Alan Parker


Director

About

Also Known As
Alan William Parker, Sir Alan Parker
Birth Place
Islington, England, GB
Born
February 14, 1944

Biography

From his humble beginnings as an office boy at age 19, Alan Parker worked his way up in the advertising business and began his career in earnest when he and partner Alan Marshall founded a production company to make industrial films and commercials. Between 1969 and 1978, Parker churned out over 500 television commercials, winning every major industry award, while also being cited as an ...

Family & Companions

Annie Inglis
Wife
Married on July 30, 1966; granted an uncontested divorce on January 6, 1992 on the grounds of her husband's adultery.

Biography

From his humble beginnings as an office boy at age 19, Alan Parker worked his way up in the advertising business and began his career in earnest when he and partner Alan Marshall founded a production company to make industrial films and commercials. Between 1969 and 1978, Parker churned out over 500 television commercials, winning every major industry award, while also being cited as an important influence on both fashion and film style of that time. He adeptly used lighting, and his sense of drama as a feature film director has seemed to come as much from his early need to convey a message in 30 seconds as from a sense of pictorial grace.

In 1973, Parker wrote and directed a 50-minute film, "No Hard Feelings," which the BBC bought and eventually aired several years later. "The Evacuees" (1975), his first film produced for the BBC, brought attention from the theatrical marketplace. The following year, he and producer David Puttnam collaborated on Parker's debut as a writer-director, "Bugsy Malone," a musical spoof of gangster films with an all-children cast. His second feature, the powerful "Midnight Express" (1978) was based on the true story of an American arrested in Turkey for drug smuggling and earned six Oscar nominations, including one for Parker. (It won for the awards for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Score.)

Parker followed the popular and stylish musical "Fame" (1980), his first US-produced feature, with arguably his most personal film "Shoot the Moon" (1981), a sensitively detailed examination of the disintegration of a marriage. The quirky, touching "Birdy" (1984) and the controversial "Angel Heart" (1987) solidified his reputation as a highly visual storyteller whose palette made use of the soundtrack as well as strong imagery. "Mississippi Burning" (1988), a glossy recreation of a famous civil rights murder case was praised for its fine performances (particularly by Gene Hackman as a veteran FBI man), but drew fire for its glib reworking of history. Plunging into farce, Parker directed Anthony Hopkins in "The Road To Wellville" (1994), a send-up of American health fadist John Kellogg. Parker also produced and wrote the screenplay based on T. Coraghessan Boyle's novel, but the colorful casting and spectacular cinematography was pretty much wasted on this uneven romp.

Among his contemporaries, Parker is the only director courageous enough to return again and again to the movie musical. Of course, good reviews build confidence, and critics have been generous with their praise of his efforts. The charming idea of casting kids in a gangster movie struck a responsive chord in most and "Bugsy Malone" also profited from an astonishingly assured performance from a 13-year-old Jodie Foster. His insights into talented young people and his ability to tell their stories in dozens of vignettes as opposed to a conventional linear plot helped insure the success of "Fame," and in "Pink Floyd--The Wall" (1982), he transformed a best-selling rock album into one of the great modern musicals. Visually stunning in its wide array of images that included animated sequences by cartoonist Gerald Scarfe, this movie appealed to a much wider audience than just rock 'n' roll fans. "The Commitments" (1991) for all its high energy and great soul music fell a bit short of the mark established by his other musicals, and though his "Evita" (1996) was epic, lavish and fascinating, the MTV-style editing diluted the inherent power of the material and worked against the integrity of Madonna's titular performance.

Always fiercely independent, Parker has often lambasted the British film establishment and film critics. No stranger to controversy, he took on the ratings board of the MPAA and personally challenged their "X" rating of "Angel Heart." Parker has also authored a compilation of satirical cartoons, "Hares in the Gate" (1982), and in 1984 produced "A Turnip Head's Guide to British Cinema," a sarcastic documentary which ridiculed the critical mentality, a film that delighted his filmmaking contemporaries as well as his four children, whom he has cited as his chief inspiration.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Life of David Gale (2003)
Director
Angela's Ashes (1999)
Director
Evita (1996)
Director
The Road to Wellville (1994)
Director
The Commitments (1991)
Director
Come See the Paradise (1990)
Director
Mississippi Burning (1988)
Director
Angel Heart (1987)
Director
Birdy (1984)
Director
Shoot the Moon (1982)
Director
Pink Floyd--The Wall (1982)
Director
Fame (1980)
Director
Midnight Express (1978)
Director
Bugsy Malone (1976)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff (Do Not Use) (2011)
Himself
Angela's Ashes (1999)
The Commitments (1991)

Writer (Feature Film)

Angela's Ashes (1999)
Screenplay
Evita (1996)
Screenplay
The Road to Wellville (1994)
Screenplay
Come See the Paradise (1990)
Screenplay
Angel Heart (1987)
Screenplay
Bugsy Malone (1976)
Screenwriter
Melody (1971)
From Story
Melody (1971)
Screenplay

Producer (Feature Film)

The Life of David Gale (2003)
Producer
Angela's Ashes (1999)
Producer
Evita (1996)
Producer
The Road to Wellville (1994)
Producer

Music (Feature Film)

Angela's Ashes (1999)
Song
Evita (1996)
Music Producer
Come See the Paradise (1990)
Theme Lyrics

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff (Do Not Use) (2011)
Other
Terror in the Aisles (1984)
Other

Cast (Special)

The Inside Reel: Digital Filmmaking (2001)
Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures (2001)
It's Black Entertainment (2000)
The Fine Art of Separating People From Their Money (1999)

Cast (Short)

On Location with: FAME (1980)
Himself

Life Events

1963

After graduating from high school, joined advertising agency as an office boy at age 19 (date approximate)

1966

At urging of Puttnam, went to work on first feature film script; eventually made as "Melody" (1972), Puttnam's producing debut

1968

Television commercial directing debut

1969

Directed nearly 500 TV commercials in London

1970

Formed own production company, The Alan Parker Film Company, with Alan Marshall

1973

Medium-length film writing and directing debut, "No Hard Feelings" (50 mins), independently produced (Parker invested his own 30,000 pounds), it was subsequently bought by the BBC, and aired in 1976

1975

TV-movie directing debut, "The Evacuees" (BBC-produced)

1976

Feature film directing debut (also writer), "Bugsy Malone"

1977

Published novel, "Puddles in the Lane"

1978

Directed the international hit "Midnight Express"; won Oscar nomination as Best Director

1980

First US-produced feature, "Fame"

1982

Published collection of cartoons, "Hares in the Gate"

1982

Expanded the themes of the bestselling rock concept album in the film version of "Pink Floyd--The Wall"; employed innovative animation techniques

1984

Scored big at Cannes Film Festival with "Birdy"

1987

Personally challenged the ratings board of the MPAA for their "X" rating of "Angel Heart"

1988

Helmed the civil rights drama "Mississippi Burning"; film received seven Academy Award nominations including one for Parker's direction

1991

Returned to movie musical format with "The Commitments", an upbeat story of poor North Dublin kids who form a band to play American soul music

1994

Wrote, produced and directed "The Road to Wellville", a sendup of health fadist John Kellogg

1996

Film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice's "Evita" opened to mixed reviews

1997

Signed first-look producing deal with PolyGram (May)

1997

Appointed as chair of the British Film Institute (BFI)

2000

Became head of the Film Council, which oversees funding allotted to the British Film Commission, the Arts Council's Film Lottery panel, the British Film Institute and British Screen Finance

Videos

Movie Clip

Bugsy Malone (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Open, If It Was Raining Brains Clever voice-over open (by 13 year-old John Cassisi as Fat Sam), from director Alan Parker’s original screenplay, leading to a highlight-shot credit sequence featuring Scott Baio (title character, in his first credited role), and the title song by Paul Williams from his Academy Award-nominated score, from the sometimes beloved kids-as-gangsters musical Bugsy Malone, 1976.
Bugsy Malone (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Fat Sam's Grand Slam Inside the speak-easy for which the song is named, another tune from Paul Williams’ score with kids in the cast lip-synching to grown-ups’ vocals, with the first glimpse of Jodie Foster as Tallulah, and the first encounter between the title character (Scott Baio) and aspiring singer Blousey (Florence Garland), from Bugsy Malone, 1976, written and directed by Alan Parker.
Bugsy Malone (1976) -- (Movie Clip) Go Feed The Ducks Probably more provocative in retrospect than it seemed at the time, writer-director Alan Parker in his kids-playing-gangsters musical has brassy Tallulah (Jodie Foster), girlfriend of the owner of the night club, apply her charms to the hustler title character (Scott Baio), igniting his potential girlfriend Blousey (Florence Garland), in Bugsy Malone, 1976.
Midnight Express (1978) -- (Movie Clip) Will It Ease The Pain? Brad Davis as American Billy Hayes, narrating a letter to his parents, being processed into a Turkish prison for smuggling hashish, early in director Alan Parker's Midnight Express, 1978, from Hayes' book.
Midnight Express (1978) -- (Movie Clip) I've Been Poisoned From the opening scenes, American Billy Hayes (Brad Davis) preparing to smuggle hashish out of Istanbul, then with girlfriend Susan (Irene Miracle) at the airport, from Alan Parker's Midnight Express, 1978.
Midnight Express (1978) -- (Movie Clip) Choose Your Own Death American Jimmy (Randy Quaid), compatriot Billy Hayes (Brad Davis) and Brit Max (John Hurt) considering prospects of breaking out of their Turkish prison, in Midnight Express, 1978, directed by Alan Parker.
Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982) -- (Movie Clip) The Thin Ice First Christine Hargreaves the inattentive mother, then sequences confirming the death of his father at Anzio, the recording of the Roger Waters original song a remix from the 1979 album, Bob Geldof as rock star Pink wierding out in his hotel, in Pink Floyd - The Wall, 1982.
Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982) -- (Movie Clip) Another Brick In The Wall Pt. 2 Probably the best known sequence from director Alan Parker, seen widely in the MTV movie-promo video, Alex McAvoy as the teacher, Kevin McKeon as student “Pink,” the recording remixed from the hit 1979 single, composed by Roger Waters, from Pink Floyd - The Wall, 1982.
Pink Floyd - The Wall (1982) -- (Movie Clip) In The Flesh Pink (Bob Geldof) now in a mental breakdown, completely assuming his neo-Nazi alter ego, with Geldof’s own vocal and a new recording of the song from the original 1979 album, composed by Roger Waters, directed by Alan Parker, in Pink Floyd - The Wall, 1982.
Birdy (1984) -- (Movie Clip) Things You Put Me Through After the introduction of the title character in the credits, scenes with injured Vietnam vet Al Columbati (Nicolas Cage), from director Alan Parker's Birdy, 1984, from William Wharton's novel.
Birdy (1984) -- (Movie Clip) The Weird Kid In the first flashback, young Al (Nicolas Cage), goaded by little brother Mario (James Santini) confronts the title character (Matthew Modine) over a stolen knife, in Alan Parker's Birdy, 1984.

Trailer

Family

Elsie Ellen Parker
Mother
William Leslie Parker
Father
Worked in the transport departmant of London <i>Times</i>.
Lucy Kate Parker
Daughter

Companions

Annie Inglis
Wife
Married on July 30, 1966; granted an uncontested divorce on January 6, 1992 on the grounds of her husband's adultery.

Bibliography