Jim Abrahams


Director, Screenwriter
Jim Abrahams

About

Also Known As
James Abrahams
Birth Place
Shorewood, Wisconsin, USA
Born
May 10, 1944

Biography

With college friends Jerry and David Zucker, Jim Abrahams is co-founder of the Kentucky Fried Theater in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1969. ZAZ (as they came to be known) subsequently moved their satirical group to Los Angeles and set up a theater there. They made their first venture into feature filmmaking with "The Kentucky Fried Movie" (1977). Directed by John Landis, the film was a memorab...

Photos & Videos

Family & Companions

Nancy Abrahams
Wife

Biography

With college friends Jerry and David Zucker, Jim Abrahams is co-founder of the Kentucky Fried Theater in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1969. ZAZ (as they came to be known) subsequently moved their satirical group to Los Angeles and set up a theater there. They made their first venture into feature filmmaking with "The Kentucky Fried Movie" (1977). Directed by John Landis, the film was a memorable series of absurd, vulgar and (mostly) wildly funny send-ups of popular culture. Most of their subsequent work has been in a similar vein. "Airplane!" (1980), "Top Secret!" (1984) and "The Naked Gun" (1988) pay satirical homage to, respectively, the disaster film, the spy film and the police film. Trademark features include scattershot pop culture allusions, rapid-fire anything-for-a-laugh gags, and rugged, but notoriously stiff, second echelon actors from the 1950s (e.g., Robert Stack, Leslie Nielsen, Peter Graves).

Like his creative partners, Abrahams has ventured into a solo career as a writer-director, making his directing debut with the slightly more restrained and traditional comedy, "Big Business" (1988) which presented Bette Midler and Lily Tomlin as a pair of identical twins. He served as executive producer to John Water's "Cry Baby" (1990), a sweet-natured musical comedy homage to 50s juvenile delinquent dramas and the mystique of the teen rebel. His next solo effort, "Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael" (1990), was a darker change-of-pace comedy featuring Winona Ryder as an outcast teen. Abrahams enjoyed his first solo hit with "Hot Shots!" (1991), an inspired spoof of "Top Gun" and other military flyboy movies. He expanded the parody to include "Rambo" and other commando rescue sagas in the sequel, "Hot Shots! Part Deux" (1992).

Abrahams helmed a well-received 1997 TV-movie, ." . . first do no harm" (ABC), which featured Meryl Streep. The telefilm's subject was close to the director's heart: focusing attention on a controversial dietary treatment for epilepsy. Abrahams' son Charlie suffers with the disease and responded well to the diet.

Life Events

1969

With David and Jerry Zucker, formed the Kentucky Fried Theater in Madison, Wisconsin

1972

Moved Kentucky Fried Theater to Los Angeles

1977

First film as co-writer and actor, "Kentucky Fried Movie"

1980

First film as co-director and co-executive producer, "Airplane!" (also co-writer)

1982

TV directing, producing, and writing debut, "Police Squad!"

1988

Solo directing debut, "Big Business"

1997

Returned to TV to direct and co-executive produce ". . . first do no harm" (ABC), the telefilm's subject had personal resonance as Abrahams' son Charlie was treated with the controversial diet depicted in the film

1998

Helmed the spoof "Mafia!"

Videos

Movie Clip

Night On Earth (1991) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Good Old World Tom Waits’ bumpy original theme song from his soundtrack, director Jim Jarmusch’s quasi-animated opening, and landing on the first clock and city, Los Angeles, in the five-vignette feature Night On Earth, 1991, starring Winona Ryder, Gena Rowlands, Roberto Benigni, and more.
Night On Earth (1991) -- (Movie Clip) D Is For Drive Opening the second episode in writer-director Jim Jarmusch’s five-part feature on taxi drivers and their rides, Giancarlo Esposito as Yoyo can’t get a ride, until Armin Mueller-Stahl, as Helmut, drives up, in Night On Earth, 1991.
Night On Earth (1991) -- (Movie Clip) A Band Called Utensil From the Los Angeles story (from writer-director Jim Jarmusch’s five taxi-themed episodes), just-introduced movie exec Victoria (Gena Rowlands) meets foul-mouthed cabby Corky, early in Night On Earth, 1991.
Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad, The (1988) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Lieutenant Frank Drebin The dumb and delightful opening from the Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker team that made Airplane, 1980, as Lt. Drebin (Leslie Nielsen) thumps all the current evil global actors, Gen. Amin, Chrmn. Arafat, Col. Qadhafi, Premier Gorbachev, the Ayatollah, etc., in The Naked Gun: From The Files Of Police Squad, 1988.
Dirty Gertie From Harlem, U.S.A. (1946) -- (Movie Clip) She's A Painted Trollop Stella (Kathrine Moore) is confirming that the whole company had to leave Harlem for the islands because headliner Gertie (Francine Everett) mistreated her big-shot boyfriend, even as she begins to make trouble with Mr. Christian (Alfred Hawkins) and on-leave servicemen (Shelly Ross, Hugh Watson), in Dirty Gertie From Harlem U.S.A., 1946.
Town That Dreaded Sundown, The -- (Movie Clip) That Phantom Killer Peggy (Cindy Butler) and Roy (Steve Lyons) choosing to take a chance after the prom, Captain Morales (Ben Johnson) and deputy Ramsey (Andrew Prine) reviewing their strategy, and a bad outcome, in The Town That Dreaded Sundown, 1977.
Airplane! (1980) -- (Movie Clip) Picked The Wrong Week... Too many gags running at once, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Hays and Julie Hagerty in the cockpit, Robert Stack battling airport solicitors, Lloyd Bridges in the control room in Airplane!, 1980.
Airplane! (1980) -- (Movie Clip) Ever Been In A Cockpit? Pilot Peter Graves is happier than co-pilot Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (as "Roger Murdoch") to see young Johnny (Stepher Stucker) in the cockpit, in the hit satire Airplane!, 1980.
Airplane! (1980) -- (Movie Clip) Fish For Dinner As seen in Zero Hour!, 1957, the doctor (Leslie Neilsen) has identified the problem, which he explains to stewardess Elaine (Julie Hagerty) who then launches panic, in Airplane!, 1980.

Trailer

Family

Joseph Abrahams
Son
Jamie Abrahams
Child
Charles Abrahams
Son
Born c. 1992; suffers with epilepsy; on special high-fat diet; family story became the basis for a TV-movie starring Meryl Streep.

Companions

Nancy Abrahams
Wife

Bibliography