIAM HEMSWORTH
(Gale Hawthorne)
has a quiet intensity that transcends the big screen. Demonstrating versatility
and skill in a range of performances, Hemsworth has proven to be one of the
most sought after actors of his generation.
Hemsworth,
who starred in two of last year’s biggest box office hits—The Hunger Games, directed by Gary Ross, and Expendables 2, directed by Simon West—can now be seen starring
opposite Harrison Ford and Gary Oldman in the high stakes thriller Paranoia, directed by Robert
Luketic. In addition, he has completed production on the feature film drama Empire State with director DitoMontiel
and co-stars Dwayne Johnson and Emma Roberts. He will soon begin lensing
the crime thriller Cut Bank,
co-starring John Malkovich, Ben Kinglsey and Michael Sheen.
Born
in Melborne, Australia, Hemsworth grew up surfing on Phillip Island. The
youngest of three boys, Hemsworth always loved movies. Though he never dreamed
of becoming an actor as a young kid, he would sit down and watch movies all day
long. At the age of 17, having observed his two older brothers Luke and Chris
do television shows in Australia, Hemsworth decided he too wanted to pursue
acting seriously. He enrolled in acting classes, got an agent and started
auditioning. Hemsworth quickly landed his first big acting job on
Australia’s popular TV series Home and
Away and from there went on to book a role on Australia’s most
successful TV show Neighbors.
Landing
his first film role in the feature film Triangle,
Hemsworth discovered that his true passion was in making movies. “It’s
something new and fresh and it’s just a different energy to what I’d worked on
before, says Hemsworth. Knowing Los Angeles was the center of movie making,
Hemsworth began sending audition tapes to the states. He sent a tape to
Sylvester Stallone who within a week of receiving the tape asked Hemsworth to
come to Hollywood immediately to play the part of his son in the feature film The Expendables. Shortly before he
was to depart for Los Angeles, Hemsworth learned that the part of Stallone’s
son had been written out of the script. However, within hours of learning he
was no longer working on The Expendables
he received a call that Marvel wanted to screen test him for Thor. Though he ended up losing the role
of ‘Thor’ to his older brother Chris, it was this audition for Marvel that got
Hemsworth to Los Angeles.
Hemsworth
soon began to gain attention throughout Hollywood and, while living with his
brother Chris in their manager Will Ward’s guest cottage, Liam beat out
hundreds of actors for the part of ‘Will Blakelee’ in the film adaptation of
Nicholas Spark’s The Last Song,
directed by Julie Anne Robinson and co-starring Greg Kinnear and Miley Cyrus.
This performance garnered Hemsworth the 2010 Young Hollywood Award as well the
2010 Teen Choice Male Breakout Award.
Hemsworth,
who currently resides in Los Angeles, eagerly looks forward to more film work
with quality actors and directors. He says, “I love acting and I love movies.
At the moment, I’m just trying to find people who are doing something different
and meet people who are as passionate as I am. I have learned the
majority of what I know on set, working. You learn from watching people with
experience.”
WOODY HARRELSON’s
(Haymitch Abernathy) rare mix of intensity and charisma that consistently
surprises and delightsaudiences and critics alike in both mainstream and
independent projects. His portrayal of a casualty notification officer,
oppositeBen Foster, in Oren Moverman’sThe
Messenger garnered him a 2010 Academy Award® nomination for Best Supporting
Actor. Hewas previously nominated by the Academy, the Golden Globes® and SAG
Awards® in the category of Best Actor for his portrayal ofcontroversial
magazine publisher Larry Flynt in Milos Forman’s The People vs. Larry Flynt.
Harrelson was last seen in Louis Leterrier’sNow You See Me starring Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo, Isla Fisher, and Mélanie Laurent. This fall, Harrelson will be seen in writer/director Scott Cooper’s Out of the Furnace starring opposite Christian Bale and Casey Affleck, and will also lend his voice to Relativity’s animated film, Free Birds with Owen Wilson. Harrelson most recently wrapped production on the HBO miniseries True Detective, co-starring Matthew McConaughey, for director Cary Fukunaga.
In 2012 Harrelson starred opposite Julianne Moore and Ed Harris in the HBO film Game Change for director Jay Roach, for which he earned Emmy®, SAG®, and Golden Globe® nominations for his role as Steve Schmidt. Harrelson was most recently seen in Martin McDonagh’sSeven Psychopaths, alongside Sam Rockwell, Colin Farrell and Christopher Walken.
Other highlights from Harrelson’s film career include Rampart, which reunited him with director Oren Moverman, Ruben Fleischer’s box office hit Zombieland; Friends with Benefits; 2012; Semi-Pro; The Grand; No Country For Old Men; A Scanner Darkly; A Prairie Home Companion; Defendor; Seven Pounds; ThePrize Winner of Defiance, Ohio; North Country; The Big White; After The Sunset; Play It To The Bone; Battle In Seattle; EDtv; The Hi-Lo County; Transsiberian; The Thin Red Line; Wag The Dog; Welcome To Sarajevo; Kingpin; Natural Born Killers; Indecent Proposal;White Men Can’t Jump and was recently seen as the on screen host for director Pete McGrain’s powerful political documentaryEthos.
Harrelson first endeared himself to millions of viewers as a member of the ensemble cast of NBC's long-running hit comedy,Cheers. For his work as the affable bartender ‘Woody Boyd,’ he won an Emmy® in 1988 and was nominated four additional times during his eight-year run on the show. In 1999, he gained another Emmy® nomination when he reprised the role in a guestappearance on the spin-off series Frasier. He later made a return to television with a recurring guest role on the hit NBC series, Will and Grace.
Balancing his film and television work, in 1999 Harrelson directed his own play, Furthest From The Sun at the Theatre de laJuene Lune in Minneapolis. He followed next with the Roundabout's Broadway revival of The Rainmaker; Sam Shepherd’s The Late Henry Moss, and John Kolvenbach'sOn An Average Day opposite Kyle MacLachlan at London’s West End. Harrelson directed theToronto premiere of Kenneth Lonergan'sThis Is Our Youth at Toronto’s Berkeley Street Theatre. In the winter of 2005 Harrelsonreturned to London's West End, starring in Tennessee Williams' Night of the Iguana at the Lyric Theatre. In 2011, Harrelson co-wroteand directed the semi-autobiographical comedy Bullet for Adolf at Hart House Theatre in Toronto. In the summer of 2012 Bullet for Adolf made its Off-Broadway debut at New World Stages.
Harrelson was last seen in Louis Leterrier’sNow You See Me starring Jesse Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo, Isla Fisher, and Mélanie Laurent. This fall, Harrelson will be seen in writer/director Scott Cooper’s Out of the Furnace starring opposite Christian Bale and Casey Affleck, and will also lend his voice to Relativity’s animated film, Free Birds with Owen Wilson. Harrelson most recently wrapped production on the HBO miniseries True Detective, co-starring Matthew McConaughey, for director Cary Fukunaga.
In 2012 Harrelson starred opposite Julianne Moore and Ed Harris in the HBO film Game Change for director Jay Roach, for which he earned Emmy®, SAG®, and Golden Globe® nominations for his role as Steve Schmidt. Harrelson was most recently seen in Martin McDonagh’sSeven Psychopaths, alongside Sam Rockwell, Colin Farrell and Christopher Walken.
Other highlights from Harrelson’s film career include Rampart, which reunited him with director Oren Moverman, Ruben Fleischer’s box office hit Zombieland; Friends with Benefits; 2012; Semi-Pro; The Grand; No Country For Old Men; A Scanner Darkly; A Prairie Home Companion; Defendor; Seven Pounds; ThePrize Winner of Defiance, Ohio; North Country; The Big White; After The Sunset; Play It To The Bone; Battle In Seattle; EDtv; The Hi-Lo County; Transsiberian; The Thin Red Line; Wag The Dog; Welcome To Sarajevo; Kingpin; Natural Born Killers; Indecent Proposal;White Men Can’t Jump and was recently seen as the on screen host for director Pete McGrain’s powerful political documentaryEthos.
Harrelson first endeared himself to millions of viewers as a member of the ensemble cast of NBC's long-running hit comedy,Cheers. For his work as the affable bartender ‘Woody Boyd,’ he won an Emmy® in 1988 and was nominated four additional times during his eight-year run on the show. In 1999, he gained another Emmy® nomination when he reprised the role in a guestappearance on the spin-off series Frasier. He later made a return to television with a recurring guest role on the hit NBC series, Will and Grace.
Balancing his film and television work, in 1999 Harrelson directed his own play, Furthest From The Sun at the Theatre de laJuene Lune in Minneapolis. He followed next with the Roundabout's Broadway revival of The Rainmaker; Sam Shepherd’s The Late Henry Moss, and John Kolvenbach'sOn An Average Day opposite Kyle MacLachlan at London’s West End. Harrelson directed theToronto premiere of Kenneth Lonergan'sThis Is Our Youth at Toronto’s Berkeley Street Theatre. In the winter of 2005 Harrelsonreturned to London's West End, starring in Tennessee Williams' Night of the Iguana at the Lyric Theatre. In 2011, Harrelson co-wroteand directed the semi-autobiographical comedy Bullet for Adolf at Hart House Theatre in Toronto. In the summer of 2012 Bullet for Adolf made its Off-Broadway debut at New World Stages.
ELIZABETH BANKS
(Effie Trinket) has become one of Hollywood’s most sought after and
versatile actresses. She has appeared in What
to Expect When You’re Expecting, Man
on a Ledge opposite Sam Worthington and People
Like Us opposite Chris Pine and Michelle Pfeiffer.
She will soon be seen in Walk
of Shame, a comedy about a news anchor whose attempt at a dream job
promotion is jeopardized by a drunken night out. The film also stars James
Marsden and Sarah Wright and will release on March 14, 2014. She has also lent
her voice in The Lego Movie releasing
on February 7, 2014.
Banks is currently in production on Little Accidents opposite Boyd Holbrook. Sara Colangelo wrote and
is directing the feature adaptation of her 2010 award-winning short film of the
same name which premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival about a woman
whose life spirals downward after a town is left devastated following a mining
accident. She recently wrapped production on the independent film, Love & Mercy directed by Bill
Pohland which will take an unconventional look at the life of the celebrated
leader of The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson, and his legendary battle with mental
illness. She recently wrapped production on Every
Secret Thing directed by Amy Berg and based on the best-selling novel by
Laura Lippman. The story follows a detective who looks to unravel a mystery
surrounding missing children and the two young women who are prime suspects.
She was recently seen in Universal Pictures’ Pitch Perfect, which released on
September 28, 2012. Banks produced the film with her husband, Max Handelman,
through their company, Brownstone Productions. The cast includes Anna Kendrick,
Brittany Snow and Rebel Wilson.
In August 2011, she was seen in Our Idiot Brother opposite Paul Rudd, Emily Mortimer and
ZooeyDeschanel, directed by Jesse Peretz. Our
Idiot Brother and The Details
premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2011 and were both purchased
for distribution by The Weinstein Company.
She also starred opposite Russell Crowe in The Next Three Days, directed by Paul
Haggis, in 2010. In 2008, Banks received critical acclaim for her role as
‘First Lady Laura Bush’ opposite Josh Brolin in Oliver Stone’s W. The impressive cast included James
Cromwell, Richard Dreyfuss, Ellen Burstyn and Jeffrey Wright. In Kevin Smith’s Zack and Miri Make a Porno, Banks (Miri) and Seth Rogen (Zack)
played two broke friends who decide to cure their financial ills by making an
X-rated movie.
Banks’ additional feature credits include her breakthrough
roles in the award Academy Award® winning films Seabiscuit, in which she starred as ‘Marcela Howard’ opposite Jeff
Bridges and Tobey Maguire, and in Steven Spielberg’s Catch Me If You Can. She has
also appeared in Role Models, Meet Dave, Invincible, The 40-Year-Old
Virgin, Fred Claus, Sisters, Slither, Heights, The Baxter, The Trade, Ordinary Sinner,
The Uninvited, Daltry Calhoun, Sexual Life,
John Singleton’s Shaft with Samuel L.
Jackson and the cult hit Wet Hot American
Summer starring JaneaneGarofalo and David Hyde Pierce. She also appeared as
journalist ‘Betty Brant,’ a role that director Sam Raimi created for her, in
Columbia Pictures’ three blockbusterSpider-Man
films with Tobey Maguire as the title character.
On the small screen, Banks earned an Emmy Award®
nomination in 2011 for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her
performance as ‘Avery Jessup’ on 30 Rock. She has also appeared on ABC’s Modern Family and in a recurring role as
‘Dr. Kim Porter’ on NBC’s Scrubs. In
2007 she appeared in the CBS mini-series Comanche
Moon, Larry McMurtry’s prequel to Lonesome
Dove.
In addition to producing Pitch
Perfect, Banks also produced Disney’s 2009 sci-fi thriller The Surrogates starring Bruce Willis.
Upcoming projects for Brownstone include Tink,
a Disney live-action romantic comedy in which Banks will star as the title
character of ‘Tinkerbell;’ Forever 21,
a Dreamworks comedy which Banks will star in and produce and Too Far From Home, a Universal film
about three astronauts who were stranded on the international space station.
Her extensive theater credits include many roles in American
Conservatory Theatre productions, as well as the Guthrie Theater’s production
of Summer & Smoke directed by
David Esbjornson. In 2006 Banks played
‘Cherie,’ the female lead in William Inge’s comedy Bus Stop, as part of the Williamstown Theater Festival.
Originally from Massachusetts, Banks received her Bachelor’s
Degree from the University of Pennsylvania and her Graduate Degree at the
American Conservatory Theater. She
currently resides in Los Angeles.
Regarded
as one of the preeminent rock musicians of our time, LENNY KRAVITZ (Cinna) has transcended genre, style, race and class
into a 20-year musical career, one which revels in the rich influences of '60s
and '70s soul, rock and funk.
Kravitz’s talents as a writer, producer and
multi-instrumentalist have resonated through nine studio albums into a timeless
catalog. He has won four consecutive GRAMMY® awards, setting a
record for the most wins in the Best Male Rock Vocal Performance category.
Lenny Kravitz’s appeal has also been recognized by his peers; his collaborative
efforts are as varied as his own influences, having worked with Madonna, Slash,
Aerosmith, Jay-Z, N.E.R.D., Mick Jagger, P. Diddy and Alicia Keys.
Having sold over 38 million albums worldwide, Lenny
Kravitz’s musical success has afforded him many opportunities to fulfill his
creative vision beyond the recording industry. The
artist appeared in a supporting role in the critically-acclaimed film Precious. Most recently, he can be seen
in Lee Daniel’s The Butler (The
Weinstein Company) alongside Jane Fonda, Oprah Winfrey and Cuba Gooding Jr.
Kravitz
launched a creative firm, Kravitz Design Inc.,
whichprovides commercial and residential
design services and specializes in product development and branding. Kravitz
Design touts a portfolio of noteworthy ventures with a range that includes
chandeliers for Swarovski Crystal Palace Collection, suites at the SLS Hotel
Miami Beach and a two story penthouse recording studio at the Setai Hotel and
Residences. Most recently Kravitz Design Inc. has undertaken the creative
vision for the downtown Miami 47-story bay front condominium project, Paramount
Bay as well as a collection of ceramic tiles for Lea Ceramiche called Goccia
and the re-interpretation of the Mademoiselle chair for Kartell.
In 2009, the 20th anniversary
deluxe edition of Lenny Kravitz’s debut, Let Love Rule, was issued. The
project was followed by the release of his most recent studio album Black
and White America.
Philip Seymour Hoffman (Plutarch Heavensbee) has completed production on A Most Wanted Man. He was last
seen in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master
and A Late Quartet with Christopher
Walken and Catherine Keener. Previously Hoffman
appeared in The Ides Of March,
directed by George Clooney and in Moneyball
with Brad Pitt, directed by Bennett Miller. Hoffman made his feature
directorial debut with Jack Goes Boating,
which was produced by Cooper’s Town Productions and is based on the play of the
same name. Other recent film credits include Synecdoche, New
York; Doubt; The Savages; Charlie Wilson’s War and Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead. It was Hoffman’s performance
in Capote—also directed by Bennett
Miller and produced through his company, Cooper’s Town Productions—for which he earned an Academy Award®.
As an actor, his theatre credits include the
Broadway revival of Death of a Salesman,
a limited run in Othello, LAByrinth’s
production of Jack Goes Boating, Long Day’s Journey Into Night, The Seagull,
True West, Defying Gravity, The Merchant
of Venice, Shopping and F*cking
and The Author’s Voice.
His theatre directing credits
include the world premieres of The Last
Days of Judas Iscariot, Our Lady of 121stStreet, Jesus Hopped the
‘A’ Train, In Arabia We’d All Be
Kings and The Little Flower of East
Orange—all written by Stephen AdlyGuirgis and produced by LAByrinth.
Also produced by LAByrinth, Hoffman directed A Family for All Occasions written by Bob Glaudini. Additionally he
directed Rebecca Gilman’s The Glory of
Living at MCC Theatre. He travelled to Australia to direct Andrew
Upton’s Riflemind at the famed Sydney
Theatre Company and later mounted the play in London. He also directed Brett C.
Leonard’s The Long Red Road for the
Goodman Theatre in Chicago and returned to the Sydney Theatre Company to direct
True West.
Critically
acclaimed actor JEFFREY WRIGHT (Beetee)
has continually pushed at the boundaries of his craft with inspired
performances over a celebrated career spanning the worlds of theatre, film and
television. Wright can most recently be seen with Mark Walhberg, Russell
Crowe and Katherine Zeta-Jones in Allen Hughes' political thriller Broken City, released by FOX.
Additionally, Wright completed work on Jim Jarmusch’s independent film Only Lovers Left Alive, and earlier in
2012, he completed filming on two additional independents – A Single Shot, directed by David
Rosenthal, and The Inevitable Defeat of
Mister and Pete, directed by George Tilman.
Wright garnered a Tony Award® in 1994 for his
work in Tony Kushner's Pulitzer Prize-winning epic Angels in America and reprised his Angels role in HBO's 2003 mini-series adaptation of the play,
earning both a Golden Globe® and an Emmy® for his
groundbreaking performance. His brilliant portrayal of the renowned and
controversial graffiti artist, ‘Jean Michel Basquiat,’ in the 1996 film Basquiat, received widespread praise
from critics and earned him an Independent Spirit Award nomination. On the
other end of the spectrum, Wright has taken on roles in 2011’s Source Code and the 2006 and 2008 James
Bond films, Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace; and also in 2008,
starred as Muddy Waters in Cadillac
Records and as Colin Powell in Oliver Stone's W. In 2005, he co-starred in the award-winning film Syriana, and his other credits include
Jonathan Demme's remake of The Manchurian
Candidate; Jim Jarmusch'sBroken
Flowers, earning another Independent Spirit Award nomination; Ang Lee's Ride with the Devil, and Shaft. For his portrayal of Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr. in HBO's Boycott, he
received a 2001 AFI award. Wright, a gifted theater actor, earned an Obie award
and a Tony® nomination for his work in Susan-Lori Parks’ 2001
Pulitzer Prize-winning play Topdog/Underdog,
which was directed by George C. Wolfe.
Award winning actor STANLEY
TUCCI (Caesar Flickerman) has appeared in over 50 films and countless television
shows. He has appeared in over a dozen plays on and off Broadway and has been
behind the camera working as a writer, director, and producer.
Tucci is well known for his role as Julia Child’s husband in
the 2008 blockbuster hit Julie and Julia.
Tucci was nominated for an Academy Award®, Golden
Globe Award®, BAFTA Award, SAG Award® and received a
Broadcast Film Critics nomination for his performance in Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones.
Next up for Tucci is the fantasy-adventure film Percy Jackson & The Olympians: Sea Of
Monsters. Scheduled to be released in August of 2013, this is the follow-up
to the worldwide hit Percy Jackson &
The Olympians: The Lightning Thief. He can be seen in the recently released
film The Company You Keep directed by
Robert Redford and Some Velvet Morning—a
film that premiered at The Tribeca Film Festival directed by Neil LaBute that
also stars Alice Eve. In the fall of 2013, Tucci will appear in the Bill Condon
directed The Fifth Estate, a film
about the relationship between WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and his early
supporter and colleague Daniel Domscheit-Berg.
In addition to his various accomplishments in film, Tucci
was also nominated for an Emmy® for his guest role on ER. His appearance on Monk, received critical praise and an
Emmy® Award in the category of Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy
Series.
Furthermore Tucciwon
an Emmy® and a Golden Globe® for his role in TV movie Winchell. His performance as the fast-talking tattler, who
exposed secrets and scandals left audiences and critics alike singing his
praises. Winchell, directed by
Paul Mazursky, provided Tucci with one of the juiciest roles of his diverse
career.
Tucci was also awarded a
Golden Globe® for his role in
HBO movie Conspiracy. His brilliant
portrayal of Lt. Colonel Adolf Eichmann delivered a truly petrifying
experience, where he often deceived others with his all but friendly smile.
Tucci’s
additional endeavors include being a writer, director, and producer. He
premiered the film Blind Date at The
Sundance Film Festival—directing, starring, and co-writing this Van Gogh
remake. Another directorial effort was USA Films’ Joe Gould’s Secret, which starred Ian Holm as bohemian writer Joe
Gould and Tucci as Joseph Mitchell, the famed writer for The New Yorker.
The film, set in New York’s Greenwich Village in the 1940s, tells the story of
the strange meeting and long lasting friendship between Gould and Mitchell, as
well as the stories Mitchell wrote about Gould and his life.
Big Night, Tucci’s first effort as
co-director, co-screenwriter and actor on the same film, earned him numerous
accolades, including the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the 1996 Sundance
Film Festival, a Recognition of Excellence by the National Board of Review, an
Independent Spirit Award, The Critics Prize at the 1996 Deauville Film Festival
and honors from the New York Film Critics and the Boston Society of Film
Critics.
Tucci’s
second project, The Imposters—a film
he wrote, directed, co-produced and starred in—was an Official Selection at the
1998 Cannes Film Festival and was acquired by Fox Searchlight Pictures later
that year. The 1930’s farce starred Tucci and Oliver Platt as a pair of
out-of-work actors who find themselves aboard a cruise ship with passengers
Steve Buscemi, Alfred Molina, Lili Taylor and Hope Davis.
His
work on television includes his appearance as a re-occurring guest star on
TNT’s Bull, Equal Justice, Wiseguy, The Equalizer, Thirtysomething and The
Street. Tucci earned an Emmy® nomination for his work in Murder One.
He
has appeared in many plays including Frankie
& Johnny in the Claire de Lune, Execution
of Hope, The Iceman Cometh, Brighton Beach Memoirs and The Misanthrope. He has also
performed in a number of off-Broadway plays at Yale Repertory Theater and SUNY
Purchase where he first studied acting.
Stanley made his directorial debut on Broadway with a
revival of Ken Ludwig’s Lend Me a Tenor
starring Tony Shalhoub. The production received a Tony Award®
nomination for Best Revival of a Play.
Tucci’s
additional film credits include Jack The
Giant Slayer, Captain America: The
First Avenger, Margin Call, Burlesque, Easy A, The Tale Of
Despereaux, Kit Kitteredge: An
American Girl, Swing Vote, What Just Happened, The Devil Wears Prada, Shall
We Dance, The Terminal, The Life And Death of Peter Sellers, Spin, Road To Perdition, America’s
Sweethearts, Sidewalks of New York,
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Alarmist, Deconstructing Harry, The
Daytrippers, Big Trouble, A Life Less Ordinary, Kiss of Death, Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, It Could Happen to You, The
Pelican Brief, Prelude to a Kiss,
In the Soup, Billy Bathgate and Slaves of
New York.
The Tucci Cookbook was released in October of 2012
where it reached the New York Times Best Sellers List.
Tucci
serves on the Board of Directors of The Food Bank for New York City. Tucci
resides in New York.
DONALD SUTHERLAND
(President Snow) is one of the most respected, prolific and versatile of
motion picture actors, with an astonishing resume of well over one hundred and
thirty films, including such classics as Robert Aldrich’s The Dirty Dozen; Robert Altman's M*A*S*H; John Schlesinger’s The
Day of the Locust; Robert Redford's OrdinaryPeople;
Bernardo Bertolucci’s1900; Philip
Kaufman’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers;
Nicolas Roeg’sDon’t Look Now with
Julie Christie; Alan Pakula'sKlute with Jane Fonda; Federico
Fellini's Fellini’s Casanova and in
Brian Hutton’s Kelly’s Heroes with
Clint Eastwood, who later directed him in Space
Cowboys.
Sutherland is currently filming Forsaken, a period Canadian Western, co-starring opposite his son,
Kiefer. Just prior, he completed filming
a starring role in Basmati Blues on
location in India.
Recently he starred in the highly-successful long form
adaptation of Ken Follett’s best-seller, The
Pillars of the Earth; in the Roman epic adventure, The Eagle, opposite Channing Tatum and Jamie Bell for director
Kevin Macdonald; in Simon West’s The Mechanic
with Jason Statham and Ben Foster; in Seth Gordon’s Horrible Bosses as Colin Farrell’s father and in Mary McGuckian’s Man on the Train with U2’s Larry Mullen,
Jr.
He has appeared as Nicole Kidman’s father in Anthony
Minghella’sColdMountain; as CharlizeTheron’s
father in F. Gary Gray’s The Italian Job
and as ‘Mr. Bennett,’ Keira Knightley’s father, in Pride and Prejudice. For the
latter he received a Chicago Film Critics nomination.
Sutherland’s other films include Paul Mazursky’sAlex in Wonderland; Dalton Trumbo’s Johnny Got His Gun; Bud Yorkin’sStart the Revolution Without Me; John
Sturges’ The Eagle HasLanded; Herbert
Ross’ Max Dugan Returns; Louis
Malle’sCrackers; Phillip Borsos’ Bethune; Oliver Stone’s JFK; Ron Howard’s Backdraft;
Richard Marquand’s Eye of the Needle;
EuzhanPalcy’sA Dry WhiteSeason with
Marlon Brando; Richard Pearce’s Threshold,
for which he won the 1983 Genie Award as Best Actor; Fred Schepisi’s film
adaptation of John Guare’sSix Degrees of
Separation; Robert Towne’s Without
Limits; and John Landis’ National
Lampoon’s Animal House, in which he made a memorable cameo appearance. He
has starred as the voice of ‘General Stone’ in the animated feature of the
manga classic, Astro Boy; in Andy
Tennant’s Fool’s Gold; in Griffin Dunne’s
FiercePeople with Diane Lane; in
Robert Towne’s Ask the Dust with
Salma Hayek and Colin Farrell; in American
Gun with Forrest Whitaker; in An
American Haunting with Sissy Spacek; in Landof
the Blind with Ralph Fiennes and in Aurora
Borealis with Louise Fletcher and Juliette Lewis. He is part of a sterling ensemble of
on-camera readers in the biographical feature on the life of Dalton Trumbo, Trumbo.
In television, Sutherland won both Emmy® and
Golden Globe® awards as Best Supporting Actor for his performance in
the HBO film Citizen X and he won a
Golden Globe® for his portrayal of Clark Clifford, advisor to President Lyndon
B. Johnson, in the HBO historical drama Path
to War, directed by the late John Frankenheimer.
Sutherland stars alongside an international cast in the
action crime series, Crossing Lines, currently
featured on NBC-TV and other networks worldwide. He begins filming the second
season this fall in Prague. Sutherland co-starred with Peter Krause in the
ABC-TV series Dirty SexyMoney. For his performance as the family patriarch,
Tripp Darling, he was nominated for a 2007 Golden Globe® as Best
Supporting Actor. Prior to that, he
co-starred with Geena Davis in the ABC drama series Commander-in-Chief, and was nominated for a Golden Globe®
as Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of House Speaker, Nathan
Templeton. At the same time, he was
nominated for a Golden Globe® as Best Actor for his performance
opposite Mira Sorvino in Lifetime Television’s much-lauded miniseries, Human Trafficking.
On stage, Sutherland starred with Justin Kirk and Julianna
Margulies in a sold-out, critically acclaimed, Lincoln Center engagement of Jon
Robin Baitz’sTen Unknowns. For that performance he received an Outer
Critics Circle Award nomination for Best Actor. He also starred in the London,
Toronto and Los Angeles productions of Enigmatic
Variations, an English language translation (by his son Roeg Sutherland) of
Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt’s French play.
Donald Sutherland was appointed an officer of the Order of
Canada in 1978 and a Chevalier des Arts etLettres in France five years
later. In 2012, he was awarded the
highest French honor, the Officier des Arts etLettres.
WILLOW
SHIELDS (Primrose Everdeen) born and raised in New Mexico, is most notably
recognized for her role as ‘Primrose Everdeen’ in the epic portrayal of the fan
favorite book series The Hunger Games.
Shields began acting at the age of seven years old and thanks to her unique
look, down-to-earth personality and easy to work with demeanor, she has quickly
caught the eye of Hollywood big wigs.
Shields became interested in acting when she
followed her brother to a handful of auditions and her passion and drive
quickly shined through. She booked her first guest starring role as ‘Liza
Rogan’ on USA’s In Plain Sight. She
continued onto roles in the Hallmark Hall of Fame movie Beyond the Blackboard alongside Emily VanCamp as ‘Grace,’ and R.L.
Stine’s The Haunting Hour as ‘Eve.’
However, it was her role as ‘Primrose Everdeen’ in The Hunger Games that put Shields on the map as one-to- watch.
Shields caught the eye of world famous fashion designer Marc Jacobs who was
adamant on dressing the young starlet for a variety of events and award shows,
even coining her as his muse in Nylon magazine.
Shields grew up
with her older brother River and fraternal twin sister Autumn in an animal
loving home with their four dogs (Jude, Arizona, Polly and Neo) and one pet cat
named Clue. During her downtime she enjoys photography, dance and spending time
with her family and friends. She dreams of one day learning how to design and
create her own clothing—everything from drawing to assembly of the garments. A
charity that she holds near and dear to her heart is Operation Smile, which
gives children a new lease on life by providing pro-bono surgeries to fix cleft
palate, cleft lip and other facial deformities across the globe.
Since graduating from The London Academy of Music and
Dramatic Art in 2009 SAM CLAFLIN (Finnick Odair) has worked on a number of prestigious
projects. He has most recently been seen
in the UK on our screens opposite Hilary Swank in Richard Curtis’ BBC One
drama, Mary & Marthawhich was
shown to coincide with Red Nose Day and to raise awareness about malaria in
Africa. Last year Claflin starredinbox office hit Snow White and the Huntsman playing ‘Prince William’ alongside
Kristen Stewart, CharlizeTheron and Chris Hemsworth. The previous year Claflin
made a name for himself in the role of a ‘Phillip,’ a youthful missionary and
the romantic lead in Pirates of the
Caribbean: On Stranger Tides—the fourth feature in the hit series.
Claflin just wrappedLove, Rosie opposite
Lily Collins. The film version of Cecilia Ahern’s novel Where Rainbows end sees Claflin and Collins star as lovers in this
romantic comedy set in Dublin and Toronto. This and the new Hammer
Horror film, The Quiet Ones, in which
Claflin stars opposite Jarred Harris, are due out in 2014. Calflin is currently filming Lone Scherfig’s new film, Posh, based on the London stage play of
the same name alongside Max Irons, Douglas Booth and Jessica Brown Findlay. The
film follows students at Oxford University as they join the infamous Riot Club,
where reputations can be made or destroyed over the course of a single evening.
Claflin has also starred in a
number of outstanding television projects. Last year he played ‘Jack’ in
White Heat, an epic drama for the BBC
charting the lives of seven friends from 1965 to the present day. In this semi-autobiographical series written
by award winning Paula Milne, Claflin starred alongside Claire Foy, Reece
Ritchie and MyAnnaBuring. He also starred in Unitedalongside
David Tennant, Dougray Scott and Jack O'Connell. In this one-off
film for the BBC Claflin played a talented footballer, Duncan Edwards,
in the tragic story of the Munich air crash of 1958 that killed and injured a
number of members in the Manchester United team.
In 2010 Claflin was seen on
television in two outstanding dramas including the hit Channel 4
mini-series Pillars of the Earthbased on Ken Follett’s novel of the same
name. In this drama Claflin plays ‘Richard’
alongside Eddie Redmayne, Hayley
Atwell and Ian McShane. He also starred
in the critically acclaimed adaptation
of William Boyd’s Any Human Heart for
Channel 4 which won a BAFTA Award for best drama serial. Claflin played the younger years of lead
character ‘Logan,’ sharing the role with Jim Broadbent and Matthew
Macfadyen. The same year he also appeared
in The Lost Future, asci-fi adventure in which he played ‘Kaleb’
alongside Sean Bean and Annabelle Wallis.
Claflin’s theatre credits whilst at LAMDA include the role
of Dorimant in Man of Mode, the title
role in Tommy,Silvius in As You Like It and Davey in Love Is.
LYNN COHEN (Mags) is best known to audiences as ‘Magda’ in the HBO series
Sex and theCity (and the two subsequent feature films based on the
series) and for hercritically acclaimed portrayal of ‘Golda Meier’ in Steven
Spielberg’s Munich.
Cohen can soon be seen on the
big screen in They Came Together with Paul Rudd. Cohen has also appeared in EagleEye;
Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York; A Life Before Her Eyes
with UmaThurman; Deception with Hugh Jackman and Ewan McGregor; Invincible
withMark Wahlberg, Louis Malle’sVanya on 42nd Street; Julie Taymor’sAcrossthe
Universe, Woody Allen’s Manhattan Murder Mystery and many others.
She has recurring roles on
the television series Damages, Bored to Deathand Law and Order. On stage she performed in Macbeth (Public Theatre); Ivanov
(LincolnCenter), as well as other works at New York Theater Workshop, New York
ShakespeareFestival, Primary Stages and EST. In addition, she appeared at
theaters acrossthe country. She is a Fox Fellow, a recipient of a Bowden Award
from NewDramatists and a member of the Actors Studio, New York Theatre
Workshop,EST, and Actors Center.
As a rising
actress distinguished by her versatility and multidimensional roles, JENA MALONE (Johanna Mason) continues
to evolve with each new project.
Later this
year Malone can be seen in The Wait opposite ChloëSevigny. It is about
two sisters who decide to keep their deceased mother in their home after being
informed that she will come back to life.
She most
recently wrapped production on Paul Thomas Anderson's Inherent Vice for
Warner Bros. The film co-stars Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson, Sean Penn and
Joaquin Phoenix and will be released in 2014. Additionally, Malone recently
wrapped production on Mitchell Lichtenstein's Angelica, a psychological
thriller set in 1880s London based on the novel of the same name by bestselling
author Arthur Phillips (Prague,The Egyptologist). Malone will
play ‘Constance,’ a young shop girl who falls for and marries Dr. Joseph
Barton. After the difficult childbirth of their daughter Angelica,
doctor-ordered celibacy creates a rift in the Bartons' marriage and a ghostly
force enters their home.
She is also
attached to the highly anticipated film, Lonely Hunter. In this biopic,
Malone will star in the title role as ‘Carson McCullers'.’
In spring
2013, Malone directed her first music video for the band Lavender Diamond. The
video for The Incorruptible Heart was
released exclusively on MTV Buzzworthy.
Malone
starred opposite Kevin Costner and Bill Paxton in the History Channel's
mini-seriesHatfields&McCoyswhich isbased on a true story, and
chronicles the bloody hostilities between two clans that escalated to the point
of near war between two states. The mini-series broke cable records and became
the new most-watched entertainment telecast of all time on cable and also
earned an Emmy® nomination for Outstanding Mini-Series and a Golden
Globe® nomination for Best Mini-Series.
Malone also
recently starred in the independent feature In Our Nature opposite John
Slattery and Zach Gilford about an estranged father and son who are forced to
share a vacation home with their respective girlfriends after a scheduling
mistake. The film premiered at SXSW as well as the Sarasota Film Festival and
was released on video-on-demand and DVD in February 2013.
Previously,
Malone starred in Zack Snyder’s Sucker Punch, Ami Mann's Dakota,
Oren Moverman'sThe Messenger, Sean Penn's Into the Wild, Anthony
Minghella'sCold Mountain, BrianDannelly'sSaved! and Joe Wright's Pride
and Prejudice. As a young actress, Malone starred opposite Julia Roberts
and Susan Sarandon in Stepmom—the cult classic, Donnie Darko and
her very first role in the independent film Bastard Out of Carolina
which earned her an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Debut
Performance.
Malone has
guest starred on several television series including Law & Order and
Chicago Hope. Her performance in the TV film Hope earned Malone a
Golden Globe® nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a
Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV.
Malone
currently resides in Los Angeles.
AMANDA PLUMMER (Wiress)
has received critical acclaim for her work in film, television and stage. Her
impressive film work includes Terry Gilliam’s The Fisher King as ‘Lydia’
(for which she received a BAFTA nomination), and Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp
Fiction for which she received an American Comedy Award nomination for her
memorable performance as ‘Honey Bunny.’ Her other film work includes Sydney
Lumet’s Daniel, Michael Winterbottom’s Butterfly Kiss, Isabel
Coixet’s My Life Without Me, Eduardo Guedes’ Pax, and Larry
Clark’s Ken Park. Her recent work includes Lee Isaac Chung’s Abgail
Harm, Amin Matalqa’s Strangely in Love, Eriko Kitagawa’s Soulier
de Paques, Mary McGuckian’s Inconceivable and Making of Plus One,
Justin Lerner’s Girlfriend (Official Selection of the 2010 Toronto Film
Festival) and Shunji Iwai’s Vampire (World Dramatic Cinema Competition
at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival).
Plummer’s
stage roles are as varied and notable as her film credits. She won a Tony®,
a Drama Desk award and a Boston Critics Circle award for her work as ‘Agnes’ in
Agnes of God opposite Geraldine Page.
She received a Theatre World award and an Outer Critics Circle award and was
nominated for a Tony Award® and a Drama Desk award for her
performance as ‘Jo’ in A Taste of Honey
with Valerie French. She was also nominated for a Tony Award® for
her performance as ‘Eliza Doolittle’ in Pygmalion
opposite Peter O’Toole. Other Broadway credits include The Glass Menagerie with Jessica Tandy and as ‘Dolly’ in George
Bernard Shaw’s You Never Can Tell. Her
Off Broadway credits include Sam Shepard’s A
Life of the Mind, Tracy Letts’ Killer
Joe with Michael Shannon and Tennessee William’s The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Any More with Elizabeth
Ashley. Plummer’s other Tennessee William’s roles include ‘Alma’ in
Summer and Smoke, ‘Polly’ in Gnagdes Fraulein and the world premiere
of One Exception—all at Hartford
Stage Company directed by Michael Wilson. She had the great honor of
working with Vanessa Redgrave and Lynn Redgrave on a workshop of Lenka
Udovicki’s Waiting for Godot as Lucky
at the Ulysses theatre in the former Yugoslavia.
Plummer’s work in
television, screen and stage has been recognized with three Emmy Awards®,
one Emmy® nomination, a Golden Globe® nomination, a
Saturn award, a Cable Ace award and the Hollywood Drama Critics award for her
‘Juliet’ in Romeo and Juliet. She is
also the recipient of the Anti-Defamation League Award.
Born
and raised in Belfast, Northern Ireland, PAULA MALCOMSON
(Katniss’ Mother) has worked extensively in television for the past
last decade. She is probably best known for her role as Trixie on HBO’s Deadwood, for which she earned a SAG
Award® nomination for Best Ensemble Cast. Other notable work
includes the BattlestarGalactica prequel
Caprica, and Sons of Anarchy, to name a few. Her early work includes films
such as Tombstone, The Green Mile, AI: Artificial Intelligence, and Hamlet.
She
recently returned to television in Showtime’s Ray Donovan, opposite Liev Schreiber.
META GOLDING (Enobaria)
spent her childhood overseas following her father's career as an envoy to the
United Nations. She was raised in the United States, India, Haiti, France
and Italy. After an injury sidelined her career as a figure skater, she
brought her love of performance from the ice to the stage.
Her ability to speak three languages and various other
dialects made this transition come naturally. Golding started acting in
Italian theatre before heading back to the United States to attend Cornell
University where she obtained degrees in theatre arts and international
relations. Straight out of school, she was cast in ABC’s daytime drama Loving and soon after the feature
films Louis and Frank, Kiss The Girls, and Surrogates
followed.
Her work in television is extensive. Her credits include a
series regular on the ABC’s Daybreak,
major character arcs on CSI and Criminal Minds, as well as stand out
guest starring roles on House and Cold Case—just to name a few. Golding
donates some of her spare time to Renaissance
Jacmelienne and Partners in Health in Haiti.
She currently resides in Los Angeles, CA.
Originally
from Ohio, BRUNO GUNN (Brutus) caught the attention of NYC audiences and
critics performing on stage with award winning companies such as UBU Rep
and Ensemble Studio Theatre.
His
first taste of Hollywood came when Woody Allen cast him in Celebrity.
Supporting roles in Mickey Blue Eyes and 28 Days quickly
followed. Bruno has co-starred in a variety of critically acclaimed indies
including Oxygen, Bad Penny, Herbie Fully Loaded, Battlefield
America and the very successful box-office comedy, Bad Teacher.
Gunn is frequently seen guest starring on the small screen
as well. TV credits include: Sons
of Anarchy, True Blood, The Office, Curb Your Enthusiasm, NCIS:
Los Angeles, CSI, NCIS, Prison Break and HBO’s Oz.
He currently resides in Los Angeles, CA.
ALAN RITCHSON (Gloss)
has carved a space for himself on both the large and small screens since he
made the trek from a small town in Florida to Los Angeles. Frequently relocating as the middle son of a
military family, Alan learned to adapt and entertain in order to build
friendships in new and unfamiliar environments.
Certainly this has been a key ingredient in his success so far in the
industry.
Alan’s early credits include portraying ‘Aquaman’ in the
long running series Smallville. This marked the first portrayal of the
superhero in an officially licensed live-action production.
Ritchson has also taken on a grittier leading man role in
the independent film market with the modern-day western Rex.
In contrast, he also made quite a comedic impression with
his love-to-hate-him Thad Castle character on the football comedy Blue Mountain State. He parlayed his comedic skills to work with
Rebel Wilson in her CBS pilot Super Fun
Night.
Coming soon, Alan can be seen as the District 1 victor,
Gloss, in Catching Fire; the second
installment of the hugely successful Hunger
Games franchise, and in 2014 as ‘Raphael,’ the cool but crude Ninja Turtle,
in the Michael Bay/Paramount Studios Teenage
Ninja Mutant Turtles franchise.
Alan Ritchson is managed by Michael Yanni and represented
theatrically by UTA.
STEPHANIE LEIGH SCHLUND (Cashmere) started her acting career on a
visit to Los Angeles where her model looks booked her an audition and quickly a
role on CBS’ The Price is Right.
Her additional film credits
include her role as Meghann Blakelee in The
Last Song which also starred Liam Hemsworth and this year’s Sundance Film
Festival film entry A.C.O.D.
Stephanie’s additional television
credits include Fox’s The Following,
Lifetime’s Drop Dead Diva and Fox’s Past Life.
The Atlanta native splits her time between the east
and west coast and enjoys art, global travel and painting.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
FRANCIS LAWRENCE (Director) made his feature film debut with Constantine, based on the Hellblazer comic book, starting Keanu Reeves and Rachel Weisz. That was followed by the 2007 hit movie, I Am Legend, a science fiction-horror-action-disaster film adapted from the Richard Matheson novel of the same name, starring Will Smith. In 2011, Lawrence directed Water for Elephants, based on the best-selling novel by Sara Gruen and starring Reese Witherspoon, Robert Pattinson and Christoph Waltz.
Lawrence is also a noted music
video director, having won a GRAMMY® Award (Lady Gaga, Bad Romance), Latin GRAMMY®
(Shakira, Whenever Whatever) and
multiple VMA awards. He has worked with artists such as Jay-Z, Britney
Spears, Beyoncé, Pink, Gwen Stefani, Jennifer Lopez, Aerosmith, Janet Jackson
and many others. Lawrence has also directed commercials for many high
profile clients including The Gap, Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, Coca-Cola,
Pepsi, L’Oreal, Bacardi, McDonald’s, Disneyland, Oldsmobile, Covergirl®
and Maybelline®.
Lawrence is also experienced in the world of television. In
2008, he served as director and executive producer on the pilot and several
episodes of the acclaimed series Kings. In 2011 he directed the
pilot episode of Touch featuring Kiefer Sutherland and served as an
executive producer on the FOX series.
Bestselling author SUZANNE COLLINS (Co-screenwriter,
based on the novel by, Executive Producer) first made her mark in
children’s literature with the New York Times bestselling Underland Chronicles for middle grade readers. Her debut for readers aged 12 and up, The Hunger Games (September 2008), was
an instant bestseller, appealing to both teen readers and adults. It was called
“addictive” by Stephen King in Entertainment Weekly, and “amazing” by Stephenie
Meyer on her website. It has appeared on
the New York Times bestseller
list for more than 180 consecutive weeks/more than three consecutive years
since publication, and there are more than 36.5 million copies of all three
books in the trilogy, The Hunger Games (September 2008), Catching Fire (September 2009), andMockingjay
(August 2010), in print in the
U.S. to date. Foreign publishing rights for The
Hunger Games trilogy have been sold into 47 territories.
Suzanne Collins also had a successful and prolific
career writing for children’s television. She has worked on the staffs of
several Nickelodeon shows, including the Emmy®-nominated
hit Clarissa Explains It All and The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo. She
received a Writer’s Guild of America nomination in animation for co-writing the
critically acclaimed Christmas special, Santa,
Baby!
In 2010 Collins was named to the TIME 100 list as well
as the Entertainment WeeklyEntertainers
of the Year list. In 2011 Fast Company named her to their 100 Most Creative
People in Business. Suzanne Collins lives with her family in Connecticut.
JON KILIK
(Producer) has become one of New
York’s most notable film producers, collaborating with a wide range of auteur
directors to create a body of work with an emphasis on human values and social
issues.
In 1988, Kilik began his partnership with
Spike Lee and has gone on to produce twelve of Lee’s films. They include Inside
Man, Clockers, Malcolm X,
and the groundbreaking Do The Right Thing, which was recently selected
by The Smithsonian Institute for The National Film Archives. Kilik also
produced Robert De Niro’s highly acclaimed directorial debut, A Bronx Tale,
based on the play by ChazzPalminteri.
In 1995, Kilik produced Tim Robbins’
Academy Award® winner, Dead Man Walking, based on Sister Helen Prejean’s
account of her work with Louisiana death row inmates, starring Susan Sarandon
and Sean Penn. The same year he produced Julian Schnabel’s directorial debut, Basquiat,
starring Jeffrey Wright as Jean-Michel Basquiat and David Bowie as Andy Warhol.
Next, Kilik teamed with Gary Ross and Steven Soderbergh to produce Ross’
directorial debut, Pleasantville, a comic look at the alternate worlds
of the American family in the 1950s and 1990s featuring Tobey Maguire and Reese
Witherspoon.
In 2000, Kilik produced Julian Schnabel’s Before
Night Falls, based on the autobiography of Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas,
starring Javier Bardem. Before Night Fallspremiered at the Venice Film
Festival where it won the Grand Jury Prize and Best Actor awards. The same
year, Kilik also produced Ed Harris’ directorial debut, Pollock,
starring Harris as American painter Jackson Pollock. Ed Harris and Javier Bardem were each
nominated for the Best Actor Oscar® at the 2001 Academy Awards®.
Next, Kilik traveled to the Pine Ridge
Indian Reservation where he produced Skins, directed by Chris Eyre. The film features Graham Greene as a Native
American who returns home from service in Viet Nam but cannot survive in his
Pine Ridge, South Dakota home. In 2004, Jon produced Oliver Stone’s Alexander.
Kilik returned to New York in 2005 to
produce the very personal Broken Flowers, by
writer/director Jim Jarmusch, starring Bill Murray and
winner of the Cannes Film Festival Grand Jury Prize in 2005.
Kilik began another international
production when he partnered with Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu to produce Babel.
The shoot took place in Morocco, Mexico and Japan. The four uniquely interwoven
stories are in Arabic, Spanish, English and Japanese.Babelpremiered at
the 2006 Cannes Film Festival where it won the prize for Best Director, and
went on to win the Golden Globe® Award for Best Feature Film Drama and was nominated
for seven Academy Awards®, including Best Picture.
In 2007 Kilik produced Julian Schnabel’s The
Diving Bell and the Butterfly, based on the inspiring autobiography by
Jean-Dominique Bauby. Kilik won his second Golden Globe® for The Diving Belland
the film was nominated for four Academy Awards®.
In 2008 Kilik produced the rock and roll
documentary, Lou Reed’s BERLIN, directed by Julian Schnabel as well as
executive producing Jim Jarmusch’sLimits Of Control, Spike Lee’s Miracle
At St. Annaand Oliver Stone’s W. In addition to Biutiful, most recently Kilikhas produced Julian
Schnabel’s Miralin Israel and Palestine.
Jon was born in Newark, New Jersey and
grew up in Millburn. He graduated from the University of Vermont and moved to
New York in 1979 to pursue a career in filmmaking. He returned to his Vermont
alma mater to receive an honorary doctorate and deliver the commencement
address to the class of 2003.
SIMON BEAUFOY
(Co-Screenwriter) is currently adapting National Book Award finalist Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk for Film
Four.
The Full Monty was
Beaufoy's first screenplay. It was nominated for four Academy Awards®
as well as winning a BAFTA for Best Film in 1997. He has recently
adapted his script as a stage play which will open in London's West End in
February after a hugely successful regional run in Sheffield.
In 2009, Slumdog
Millionaire won eight Academy Awards®, including Best Adapted
Screenplay and Best Picture. Beaufoy won WGA, Golden Globe®
and National Board of Review awards for the film as well.
Beaufoy and Danny Boyle were nominated again for Best
Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay for 127
Hours in 2010.
His most recent film, Salmon
Fishing in the Yemen, was nominated for three Golden Globes®
including Best Picture.
His other films include Among
Giants, This is Not a Love Song, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, the BBC
miniseries Burn Up and Yasmin.
NINA JACOBSON
(Producer) has built an impressive 20-year career as a senior film executive
at three major motion picture studios. Her first film as producer and the
first film for her company, Color Force, was Diary of a Wimpy Kid which grossed over $75 million worldwide and
led to the production of successful sequels Diary
of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules and Diary
of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days. Jacobson produced The Hunger Games based on Suzanne Collins’ best-selling novel.
Released in March 2012, the record-breaking film took in $155 million
domestically in its opening weekend. Jacobson also produced the film One Day starring Anne Hathaway and Jim
Sturgess and based on the best-selling novel by David Nicholls.
Prior to forming Color Force, Jacobson was president of the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, where she oversaw script development and film production for Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures. During her tenure, 15 of Jacobson’s projects grossed over $100 million domestically including Pirates of the Caribbean, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and theWardrobe and The Princess Diaries. The Pirates of the Caribbean franchise became the highest grossing film in Disney’s history generating almost three billion dollars in worldwide box office.
Before joining the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, Jacobson was a senior film executive at DreamWorks SKG, where she developed What Lies Beneath and originated the idea of DreamWorks’ first animated feature, Antz. She also held positions at Universal, Parkes/MacDonald Productions, Silver Pictures and began her career at Disney Sunday Movie.
Jacobson is a graduate of Brown University and currently lives in Brentwood with her partner Jennifer and their three children, Noah, Josie and William.
Prior to forming Color Force, Jacobson was president of the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, where she oversaw script development and film production for Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures. During her tenure, 15 of Jacobson’s projects grossed over $100 million domestically including Pirates of the Caribbean, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and theWardrobe and The Princess Diaries. The Pirates of the Caribbean franchise became the highest grossing film in Disney’s history generating almost three billion dollars in worldwide box office.
Before joining the Walt Disney Motion Picture Group, Jacobson was a senior film executive at DreamWorks SKG, where she developed What Lies Beneath and originated the idea of DreamWorks’ first animated feature, Antz. She also held positions at Universal, Parkes/MacDonald Productions, Silver Pictures and began her career at Disney Sunday Movie.
Jacobson is a graduate of Brown University and currently lives in Brentwood with her partner Jennifer and their three children, Noah, Josie and William.
LOUISE
ROSNER-MEYER (Executive Producer) executive produced Marc Forster’s Machine
Gun Preacher, The Goods: Live Hard,
Sell Hard starring Jeremy Piven and Baby
Mama with Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. Baby Mama marked Rosner’s second
collaboration with Fey and third collaboration with Lorne Michaels. In 2004 Rosner co-produced Fey’s critical and
box-office smash titled Mean Girls.
Her additional executive producer credits include Paparazzi, Firestorm and On the Line.
She co-produced Hot Rod starring Andy Samberg, Fracture with Ryan Gosling and Anthony
Hopkins, Beauty Shop with Queen
Latifah, Get Over It with Kirsten
Dunst and Ben Foster, and the teen favorite She’s
All That. Additionally Rosner line produced A Kid in King Arthur’s Court, Boys
and Girls and Leo.
Rosner produced The Last Time I Committed Suicide with
Thomas Jane, Keanu Reeves and Adrian Brody, as well as the Adam Rifkin Comedy Denial.
Rosner cut her teeth
as a production coordinator on several major projects including Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, The Crush, Imaginary Crimes and Silent
Fall.
ALLISON
SHEARMUR (Executive Producer) is a Los Angeles-based film and
television producer. She is currently producing Cinderella for the Walt Disney Company with Simon Kinberg’s Genre
Films, to be directed by Sir Kenneth Branagh and starring Cate Blanchett; The Candy Store written and to be
directed by Stephen Gaghan for Good Universe; Pride and Prejudice and Zombies alongside Natalie Portman’s
Handsomecharlie Films and Sean McKittrick of Darko Entertainment for Panorama
Media; and Chaos Walking based on the
internationally acclaimed YA science fiction books by Patrick Ness, with Doug
Davison’s Quadrant Pictures for Lionsgate Films.
Allison
was the President of Production and Development at Lionsgate Films from
September 2008 to January 2012. She oversaw the day-to-day development and
production of the studio’s film slate and literary acquisitions, including
production of hit book and box office blockbuster The Hunger Games, directed by multiple-Academy Award®
nominee Gary Ross and starring Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam
Hemsworth, Woody Harrelson, Elizabeth Banks, Lenny Kravitz and Stanley Tucci.
Before
Lionsgate she was Co-President of Production of Paramount Pictures. While at
Paramount she oversaw such productions as The
Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Beowulf,
The Spiderwick Chronicles, Zodiac, Dreamgirls,Charlotte’s Web, Nacho
Libre, and Failure to Launch.
Prior
to Paramount, she served as Executive Vice President of Production for
Universal Pictures where she oversaw the development and production of such
hits as the The Bourne Supremacy, The Bourne Identity, the American Pie trilogy, Along Came Polly, and Erin
Brockovich. Prior to that, Shearmur was Vice President of Production for
Walt Disney Pictures from 1994 through 1997. While at Walt Disney Pictures, she
developed and supervised George of the
Jungle, starring Brendan Fraser and directed by Sam Weisman. The Bourne and American Pie franchises have each grossed more than $900 million.
Before
joining Disney, Allison served as Vice President for Stewart Pictures, where
she acquired and helped develop the highly acclaimed children’s classic Madeline—directed by Daisy Von Scherler
Mayer and produced by Allyn Stewart and Stanley Jaffe. Prior to that, Shearmur
was with Columbia Pictures Entertainment/Sony Pictures. Selected to participate
in the Columbia Pictures Management Associate Program, she went on to work in
Columbia’s corporate New York office, the international television group based in
London and later served with the film production group in Los Angeles, where
she was mentored by Sony Pictures’ Chairman, Amy Pascal. She was later hired as
director of comedy development at Columbia Pictures Television where she
supervised the development and physical production of half-hour comedy projects
including Columbia’s first syndicated/cable educational series: Beakman’s World which aired on CBS.
A graduate of the University of
Pennsylvania, Allison received a JD degree from USC Law Center and is a member
of the California bar.
PHILIP MESSINA(Production Designer) last designed The Hunger Games. In 2011, Messina designed Marc Forster’s Machine Gun Preacher starring Gerard Butler. Prior to that Messina worked with M. Night Shyamalan to create the fantasy adventure The Last Airbender.
He has also frequently collaborated
with director Steven Soderbergh, designing Soderbergh’sOcean’s Thirteen, Ocean’s
Twelve and Ocean’s Eleven. The latter garnered Messina an Art Director’s
Guild nomination. They also teamed up on The
Good German, Eros, Solaris, Traffic and Erin Brockovich. They first met when Messina worked as the art
director on Out of Sight.
Additional credits include Curtis
Hanson’s acclaimed drama 8 Mile
starring Eminem and Gregory Jacob’s directorial debut: Criminal.
Born and raised in Lawrence,
Massachusetts, Messina graduated from Cornell University with a degree in
architecture. His initial foray into films was as a set designer on Mermaids, School Ties and Housesitter
which were all filmed in the Boston area. Relocating to Los Angeles, he went on
to serve as the art director on such films as Hard Target, The Neon Bible,
Reckless, The Associate, Trial and
Error and The Sixth Sense. For
television, Messina was the production designer on the series Freaks and Geeks created by Paul Feig
and executive produced by Judd Apatow.
Messina is married to set decorator Kristen Toscano Messina, with whom
he frequently collaborates. They live in
Los Angeles with their five-year-old son, Luca.
TRISH SUMMERVILLE
(Costume Designer)
Award-winning costume
designer Trish Summerville continues to set trends with her imaginative
ensembles. She has created looks for some of the world’s most recognizable
movie characters, including LisbethSalander from The Girl With The Dragon
Tattoo and The Hunger Games’ Katniss Everdeen.
Summerville most recently
designed the costumes for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. She also
created the wardrobe worn by Liev Schreiber and the cast of Showtime’s Ray
Donovan.
Summerville has worked
extensively with director David Fincher on both feature films and high-profile
commercials. She created the costuming for Fincher’s Heineken spot starring
Brad Pitt, as well as his Nike “Fate” commercial, which earned her a nomination
from the Costume Designer’s Guild. Most recently, Summerville collaborated with
Fincher on Justin Timberlake and Jay-Z’s “Suit and Tie” video.
Summerville’s theatrical work
with Fincher includes 2011’s The Girl WithThe Dragon Tattoo. She
developed the unique look of Rooney Mara’s LisbethSalander character, winning a
Costume Designer’s Guild Award for Excellence in Contemporary Film.
Summerville’s Dragon Tattoo work led to featured design spreads in W, Vanity Fair, Vogue, Nylon and
Entertainment Weekly.
Summerville also created an
H&M capsule collection inspired by The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
The first costume designer to team with a major global retailer, her line sold
out in minutes.
Summerville has created
designs for several memorable music videos. Her work was famously featured in
the clips for Pink’s “Sober,” Black Eyed Peas’ “Meet Me Halfway” and
Christina Aguilera’s “Dirrty,” among others. Famous brands that have tapped
Summerville for their commercials include Apple, Tanqueray, Volkswagen, Diet
Coke and Chevy.
When not working in film,
Summerville consults for red carpet appearances and large-scale music tours.
As Senior Vice President of
Production and Development at Color Force, BRYAN UNKELESS (Co-Producer)
was a co-producer on The Hunger Games. He was
the development executive on the wildly successful Diary of a Wimpy Kid franchise, which is based off of Jeff Kinney’s
best-selling children’s books. The third film in the series, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days—starring
Steve Zahn, Rachel Harris and Zachary Gordon—was released in August of 2012.
Unkeless was a development executive
on Lone Sherfig’s adaptation of the best-selling novel One Day by David Nicholls. Starring Anne Hathaway and Jim
Sturgess, One Day was released by
Focus Features in 2011.
Prior to joining Color Force, Unkeless worked at
Parkes-MacDonald Productions where he was involved with projects such as The Burning Plain—written and directed
by Guillermo Arriaga—and The Uninvited—directed by the Guard Brothers.
A graduate of Duke University, Unkeless enjoys swimming,
running, cycling and watching the Denver Broncos win.
One of the most renowned makeup artists in the motion picture business, VE NEILL (Makeup Designer and Department Head) has set many standards of excellence in the makeup field. Over the course of her 30 year career Neill has won three Academy Awards®, two Emmy® Awards, four Saturn Awards, a BAFTA Award, Local 706 Best Character Makeup Award and the first artist to be awarded Hollywood Foreign Press’ Makeup Artist of the Year award as well as the first to be honored as Makeup Artist of the Year by MAC Cosmetics. She has a total of 21 international nominations and wins for her creative and innovative makeups. For Pirates of the Caribbean she was awarded the BAFTA and received an Oscar® nomination.
One of the most renowned makeup artists in the motion picture business, VE NEILL (Makeup Designer and Department Head) has set many standards of excellence in the makeup field. Over the course of her 30 year career Neill has won three Academy Awards®, two Emmy® Awards, four Saturn Awards, a BAFTA Award, Local 706 Best Character Makeup Award and the first artist to be awarded Hollywood Foreign Press’ Makeup Artist of the Year award as well as the first to be honored as Makeup Artist of the Year by MAC Cosmetics. She has a total of 21 international nominations and wins for her creative and innovative makeups. For Pirates of the Caribbean she was awarded the BAFTA and received an Oscar® nomination.
From
her early career as a rock 'n roll stylist, Neill began to develop her skills
as a designer and makeup artist. Specializing in concept, design and
execution, Neill entered the film industry and discovered a talent for extreme
fantasy makeup. These unique skills put her on the forefront of the early
80s film extravaganza.
Neill
created space travelers for the first Star Trek film and for the hit
comedy Galaxy Quest, vampires for Joel Schumacher’s The Lost Boys
and visions of the afterlife for Tim Burton's wacky comedy Beetlejuice.
In addition, she turned Johnny Depp into a scissors wielding anti-hero for Edward
Scissorhands; Robin Williams into a Scottish nanny for Mrs. Doubtfire;
Martin Landau into horror king ‘Bela Lugosi’ for Ed Wood and brought to
life an onslaught of villains, beauties and super-heroes for Warner Brothers’ Batman
series. She gave Patricia Arquette the Stigmata, transformed
Christine Baranski into the Grinch’s sexy girlfriend, aged Johnny Depp 60 years
for the film Blow and turned Jude Law into the perfect love-robot for
Steven Spielberg’s A.I.
Some
of her other credits include The Chronicles of Riddick, Danny DeVito’s Matilda,
Hoffa and Spielberg’s Amistad. Neill continues her
illustrious career with an assortment of new characters ranging from a manic
100 year old woman in Duplex, possessed beings in Constantine and
a slew of dirty, drunken, barnacle encrusted camp Pirates (that everyone
adores) for the Pirates of the Caribbean series. In early 2007 she
turned Johnny Depp into the infamous ‘Butcher Barber of Fleet Street’ for the
film-musical Sweeney Todd. In late 2007 she also transformed another
well-known face, Mike Myers, into The Love Guru. She worked with Joe
Wright (Director of Atonement) on the film The Soloist starring
Robert Downey Jr., Jamie Foxx and Catherine Keener; Jim Carrey and Ewan
McGregor in the film I Love You Phillips Morris and Priest
starring Paul Bettany, Carl Urban, Cam Gigandet, Stephen Moyer and Lilly
Collins. She headed up the special makeup department for the film Thor.
She created the looks for the stars of The Amazing Spider-Man starring
Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone. Last summer Neill added a Stephanie
Meyers book film to her resume, The Host.
Also be on the lookout for the next Spider-Man
film that she just finished filming in New York.
Throughout her career Neill has worked with many of Hollywood's brightest stars. Jack Nicholson, Johnny Depp, Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Lenny Kravitz, Elizabeth Banks, Keira Knightly, Julia Roberts, Danny DeVito, Sarah Jessica Parker, Uma Thurman, Orlando Bloom, Sigourney Weaver, StellanSkarsgård, Jude Law, Lilly Collins, Ethan Hawke, Catherine Keener, Jim Carey, Courtney Love, Edward Norton, Andy Garcia, Keanu Reeves, Hope Davis and Michael Caine have all called upon Neill for her expertise with beauty, the bizarre and lots of wild characters. This is a small part of the all-star list of clientele who enjoy the touch of Neill's magical brush.
LINDA FLOWERS (Hair and Wig Designer and Department Head) feature film credits include the award winning The Social Network with director David Fincher, Iron Man 2, Angels & Demons with director Ron Howard and There Will Be Blood with director Paul Thomas Anderson. Her clients have included Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Lawrence, Tom Hanks, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Melissa McCarthy, Jason Bateman and Christina Applegate, amongst others. Flowers has department headed such television shows as Samantha Who, Entourage, Heroes, and Crossing Jordan. She is the inventor of the “Top Styler,” the revolutionary patented innovative hair styling tool.
Throughout her career Neill has worked with many of Hollywood's brightest stars. Jack Nicholson, Johnny Depp, Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Lenny Kravitz, Elizabeth Banks, Keira Knightly, Julia Roberts, Danny DeVito, Sarah Jessica Parker, Uma Thurman, Orlando Bloom, Sigourney Weaver, StellanSkarsgård, Jude Law, Lilly Collins, Ethan Hawke, Catherine Keener, Jim Carey, Courtney Love, Edward Norton, Andy Garcia, Keanu Reeves, Hope Davis and Michael Caine have all called upon Neill for her expertise with beauty, the bizarre and lots of wild characters. This is a small part of the all-star list of clientele who enjoy the touch of Neill's magical brush.
LINDA FLOWERS (Hair and Wig Designer and Department Head) feature film credits include the award winning The Social Network with director David Fincher, Iron Man 2, Angels & Demons with director Ron Howard and There Will Be Blood with director Paul Thomas Anderson. Her clients have included Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Lawrence, Tom Hanks, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Melissa McCarthy, Jason Bateman and Christina Applegate, amongst others. Flowers has department headed such television shows as Samantha Who, Entourage, Heroes, and Crossing Jordan. She is the inventor of the “Top Styler,” the revolutionary patented innovative hair styling tool.
LARRY DIAS (Set Decorator) was born and raised
on a dairy farm in the San Joaquin Valley in California to Portuguese immigrant
parents. After working in the family business until the age of 22 he
moved to Los Angeles to study fashion design at Otis Art Institute of Parsons
School of Design.
Dias began his film career at the urging of a friend who
suggested that he try some film work over a summer vacation. He began as a
set dresser, moving furniture in the set decoration department, and was
immediately hooked. Within a year he worked his way up the ladder to become a
Set Decorator on commercials and television movies. He landed his first
feature film as the set decorator on Diane Keaton's directorial debut, Unstrung Heroes. Since then, he
has decorated over 25 feature films. Dias has had three nominations for
an Art Directors Guild award for his set decorations which include Gore
Verbinski’sPirates of the Caribbean: The
Curse of the Black Pearl, Steven Speilberg'sIndiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and most
recently an ADG win with Christopher Nolan's Inception. He has won international acclaim with a Goya Award
for his set decoration on Alejandro Amenábar'sAgora, a BAFTA Award and an Oscar® nomination for his
work on Inception.