Frederic Alan Schepisi ( ;Pauline Kael (1984). Taking It All In. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 55. born 26 December 1939) is an Australian film director, producer, and screenwriter. His credits include The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, Plenty, Roxanne, A Cry in the Dark, Mr. Baseball, Six Degrees of Separation, and Last Orders.
During his late teens, he began watching classic post-war European films such as The Wages of Fear, Rocco and His Brothers, and Bicycle Thieves at The Savoy, a theatre in Russell Street which specialised in showing such films.
As part of his high school education, he spent 18 months at the Marist Brothers juniorate in Macedon in regional Victoria. His experiences there were later depicted in his 1976 feature film The Devil's Playground.
After completing his school-leaving certificate at 14, for a short time he worked in one of his father's car yards as a motor mechanic but had no aptitude for the job, and was glad to discover the world of advertising.
Schepisi's first feature film was The Devil's Playground, in 1976, but it was The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (1978), based on Keneally's novel of the same name, that brought him to international notice. This film was one of the first to feature an Aboriginal story on the big screen. This led to his first film produced in the US, Barbarosa (1982), a Western starring Willie Nelson.
The sci-fi parable Iceman (1984) came next, and in 1985 he adapted David Hare's stage drama, Plenty, for the film of the same name (1985), starring Meryl Streep. In 1987 Steve Martin starred in his next film, the comedy Roxanne (1987), based on the 1897 French play by Edmond Rostand, Cyrano de Bergerac. Streep, along with Sam Neill, starred again in his 1988 film Evil Angels, which was filmed in Australia (released as A Cry in the Dark outside of Australia and New Zealand).
The Russia House (1990), based on the spy thriller by John le Carré, starred Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer. Six Degrees of Separation (1993) was another adaptation, this time of the 1990 play by John Guare, and in 1994 he made I.Q., based on a story about Albert Einstein and his niece. His next major film on the big screen was in 2001, Last Orders, starring Ray Winstone, Michael Caine, and Bob Hoskins.
In 2003, he made It Runs in the Family, with Kirk Douglas and Michael Douglas in the lead roles. In 2005, Schepisi directed and co-produced the HBO miniseries Empire Falls, starring Paul Newman, Ed Harris, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joanne Woodward, Robin Wright Penn, and Helen Hunt.
In April 2008, it was announced that Film Finance Corporation Australia was providing funding for Schepisi's film The Last Man, about the final days of the Vietnam War. It was scheduled to begin filming in Queensland, with Guy Pearce and David Wenham in leading roles, towards the end of the year.Ziffer, Daniel (3 April 2008). "Fred Schepisi's new local venture". TheAge.com.au. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
In 2011, Schepisi directed The Eye of the Storm. Filmed in Melbourne, Sydney, and Far North Queensland, and based on the novel by Patrick White, The Eye of the Storm stars Charlotte Rampling, Judy Davis, and Geoffrey Rush. The story is about "children finally understanding themselves through the context of family". "About Fred Schepisi" (archived 2014)
In 2013, he directed Words and Pictures, starring Juliette Binoche and Clive Owen.
Schepisi was president of the 2006 Bangkok International Film Festival in Thailand.
In 2007, he chaired the jury at the 29th Moscow International Film Festival.
, Schepisi is a patron of the National Film and Sound Archive.
A photographic portrait of him by Kate Gollings, taken in 2000, is held by the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra.
Other honours and awards include:
He met his second wife Rhonda Finlayson (11 September 1940 – 30 October 1995), sister of actor Jon Finlayson, when she became a driver for his company, Film House. She had previously had an acting and singing career in the 1950s. She later become production manager and casting director. She cast his first film in 1973 ( Libido), and they married in that year. She continued to do casting for his films, including casting Tom E. Lewis in his first film role in The Chant of Jimmy Blacksmith after spotting him at Melbourne Airport. They had two daughters together, but their marriage ended in 1983. Rhonda remarried and did casting in the UK and US. She went on to establish her own production company, Rhonda Schepisi Productions, in Melbourne. While working on the production of a screen adaptation of Tim Winton's short story "A Blow, a Kiss", she died of cancer on 30 October 1995. Filming had finished three days earlier, and production was completed by the film's director, Rey Carlson.
His third wife, Mary, whom he married in 1984 and with whom he had a seventh child, is American.Caroline Baum, "Fred bare", The Age, 22 April 2006, Good Weekend magazine, p. 46
In 2011, asked about the "gypsy-like existence" of a filmmaker, Schepisi said: "It's the hardest thing. I think we're today's circus people. It's very hard on your family. His Mary Schepisi travels with me and when everyone was younger and it was possible, I liked them to travel with me and be with me. Fortunately, Mary's an artist; she paints, and often finds inspiration from our locations."Dow, Steve (10 October 2006). "Action Men: Australian directors on film". SteveDow.com. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
He supports Australia becoming a republic and is a founding member of the Australian Republican Movement.Australian Republican Movement (1987–2009). "Records of the Australian Republican Movement, 1987-2009 (manuscript)". description of documents in the National Library of Australia. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
Career
The Film House
Films
Music videos
Other activities
Recognition and awards
Personal life
Filmography
Unmade films
Footnotes
External links
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