The
screenwriter for Juno and the executive who turned Bravo
Cable Network into a $1.25 billion company are former UI students.
They are just a few of the people with UI affiliations who went on to make a name for
themselves in the entertainment industry.
Executives
and producers
- Mitchell
A. Burgess and Robin
L. Green—Executive producers of The
Sopranos and Northern
Exposure. Burgess received a BA in History, 1978. Green earned an MA in English, 1977.
Diablo Cody—Also known as Brooke Busey, Cody is the writer behind the 2009 film Jennifer's Body and 2007's Juno, which won an Academy Award for best screenplay. She worked at the student-run radio station KRUI while at Iowa in the late 1990s. BA, Communication Studies, 2000.
- Kathleen
A. Dore—A
top entertainment industry executive and the former president
of the Bravo Cable Network,
IFC Co. (the parent company of the Independent
Film Channel),
and
Rainbow Entertainment Services. BA, 1972; MBA, 1984.
- John
Falsey—A consulting producer on the television series
Providence, co-creator
of St. Elsewhere, and executive producer
of Northern Exposure. He won an Emmy in 1986, a
Peabody in 1992, and a Golden Globe in 1992. MFA, 1978.
- Mark
M. Johnson—Producer
who won an Oscar for Rainman. His
other film production credits include The Chronicles of Narnia,
The Banger Sisters, Bugsy, Good Morning Vietnam, Tin Men, and Diner.
MA, Communication and Theatre Arts, 1973.
- Barry
M. Kemp—Producer of the television hits Coach and Newhart.
BA, Communication and Theatre Arts, 1971.
- Richard
W. Maibaum—Author of 13
James Bond film scripts. BA, 1931; MA, Communication and Theatre
Arts, 1932. He died in 1991.
David Milch—The screenwriter and producer who created the acclaimed HBO drama Deadwood, and the television programs Hill Street Blues and NYPD Blues before that. MFA, 1970.
Performers
- Bruce
French—Actor
whose credits include Mr. Mom, Legal Eagles, Fletch,
and Star Trek: The Next Generation. BA, Communication
and Theatre Arts,
1967.
- Mary
Beth Hurt—Film and stage actress who received three Tony Award nominations for her performances on Broadway. Her movie credits include 2008's Untraceable and 1982's The World According to Garp (which was based on a bookby UI grad John Irving, incidentally). BA, Communication and Theatre Arts, 1968.
Ashton Kutcher—Hollywood
actor whose film credits include Dude, Where’s My Car? and
Just Married. He studied biochemical engineering at Iowa
in 1997 before he was recruited by a modeling agent. He posed
for Versace and Calvin Klein before becoming a film and television actor.
- Gene
Wilder—Comedic
film and television actor whose credits include Willie Wonka
& The Chocolate Factory, Young
Frankenstein, and Stir Crazy. BA, Communication
and Theatre Arts,
1955.
Filmmakers
- Charles
Guggenheim—A documentary filmmaker who has won
three Academy Awards and been nominated for eight others. BA,
Communication and Theatre Arts, 1948.
- Jeanne Jordan—A documentary she co-directed with Steven Ascher, Troublesome Creek: A Midwestern, was nominated for an Academy Award in 1995. BA, English, 1973.
- Nicholas
Meyer—Film writer and director whose film credits
include Fatal Attraction, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution,
and Star Trek II. BA, Communication and Theatre Arts,
1968.
- Stewart
Stern—Hollywood
screenwriter whose credits include writing Rebel Without a Cause (starring
James Dean) and Sybil (starring Sally
Field as a woman with multiple personality disorder). He attended Iowa
to study art in the 1940s, but after serving in WWII, he began writing
screenplays.
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