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John Crowley (director)

Irish theatre and film director


Irish theatre and film director

FieldValue
nameJohn Crowley
imageJohn Crowley at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival (Cropped).jpg
captionJohn Crowley at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival
birth_date
birth_placeCork, Ireland
occupationDirector
spouseFiona Weir

John Crowley (born 19 August 1969) is an Irish theatre and film director. He is best known for the films Brooklyn (2015) and his debut feature, Intermission (2003), for which he won an Irish Film and Television Award for Best Director. He is a brother of the designer Bob Crowley.

Life and career

Early years and education

Crowley earned a BA in English and Philosophy (1990) and an MA in Philosophy from University College Cork.

Career

Crowley became involved in theatre as a student, seeing it as a stepping stone to directing film. He began directing plays in Dublin in the early 1990s, reached London's West End by 1996 and eventually become an associate director at the Donmar Warehouse. In 2000, he directed Come and Go as part of the Beckett on Film series and made his feature debut Intermission (2003), a comedy drama set in Dublin, starring Colin Farrell, Cillian Murphy and Kelly Macdonald, based on a screenplay by playwright Mark O'Rowe.

In May 2005, Crowley, along with Danny Boyle, launched the UK Film Council Development Fund's "25 Words or Less: Director’s Cut" scheme to develop a feature film project, stating that he wanted particularly to "create a contemporary 'rebirth' or transformation story about a man or woman who begins as someone that spreads coldness."

In 2007, Crowley reteamed with O'Rowe for the thought-provoking BAFTA-winning drama Boy A, about a young man's return to civilian life after imprisonment for a brutal childhood killing, which was made for British television but was released theatrically in the US the following year. It won him the Best Director (Fiction) award at the 2008 British Academy Television Craft Awards.

Additionally, Crowley was Tony nominated for the hugely successful London and Broadway runs of Martin McDonagh's play The Pillowman in 2003 and 2005. He directed Neve Campbell and Cillian Murphy in the West End production of Love Song in 2006-7, and in 2007 filmed a television version of Harold Pinter's Celebration starring Michael Gambon, Stephen Rea and Colin Firth. In 2009 he directed the film Is Anybody There?, set in 1980s seaside Britain, written by Peter Harness and starring Michael Caine as a grumpy ex-magician. In 2010, Crowley teamed once again with McDonagh for A Behanding in Spokane on Broadway.

In July 2016, it was announced that Crowley will direct the screen adaptation of Donna Tartt's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Goldfinch for Warner Bros. and RatPac Entertainment, starring Ansel Elgort, Oakes Fegley, Aneurin Barnard and Finn Wolfhard.

In 2017 it was announced that he would be directing a film adaption of Bernard MacLaverty's Midwinter Break.

Works

Theatre

  • A Very Expensive Poison (2019) – The Old Vic – written by Lucy Prebble.
  • The Present (2016) on Broadway – Anton Chekhov's Platonov adaptation by Andrew Upton. Starring Cate Blanchett, Richard Roxburgh, Toby Schmitz, Jacqueline McKenzie.
  • The Playboy of the Western World (2011) – The Old Vic – Starring Ruth Negga, Niamh Cusack and Robert Sheehan.
  • A Behanding in Spokane (2010) on Broadway.
  • A Steady Rain (2009) on Broadway. Starring Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig
  • Love Song (2006–07) – Written by John Kolvenbach – New Ambassadors Theatre (West End), London. This production, which was the UK premiere, starred Neve Campbell & Cillian Murphy.
  • The Pillowman (2005) – International tour.
  • The Pillowman (2003–04) – Royal National Theatre.
  • On An Average Day (2002) – the Comedy Theatre (West End), London. It starred Woody Harrelson & Kyle MacLachlan.
  • Tales from Hollywood (2001) – Donmar Warehouse, London.
  • Juno and the Paycock (2000) – Gramercy Theatre, New York.
  • The Turn of the Screw (2000) – Welsh National Opera.
  • Juno and the Paycock (1999) – Donmar Warehouse, London.
  • Macbeth (1999) – UK tour.
  • Into the Woods (1998–99) – Donmar Warehouse, London.
  • How I Learned to Drive (1998) at the Donmar Warehouse, London (UK premiere).
  • An Irish Trilogy, aka Shadows (1998–99) – Royal Shakespeare Company.
  • The Maids (1997) – UK tour.
  • Fair Ladies at a Game of Poem Cards (1996) – Royal National Theatre.
  • Double Helix (1996) – Dublin Theatre Festival/ Peacock Theatre, Dublin.
  • Six Characters in Search of an Author (1995) – Abbey Theatre, Dublin.
  • The Crucible (1995) – Abbey Theatre, Dublin.
  • True Lines (1994) – Dublin Theatre Festival/ Bush Theatre, London
  • One for the Road (1994) – Gate Theatre, Dublin.
  • The Master Builder (1993–94) – Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh/ Riverside Studios, London. Co-directed with Brian Cox.
  • The Match Seller Girl – Theatre Project Tokyo, Japan.
  • Asylum! Asylum! – Peacock Theatre, Dublin.
  • John Hughdy-Tom John – Druid Theatre Company.
  • Phaedra – Gate Theatre, Dublin.

Film

  • Come and Go (2000) (Short film)
  • Intermission (2003)
  • Boy A (2007)
  • Is Anybody There? (2009)
  • Closed Circuit (2013)
  • Brooklyn (2015)
  • The Goldfinch (2019)
  • We Live in Time (2024)

Television

YearTitleNotes
2007CelebrationTelevised play
2015True DetectiveEpisodes: "Other Lives" and "Omega Station"
2021Modern Love Episode: "In the waiting room of estranged spouses"
2022Life After LifeMiniseries,
Also executive producer
2023Black MirrorEpisode: "Beyond the Sea"

Recurring collaborators

ActorWork}}2003200720082013201520192024!
Jane Brennan
Denis Conway
Andrew Garfield
Anne-Marie Duff
Jim Broadbent

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryTitleResult
2003IFTA Film & Drama AwardsBest Film DirectorIntermission
Galway Film FleadhBest First Feature Film
First Feature Film
2004British Independent Film AwardsThe Douglas Hickox Award (Best Debut Director)
Galway Film FleadhBest First Feature
2006Golden Rooster AwardsBest International Director
2008British Academy Television AwardsBest Single DramaBoy A
British Academy Television Craft AwardsBest Director: Fiction
Banff World Media FestivalBest Made for TV Movie
Berlin International Film FestivalPrize of the Ecumenical Jury
Dinard British Film FestivalGolden Hitchcock
Silver Hitchcock
Film by the SeaYouth Jury Award
Irish Film & Television AwardsBest Film Director
2010Bodil AwardsBest Non-American Film
CinEuphoria AwardsTop Ten of the Year - International Competition
2015Denver Film FestivalNarrative FeatureBrooklyn
Detroit Film Critics SocietyBest Director
Dublin Film Critics' CircleBest Director
IndieWire Critics PollBest Director
Mill Valley Film FestivalWorld Cinema
San Diego Film Critics Society AwardsBest Director
San Francisco Film Critics Circle AwardsBest Director
Twin Cities Film FestFeature Film
Vancouver International Film FestivalPeople's Choice
Virginia Film FestivalNarrative Feature
2016British Academy Film AwardsOutstanding British Film
Irish Film & Television AwardsBest Film Director
2017Kinema JunpoBest Foreign Language Film
Best Foreign Language Film (Readers' Choice)

References

References

  1. Michael Dwyer. (2009-05-02). "A director with a lot on his mind".
  2. (2006-11-27). "Biographies - Irish Film & TV Research Online - Trinity College Dublin".
  3. "John Crowley, Is Anybody There?". Filmmaker Magazine.
  4. "John Crowley Teams With Danny Boyle for New Script Initiative | The Irish Film & Television Network".
  5. "BAFTA Craft Awards 2008". [[British Academy of Film and Television Arts]].
  6. (20 July 2016). "John Crowley eyed to Direct Adaptation of The Goldfinch".
  7. (4 September 2017). "John Crowley To Direct 'Midwinter Break' For Film4, Shoebox – Venice".
  8. The Present Broadway Official Website http://www.thepresentbroadway.com/?
  9. "THE IRISH FILM AND TELEVISION AWARDS 2004".
  10. "galway film fleadh 2003".
  11. "Intermission - John Crowley - 2004 The Douglas Hickox Award".
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