Gavin O'Connor
About
Biography
Filmography
Family & Companions
Biography
A sensitive soul lurking inside a six-foot-two-inch he-man, Gavin O'Connor wrote and produced fellow Long Islander Ted Demme's directorial debut, the short film "The Bet" (1992). The following year, he portrayed Drill Man in Demme's feature directing debut, "Who's the Man?." After writing and helming the short "American Standoff" (1994), which aired on PBS, the Independent Film Channel and multiple foreign TV stations, O'Connor made his own feature co-writing and directing debut with "Comfortably Numb" (1995), a smartly mounted flick with no star power and a storyline about the moral dilemmas facing a Connecticut preppie-turned-NYC prosecutor. Unfortunately, the script's descent into a telepic-style chronicling of heroin addiction undercut the quality look of the film. After screenings at Cannes and the Boston Film Festival, "Comfortably Numb" was relegated to the shelf. To counteract this disappointment, O'Connor opted for the stage, producing, writing and starring in the Off-Off-Broadway play "Rumblings of a Romance Renaissance" (1997), learning a little bit more about actors and acting from the inside while experiencing the immediate gratification of an audience's response.
O'Connor and then wife Angela Shelton conceived a project that would survive their brief marriage. Shelton's memoir of her childhood experiences on the road with her serial-marrying mom resonated with O'Connor, himself the product of a broken home, so the pair co-wrote "Tumbleweeds" (1999, executive produced by Demme), focusing on the period when the pre-teen daughter was on the cusp of young womanhood. Once he saw the Tony-winning British actress Janet McTeer on Charlie Rose's show in 1997, he knew he had found the mother, and he stuck by her, even though it meant funding the shoot himself when potential financiers balked at her anonymity. Despite limited rehearsal time, O'Connor rapidly developed chemistry between mother and daughter (Kimberly J Brown) through improvisational exercises, striving for what he calls a "documentary within the context of drama." The resultant gem of a movie, in which he also co-starred as McTeer's volatile truck-driving boyfriend, won the Filmmaker's Trophy at Sundance and went on to garner several awards for its leading lady. O'Connor and Shelton were also asked to create a potential TV series based on the material.
After executive producing the documentary "Mule Skinner Blues" (2001), the indie drama "The Slaughter Rule" (2002) and the cable actioner "The Smashing Machine" (2002), O'Connor returned behind the camera to direct "Miracle" (2004), the well-crafted Cinderella sports story of the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team and its near unimaginable defeat of the then-dominating Soviet and Czech teams. Building the drama on the shoulders of coach Herb Brooks, a complicated, hard-driving man played to perfection by hockey enthusiast Kurt Russell, O'Connor assembled a textbook sports film that rose above others in the genre due to its attention to human moments and character foibles.
Filmography
Director (Feature Film)
Cast (Feature Film)
Writer (Feature Film)
Producer (Feature Film)
Misc. Crew (Feature Film)
Producer (Special)
Life Events
1992
Wrote and produced Ted Demme's directorial debut, the short film "The Bet"
1993
Played Drill Man in Demme's feature directing debut, "Who's the Man?"
1994
Wrote and directed the short "American Standoff" (aired on PBS)
1995
Feature co-writing and directing debut, "Comfortably Numb"
1997
Produced, wrote and starred in the off-off-Broadway play "Rumblings of a Romance Renaissance"
1998
Founded Final Cut Features with twin brother Greg
1999
Co-wrote (with then-wife Angela Shelton) "Tumbleweeds"; also directed, co-produced (with Demme) and co-starred
2004
Produced and directed first mainstream film "Miracle"; based on the US hockey team's victory in the 1980 Winter Olympics
2008
Directed (also co-wrote) the crime drama "Pride and Glory" starring Colin Farrell and Edward Norton