How many awards has julie taymor won
Julie Taymor
American film and theatre director and writer (born )
Julie Taymor (born December 15, ) is an American director and writer of theater, opera, and film. Her stage adaptation of The Lion King debuted in and received eleven Tony Award nominations, with Taymor receiving Tony Awards for her direction and costume design.
Her film Frida, about Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, was nominated for five Academy Awards, including a Best Original Song nomination for Taymor's composition "Burn It Blue". She also directed the jukeboxmusical filmAcross the Universe, based on the music of the Beatles.
Early life
Taymor was born in Newton, Massachusetts, the daughter of Elizabeth (née Bernstein), a political science professor and Democratic activist, and Melvin Lester Taymor, a gynecologist and prominent fertility researcher later at Harvard Medical School.[2][3] Taymor's interest in theatre took root early in her life.
By age ten, she had joined the Boston Children's Theatre and starred in a number of productions. Being the youngest member of theatre groups became common.
Julie taymor biography lion king musical circle of life The Age. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Learn how to purchase tickets. Archived from the original onBy 13, she was taking trips to Boston by herself every weekend, where she discovered Julie Portman's Theatre Workshop. At the age of 15, her parents sent her to both Sri Lanka and India with the Experiment in International Living.[4] After graduating High School at 16, Taymor went to Paris to study with L'École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq.
Her studies there exposed her to mime, which helped develop her physical sensibilities. While in Paris, Taymor worked with masks for the first time and immersed herself in film, especially the work of Fellini and Kurosawa.[4]
In Taymor was enrolled in Oberlin College in Ohio. During her second year, she interned with Joseph Chaikin's Open Theatre and other companies in New York City.
Hearing that director Herbert Blau was moving to Oberlin, she returned there and auditioned successfully, becoming, once again, the youngest member of a troupe. In , Taymor attended a summer program of the American Society for Eastern Arts in Seattle. The instructors were masters of Indonesian topeng masked dance-drama and wayang kulit shadow puppetry.
This would prove to have a great effect on Taymor in later years. Taymor graduated from Oberlin College with a major in mythology and folklore and with Phi Beta Kappa honors in She spent a summer with Bread and Puppet Theater.[5]
As a college senior, Taymor won a year long Thomas J. Watson Fellowship that began after graduation.
The Watson allowed her to travel to Japan and Indonesia which she continued independently from until In Indonesia, she developed a mask/dance company, Teatr Loh, consisting of Japanese, Balinese, Sundanese, French, German and American actors, musicians, dancers and puppeteers. The company toured throughout Indonesia with two original productions, Way of Snow and Tirai, which were subsequently performed in the United States.
She met her long-time collaborator, Elliot Goldenthal, in
Taymor was the commencement speaker for her alma mater, Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio.
Career
Theatre
Back in New York from Indonesia, Taymor remounted Tirai at La MaMa in Her next project, The Haggadah, came from the desire of The Public Theater director Joseph Papp to create an annual Passover pageant that would be culturally inclusive.
In , Taymor worked in collaboration with Theatre for a New Audience on a minute version of A Midsummer Night's Dream presented at The Public Theater. Two years later, she directed her first Shakespeare play, The Tempest, for Theatre for a New Audience. She went on to direct three other productions at that theatre, including The Taming of the Shrew, Titus Andronicus and The Green Bird by Carlo Gozzi.
She later adapted Tempest and Titus into major motion pictures.
Taymor is known for a distinct visual style, with extensive use of puppets and masks, developed largely from her time in Indonesia working with Teatr Loh.[6]
Taymor is most widely recognized for her production of The Lion King, which opened on Broadway in The Lion King's worldwide gross exceeds that of any entertainment title in box office history, and has been presented in over cities in over 20 countries, having been seen by more than million people worldwide.[7][8]
Taymor has the distinction of being the first woman to receive the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical, which she won for The Lion King.[7] She also received a Tony Award for her original costume designs for the production.
Taymor co-designed the masks and puppets, and wrote additional lyrics for the show.[9] In , The Lion King was performed in Johannesburg, and had its first French language production in Paris. In , Le Roi Lion was awarded Best Costume Design, Best Lighting Design, and Best Musical at the Molière Awards, the national theatre awards of France.[10]
In , Taymor directed Carlo Gozzi's The Green Bird on Broadway.
The work was first produced in by Theatre for a New Audience at the New Victory Theater and presented at the La Jolla Playhouse.[11] Taymor's stage production of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus was produced off-Broadway by Theatre for a New Audience in Other directing credits include The Tempest, The Taming of the Shrew, The Transposed Heads, based on the novella by Thomas Mann, co-produced by the American Musical Theater Festival and the Lincoln Center; and Liberty's Taken, an original musical co-created with David Suehsdorf and Elliot Goldenthal.
Her original music-theatre work, Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass, presented at Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont Theater in , received five Tony Award nominations including Best Director. Originally produced by Music Theater Group in , Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass was directed by Taymor, and co-written with Elliot Goldenthal. The recipient of two Obies and numerous other awards, the piece was performed at The Edinburgh International Festival, as well as festivals in France, Jerusalem and Montreal, and had an extended run in San Francisco.[12]
In April , it was announced that a musical adaptation of Spider-Man was being prepared for Broadway.
Taymor was selected to direct the show and write the book with Glen Berger. The production features music and lyrics by Bono and The Edge. The musical, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, was scheduled to begin previews on November 28, , at the Foxwoods Theatre. The play was delayed for several months due to numerous injuries, and Taymor was fired and replaced by Philip William McKinley.
The play officially opened on June 14, , having set the record for the longest preview period in the history of Broadway at performances. The production also set the record for most expensive Broadway production at an estimated $75 million.[13] In November , Taymor sued the show's producers, Michael Cohl and Jeremiah J. Harris, claiming that they were profiting from her creative contributions without compensating her.[14] Taymor and the producers reached a settlement in August [15]
Taymor was a inductee into the American Theater Hall of Fame for Lifetime Achievement.[16]
Taymor directed a Broadway revival of David Henry Hwang's M.
Butterfly, starring Clive Owen, which opened on October 26, , at the Cort Theatre, with previews beginning on October 7. David Henry Hwang made changes to the original text for the revival, mostly centering on the issue of intersectional identities.
Stage production history
- Way of Snow (–75, ) – writer, director, and designer in Java and Bali and The Ark Theater, New York City
- Tirai (–79, ) – writer, director, and designer in Java and Bali and La MaMa, New York City
- The Haggadah () – sets, costumes, masks, and puppetry produced for the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater, New York City
- Black Elk Lives () – sets, masks, and puppetry produced at Intermedia Theater, New York City
- The King Stag () – costumes, masks, puppetry and choreography produced at ART, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Liberty's Taken () – director, masks, and puppetry produced at the Castle Hill Festival, Massachusetts
- The Transposed Heads (, ) – director, masks, and puppetry produced at The Ark Theater, New York City and Lincoln Center
- The Tempest (, by Shakespeare, abridged) – director, puppetry.
produced for Theatre for a New Audience (TFANA) at Classic Stage Company (New York City)
- The Taming of the Shrew (, by Shakespeare) – director, produced by Theatre For a New Audience
- Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass (, , ) – director, co-bookwriter, co-scenic designer, co-costume designer, mask designer, puppet designer
– Tony Award co-nomination for Best Scenic Design, Tony Award nomination for Best Direction of a Musical - Oedipus rex (, by Igor Stravinsky) – director, puppetry.
at Sito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto (taped for TV, released / released DVD)
- The Magic Flute (, by Mozart – director, costume designer, masks and puppetry designer by Taymor and Michael Curry)
- Titus Andronicus (, by Shakespeare) – director, produced by Theatre For a New Audience
- The Flying Dutchman (, by Richard Wagner) – director
- Salome ( premiere at Passionstheater, Oberammergau, Germany) directed and choreographed by Taymor and Andreas Liyepa
- The Lion King () – director, lyricist for the song "Endless Night", costume designer, co-mask designer, co-puppet designer
– Tony Award winner for Best Direction of a Musical, Tony Award co-nomination for Best Original Score, Tony Award winner for Best Costume Design - The Green Bird (, ) – director, mask designer, puppet designer produced by Theatre for a New Audience at the New Victory Theater (), La Jolla, and on Broadway at the Cort Theatre ()
- The Magic Flute (premiered , opera by Mozart) – director, Metropolitan Opera, New York, live broadcast
- The Magic Flute (), newly translated and abridged version, Metropolitan Opera, Opera Australia ()
- Grendel (, opera by Elliot Goldenthal) – librettist, director, co-commissioned and performed at the Los Angeles Opera and the Lincoln Center Festival
- Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark (, musical adaptation of Spider-Man) – director, co-author, mask designer, Broadway at the Foxwoods Theatre
- A Midsummer Night's Dream () – director, Theatre for a New Audience, Polonsky Shakespeare Center
- Grounded () – director, The Public Theater
- M.
Butterfly () – director, Broadway at the Cort Theatre
Film
Taymor's first film, Fool's Fire, which she co-directed and adapted from Edgar Allan Poe's short story, Hop-Frog, was produced by American Playhouse. The hour-long film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and aired on PBS in March [17] In the film, all characters except the titular character Hop-Frog are either elaborate puppets or masks, not unlike Taymor's stage work.[18] The film won the Best Drama award at the Tokyo International Electronic Cinema Festival.[19]
Taymor also directed a film adaptation of opera Oedipus rex after directing a stage production of the same opera.
The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Jury Award at the Montreal Festival of Film on Art. Broadcast internationally in , the film garnered an Emmy Award and the International Classical Music Award for Best Opera Production.[2]
Taymor's feature film debut, Titus (), starring Anthony Hopkins, Jessica Lange, Alan Cumming and Jonathan Rhys Meyers, was an adaptation of Shakespeare's play Titus Andronicus.
Taymor adapted the screenplay and produced the film, which received an Academy Award nomination for costume design.
Taymor received critical acclaim for her direction of Salma Hayek and Alfred Molina in Frida (), a biographical film about the Mexican artist Frida Kahlo. Frida garnered six Academy Award nominations, including a Best Actress nomination for Hayek, and won two Academy Awards for make-up and original score.[20]Frida was honored with four BAFTA nominations and one win, including nominations for Hayek and Molina, as well as two Golden Globe nominations, winning the Golden Globe for Best Original Score.[21] In addition, the film received two Screen Actors Guild nominations.
The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival where it won the festival's Mimmo Rotella Foundation Award.[22]
Her next film was the jukebox musicalAcross the Universe (), which received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Musical/Comedy as well as a nomination for the Academy Award for Costume Design.[23] With a collection of 33 Beatles songs, the film stars Evan Rachel Wood and Jim Sturgess in a s love story set to the music of The Beatles, and featured performances by Bono, Joe Cocker, Eddie Izzard and Salma Hayek.
Taymor both directed and co-wrote the story for the film.[24]
In November , Taymor directed a film version of Shakespeare's The Tempest, released in December starring Helen Mirren, Alfred Molina, Djimon Hounsou and Ben Whishaw. Working behind the camera with Taymor on The Tempest were the Academy Award winners Elliot Goldenthal for music, Sandy Powell for costumes, and Françoise Bonnot.
Taymor produced the feature and adapted the screenplay based on Shakespeare's play.[25][26]
She also completed a cinematic version of William Shakespeare'sA Midsummer Night's Dream, starring David Harewood, Max Casella and Kathryn Hunter, and filmed during her critically acclaimed, sold-out stage production that ran at Theatre for a New Audience's new home in Downtown Brooklyn.
The film was shown at the Toronto International Film Festival as part of the Mavericks in Film Programme.
Taymor directed and co-wrote The Glorias, a biopic of feminist icon Gloria Steinem, based on her novel My Life on the Road, starring Julianne Moore, Alicia Vikander, Bette Midler, and Janelle Monae.
The movie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was released by Amazon Prime on September 30,
Works
Films
Year | Title | Director | Writer | Producer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fool's Fire | Yes | Yes | Yes | TV movie; Also costume designer | |
Titus | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||
Frida | Yes | No | No | Also Tango choreographer (credited as Taymor) and lyricist for the song "Burn it Blue" | |
Across the Universe | Yes | Story | No | ||
The Tempest | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||
The Lion King | No | No | executive producer | ||
The Glorias | Yes | Yes | Yes | Also uncredited cameo |
Recorded plays/opera
Opera
Taymor's first opera direction was of Stravinsky's Oedipus rex, for the Saito Kinen Orchestra in Japan, under the baton of Seiji Ozawa in [27] The opera featured Philip Langridge as Oedipus and Jessye Norman as Jocasta.
Lion king musical tour The Broadway League. Categories : Directors People Real world. Top content. What awards has Julie Taymor won?Taymor went on to direct the film adaptation of the opera Oedipus Rex.[2]
She went on to direct Wagner's The Flying Dutchman for the Los Angeles Opera in a co-production with the Houston Grand Opera.[28]
She directed Richard Strauss' Salome for the Kirov Opera in Russia, Germany, and Israel, conducted by Valery Gergiev.[2] Taymor's first direction of The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflöte), was for the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in Florence, with Zubin Mehta conducting in Over a decade later, Taymor premiered The Magic Flute at the Metropolitan Opera in The show is now in repertoire there.
A newly translated and abridged English version of the opera premiered at the Met in December , and inaugurated a new series on PBS in entitled, Great Performances at the Met as well as launched the Metropolitan Opera Live in HD series of movie-theater transmissions.[29]
In June , Taymor directed the premiere of Elliot Goldenthal's opera Grendel for the Los Angeles Opera, starring Eric Owens, which was also presented as part of the Summer Lincoln Center Festival in New York City.[30] A darkly comic retelling of the Beowulf tale based on the novel by John Gardner, the opera was co-commissioned by the Los Angeles Opera and the Lincoln Center Festival.
The opera was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Music in [31]
For the Metropolitan Opera /06 season, Taymor directed a successful production of The Magic Flute. It was revised for the /07 season and, in addition to full-length performances, was adapted for a minute version over the holiday season to appeal to children.
That version of the opera was the first of a series of NCM Fathom Live on the Big Screen presentations of MET operas downloaded via satellite to movie theaters across North America and parts of Europe for the /07 season.[32] In , Opera Australia produced this version with locally built scenery and props at the Sydney Opera House, the Arts Centre Melbourne, and the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in Brisbane.[33]
Books
- The Lion King: Pride Rock on Broadway, Hyperion Books, , ISBN
- Titus: The Illustrated Screenplay, Newmarket Press, , ISBN
- (with Eileen Blumenthal and Antonio Monda) Julie Taymor: Playing with Fire, Harry N.
Abrams, Inc., , ISBN
- (with Salma Hayek) Frida: Bringing Frida Kahlo's Life and Art to Film, Newmarket Press, , ISBN
- The Tempest (screenplay adapted from the play by William Shakespeare), Abrams Books, , ISBN
Exhibition
A major retrospective of 25 years of Taymor's work, titled 'Playing With Fire' opened in the fall of at the Wexner Center for the Arts[34] and toured the National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington D.C.) in [35] and the Field Museum of Natural History[36] (Chicago) in , and was extended due to popular demand in each venue.
In September , costumes from The Lion King were requested and presented to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History[37] and they are now part of the Smithsonian collection as well as the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[38]
Awards and nominations
In , Taymor won the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship.
In addition, Taymor has received a Guggenheim Fellowship,[2] two Obie Awards,[39] the first Annual Dorothy B. Chandler Award in Theater, the Brandeis Creative Arts Award,[39] and the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[40][41] Taymor received a Disney Legend award in for Theatrical.[42]
Film
Television
Theatre
Source:[45]
References
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"On the Road With 'The Outsiders,' Where the Greasers and Socs Rumbled". The New York Times. Retrieved June 17,
- ^ abcdeBlumenthal, Eileen. "Julie Taymor".
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- ^"Julie Taymor Biography", Film , accessed August 28,
- ^ abMunro, Eleanor (). Originals: American Women Artists. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. ISBN.
- ^Richard Schechner (Fall ).
"Julie Taymor: From Jacques Lecoq to The Lion King". TDR: The Drama Review. 43 (3): 35– Retrieved via Project MUSE.
- ^"Julie Taymor: Director of Theatre & Film". makers. Retrieved
- ^ ab"Oprah Interviews Julie Taymor".
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- ^Culwell-Block, Logan (). "The Top 10 Highest-Grossing Broadway Shows of All Time". Playbill. Retrieved
- ^"Disney Musical Theatre". Disney. Retrieved
- ^Gans, Andrew. "Le Roi Lion (The Lion King) Wins Molière Award for Best Musical".
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- ^Brantley, Ben (). "Child With Inner Jaguar In a 60's Dreamscape". The New York Times. Retrieved
- ^Pennacchio, George. "Spider-Man musical opens: What critics said" .
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- ^Patrick Healy (November 8, ). "Julie Taymor Sues Spider-Man Team Over Royalties". The New York Times.
- ^Dave Itzkoff (August 30, ). "Taymor, Spider-Man Producers Reach Undisclosed Settlement on Dueling Lawsuits".
- ^"Presenters Announced for Starry Theater Hall of Fame Ceremony", Playbill, November 11,
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- Is danya taymor related to julie taymor
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- ^Swed, Mark (). "Fly, 'Dutchman,' Fly: Not content to just accept the classic story as it stands, director Julie Taymor has reworked Wagner's Romantic epic, adding new interests and personalities to the players". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved
- ^Zuckerman, Alicia ().
"The Circle of Life: The Lion King's Julie Taymor returns to opera, reimagining The Magic Flute for the Met". New York. Retrieved
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Lion king musical cast: Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous. Buckholz, Kathleen C. The Haggadah, a Passover Cantata. Along with her passion for theater, she developed a lively interest in other cultures and faraway places.
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- ^ abGabrielli, Betty. "Julie Taymor Continues the Artistic Journey, Begun at Oberlin, with The Lion King". Oberlin Alumni News & Notes. Retrieved
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Julie taymor biography lion king musical Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark. The Lion King. Tools Tools. Chicago Tribune.The Broadway League.
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Bibliography
- Blumenthal, Eileen, and Taymor, Julie. Julie Taymor, Playing with Fire : Theater, Opera, Film, New York: H.
N. Abrams,