John Briley


Screenwriter

About

Also Known As
John Richard Briley
Birth Place
Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA
Born
June 25, 1925

Biography

An American writer who went to England to work for the U.S. Air Force in the mid-1950s and stayed on after his tour, John Briley is best known for writing the screenplay for "Gandhi," the 1982 epic which earned him an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. Briley's first writing was actually in public relations for General Motors in his native Michigan. It was not until after her rejoined t...

Family & Companions

Dorothy Louise Reichart
Wife
Married in 1950.

Bibliography

"The First Stone"
John Briley, William Morrow (1997)
"The Last Dance"
John Briley, Secker & Warburg (1978)
"The Traitors"
John Briley, G.P. Putnam's Sons (1968)

Biography

An American writer who went to England to work for the U.S. Air Force in the mid-1950s and stayed on after his tour, John Briley is best known for writing the screenplay for "Gandhi," the 1982 epic which earned him an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. Briley's first writing was actually in public relations for General Motors in his native Michigan. It was not until after her rejoined the Air Force in 1955 and was sent to England for five years as director of orientation at a base there that he took up writing full-time. Briley was a staff writer with MGM in Elstree, England, from 1960-64, through which he earned his first screenplay credit when he co-authored the adaptation the Norman Collins novel "Invasion Quarter" (1961). In 1972, he wrote "Pope Joan," which starred Liv Ullmann in the fact-based story of a woman who disguised herself as a man and became head of the Roman Catholic Church. In 1978 came "The Medusa Touch" with Richard Burton as a man who wills the death of others. But few of Briley's screenplays became acclaimed films before "Gandhi" (1982), which he followed with "Enigma" (1983), a thriller starring Martin Sheen as an agent out to stop five crack assassins from killing five Soviet dissidents. In 1987, Briley wrote the script for "Cry Freedom," the story of a South African newspaper editor who is moved by Steven Biko to lobby against apartheid and then must free the country. Briley also produced with Richard Attenborough, who had hired him to write "Gandhi." The following year, Briley wrote "Sandino," about the Nicaraguan leader who fought American imperialists in the 1930s, and in 1992 came "Christopher Columbus: The Discovery."

Briley has written occasionally for TV, including the BBC series "Hits and Misses" (1962) and "The Airbase" (1965), derived from his own experiences in the Air Force. He has had two plays produced on the British stage, "Seven Bob a Buck" (1964) and "So Who Needs Men!" (1976), and has also written two novels.

Life Events

1943

Rose to rank of captain in US Air Force

1961

Earned first screenplay credit, co-writing "Invasion Quartet"

1962

Wrote for British series, "Hits and Misses"

1964

Had first play produced, "Seven Bob a Buck"

1982

Wrote screenplay for "Gandhi"

1987

Wrote and produced "Cry Freedom"

1992

Credited with the screenplay for "Christopher Columbus: The Discovery"

1999

Penned the script for "Molokai: The Story of Father Damien"

Videos

Movie Clip

Marie: A True Story (1985) -- (Movie Clip) He's A Good Kid Given a tour of the Tennessee state penitentiary (shot on location in Nashville, Bill McIntyre the guard), Sissy Spacek (title character) gets another exciting offer from her boss in the governor’s office (Jeff Daniels as Eddie Sisk), then the first suggestion that he’s corrupt, then meets Morgan Freeman as the head of the parole board, in Marie: A True Story, 1985.
Marie: A True Story (1985) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Bring Us Some More Beer The violent opening by director Roger Donaldson, from John Briley’s screenplay from Peter Maas’ book based on the real life of the title character Marie Ragghianti, played by Sissy Spacek, Vincent Irizarry her husband, in Marie: A True Story, 1985, also starring Jeff Daniels, Morgan Freeman, and then-lawyer Fred Thompson “as himself.”
Gandhi (1982) -- (Movie Clip) Day Of Prayer And Fasting Spring, 1919, Jinnah (Alyque Padamsee) introduces Ben Kingsley (title character) to fellow Muslim leader Patel (Saeed Jaffrey) and friends, Nehru (Roshan Seth) joining, in Richard Attenborough's Gandhi, 1982.
Gandhi (1982) -- (Movie Clip) Jallianwala Bagh Massacre Edward Fox as British General Dyer, leading director Richard Attenborough's heavily researched recreation of the massacre at Jallianwala Bagh, Amritsar, India, April 1919, in Gandhi, 1982.
Gandhi (1982) -- (Movie Clip) I Thought You'd Be Bigger South Africa circa 1913, priest Charles Freer Andrews (Ian Charleson) introduces himself to Indian lawyer Mohandas Gandhi (Ben Kingsley), whereupon they meet thug Colin (Daniel Day-Lewis, not a historical figure) in Gandhi, 1982.
Gandhi (1982) -- (Movie Clip) Conscience Of All Mankind Opening scenes, the death of the title character (Ben Kingsley) in Delhi, Harsh Nayyar as assassin, then the funeral, Shane Rimmer as the commentator, generally recognized as the largest movie scene ever filmed, with over 300,000 extras, from Richard Attenborough's Gandhi, 1982.
Gandhi (1982) -- (Movie Clip) We Will Light A Fire First wife Kasturba (Rohini Hattangady) then the title character (Ben Kingsley), addressing a crowd during his Indian "non-cooperation" movement, circa 1921, in Richard Attenborough's Gandhi, 1982.

Trailer

Family

William Treve Briley
Father
Salesperson.
Mary Stella Briley
Mother
Salesperson.
Dennis Patrick Briley
Son
Paul Christian Briley
Son
Mary Sydney Briley
Daughter
Shaun William Briley
Son

Companions

Dorothy Louise Reichart
Wife
Married in 1950.

Bibliography

"The First Stone"
John Briley, William Morrow (1997)
"The Last Dance"
John Briley, Secker & Warburg (1978)
"The Traitors"
John Briley, G.P. Putnam's Sons (1968)