- Nancy Savoca
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Nancy Savoca Born Nancy Laura Savoca
July 23, 1959
Bronx, New YorkOccupation Director, Writer, Producer Years active 1982 to present Spouse Richard Guay[disambiguation needed ] (m. 1980 to present) Children Bobby Guay (b. 1986), Kenny Guay (b. 1989), Martina Guay (b. 1992) Awards Won: Haig P. Manoogian Award, New York University (1982)
Won: Grand Jury Prize, Sundance Film Festival (1989) for True Love
Won: San Sebastián International Film Festival for True Love (1989)
Nominated: Independent Spirit Award, Best Director for True Love (1990)
Nominated: Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay: Household Saints (1994)
Won: Lucy Award for If These Walls Could Talk (1996)
Nominated: ALMA award for Outstanding Director of a feature film for The 24-Hour Woman (2000)
Won: Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival, Best Director for Dirt (2004)Nancy Savoca (born July 23, 1959) is an American film screenwriter, director, and producer. Born and raised in the Bronx, New York, she is the daughter of Sicilian and Argentine immigrants Calogero Savoca and Maria Elvira Savoca. Married to Richard Guay (pronounced as "gay"), also a writer and producer, they have three children: two sons and a daughter.
Contents
Life and work
After completing her courses at Queens College, Flushing, New York, Savoca went on to graduate in 1982 from New York University’s film school, the Tisch School of the Arts. While there she received the Haig P. Manoogian Award for overall excellence for her short films Renata and Bad Timing. Around this time she met Rich Guay, then an accounting student working at an Italian deli near her home. They were married in 1980. Once out of film school she worked as a storyboard artist and assistant editor on an independent film. But her first real hands-on professional experience was as a production assistant to John Sayles on his film: The Brother From Another Planet and as an assistant auditor for Jonathan Demme on two of his films: Something Wild (1986), and Married to the Mob (1988).
In 1989, her very first full length movie, the privately funded True Love about Italian-American marriage rituals in the Bronx won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. The movie, starring Annabella Sciorra and Ron Eldard, both making their film debuts (and co-starring a number of familiar faces from The Sopranos including Aida Turturro and Vincent Pastore), was hailed as one of the best films of the year by both Janet Maslin and Vincent Canby of the New York Times. Savoca was nominated for a Spirit Award as Best Director. MGM/UA snapped up the distribution rights and RCA released the soundtrack, seeing two of the songs reach the Top 40 hits on the Billboard charts.
Since then she has written, directed and produced movies for the big screen, for television, has written or polished scripts for other directors, and has directed a number of episodes in ongoing television series. Her most famous work for television was co-writing all three segments of the Demi Moore produced If These Walls Could Talk, a mini-series about abortion rights, and directing the first two segments. The second segment starred Sissy Spacek trying to decide in the mid-70’s whether her marriage could stand the strain of another child. Cher starred in and directed the third segment. In it she played a modern Planned Parenthood doctor, the victim of a pro-life fanatic.
In 1998, Savoca was feted as a "New York trailblazer" at the New York Women's Film Festival. Savoca was also honored by the Los Angeles chapter of the advocacy organization, Woman in Film and Television (WIFT). Her film, True Love was called one of the "50 Greatest Independent Films of All-Time" by Entertainment Weekly.
Two of Savoca's films, Household Saints and True Love, are listed in The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made St. Martin's Griffin.[1]
Nancy Savoca’s work has also been the subject of a retrospective by The American Museum of the Moving Image.
An artist’s vision
Savoca works most often as an independent filmmaker although she is no stranger to Hollywood. Like the innovative John Cassavetes, she allows her actors to find their own way through to a character. Also like Cassavetes, although her films are entirely scripted (often in partnership with her husband, Rich Guay), Savoca is willing to change a line or a scene at a moment’s notice if it feels right. And unlike most directors, she will use people in her films that have either only acted on stage, or never acted at all. Making a movie is personal. As well as devoting perhaps years to one project, it can be emotionally draining. Asked to direct Emma Thompson in Wit, Savoca declined since the plot of a woman dying from cancer was too close to events in her own life.
Savoca’s films reflect an ongoing concern with the feminine, albeit the quirky feminine. With a sense of nothing being “directed” or manipulated, she evokes so-called “ordinary” life on its deepest emotional level, yet with perfect artistic control. In 1991’s Dogfight, starring River Phoenix and Lili Taylor, she gives us a touching portrait of feminine courage and masculine absolution. This film—about a Marine on the eve of leaving for the new war in Vietnam finding and bringing the ugliest girl he can scrape up to a dreadful contest called a “dogfight”—was not well attended, but was critically acclaimed. The New York Times again praised Savoca’s work. As an interesting aside, Brendan Fraser made his first appearance in "the movies" as a cameo in Savoca's Dogfight.
In 1993’s Household Saints, again teaming up with Lili Taylor, Savoca moved beyond her interest in “ordinary people” to one extraordinary person who steps over the boundaries of routine religion into the realm of the luminously spiritual. Tracey Ullman and Vincent D'Onofrio play the parents of Lili Taylor. Being Italian, they are also Roman Catholic. Professing Catholicism means certain things, but it seldom means housing a saint. Savoca’s script was lovingly crafted from the book by Francine Prose. With Jonathan Demme as the executive producer and released by Fine Line, the film was on the "Best Films" list of over twenty national critics and was nominated for a Spirit Award for Best Screenplay by Savoca and Guay. Lili Taylor won a Spirit for Best Female Performance.
Working with Oscar nominees Rosie Perez, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, and Tony Award winner, Patti Lupone, Savoca wrote and directed The 24 Hour Woman about the myth of the “superwoman,” able to juggle a marriage, pregnancy, and a high profile job. Perez plays the producer of a local TV show for women in New York City who lives her pregnancy, child-birth, and new baby very publicly “over the air.” Also appearing was the up-and-coming Diego Serrano as "Eddie Diaz." This movie was premiered at Sundance in 1999 and Savoca was nominated for an ALMA (American Latin Media Arts) award for Outstanding Director.
Moving into television, Savoca directed, as mentioned, the first two segments of If These Walls Could Talk. The first segment, a single woman seeking a backstreet abortion in the 1950s played by Demi Moore, caught Moore at perhaps her finest moment as an actress. In this section, Savoca also worked with the highly respected actresses Shirley Knight and CCH Pounder. It was then the highest rated original movie in HBO history. It played at several international film festivals and received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for best television drama and for Ms. Moore's performance. Because of “Walls,” Savoca shared a Lucy Award from Women in Film with the other creators.[2] Released in 2003, she directed Reno: Rebel Without a Pause: Unrestrained Reflections on September 11, the performance artist Reno’s raw, cynical and furiously funny rant about the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center and The Pentagon. This film opened at the Toronto Film Festival on September 11, 2002. The city of Florence, Italy awarded this film the Prize for Peace and Liberty.
2005 saw the release of Dirt starring Julieta Ortiz, a stage actress making her first appearance in a motion picture. Dirt, which premiered on Showtime, explores the life of Dolores, an illegal immigrant from El Salvador who can only find work “under the table.” Constantly terrified she will be deported as she cleans American houses, she dreams of the day she can go back to a home of her own. For this film, the Writers Guild of America nominated Savoca and Guay for a WGA for Best Longform Teleplay in 2006. Ortiz won Best Actress in New York's Le Cinema Fe and Savoca won Best Director at Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival.
Latest work
Savoca and Guay are shooting a documentary on Gato Barbieri, an Argentinian jazz saxophonist. They are also currently working towards the filming of Ki Longfellow’s novel The Secret Magdalene (Eio Books, 2005; Random House, 2007) in which Savoca is again the screenwriter and director, while Guay is producing.
Revolution Books screened "Dirt" on August 11, 2010. Savoca appeared for a Q&A. DIRT is an award-winning tragic-comedy about an undocumented cleaning woman. Shot in NYC and El Salvador. [2]
In February 2011, Colombia held a retrospective of Savoca's work which she attended.
Savoca recently completed photography on the independent feature Union Square starring Mira Sorvino, Tammy Blanchard, Patti LuPone, Mike Doyle, Michael Rispoli and Daphne Rubin-Vega. Madeleine Peyroux is recording an end song for the film which has been invited to open in 2011's Toronto International Film Festival.[3]
Filmography
- Renata (1982) (short film)
- Bad Timing (1982) (short film)
- True Love (1989)
- Dogfight (1991)
- Household Saints (1993) (also co-writer, with Richard Guay)
- Dark Eyes (1995) (TV)
- Murder One (1995) (TV)
- If These Walls Could Talk (1996) (TV) (also co-writer, with I. Marlene King and Susan Nanus)
- The 24 Hour Woman (1999) (also co-writer, with Richard Guay)
- Third Watch (2000) (TV)
- The Mind of the Married Man (2001) (TV)
- Reno: Rebel without a Pause (2003) (TV) (also co-producer)
- Dirt (2003) (also co-writer, with Richard Guay)
- Union Square (2012) (also co-writer, with Mary Tobler)
Television Director
- 1995 – Chapter Five, Murder One, ABC
- 1996 – If These Walls Could Talk, (miniseries)
- 2000 - Know Thyself, Third Watch, NBC
- 2001 - Anywhere, Anytime, The Mind of the Married Man, HBO
- 2003 – Dirt, Showtime, 2003
- 1980s - Director for The Great Spacecoaster (syndicated children’s series)
Other
- 1995 – Dark Eyes (pilot), ABC
- 1996 – 1952 and 1974, If These Walls Could Talk, (miniseries), HBO
- 2005 – Dirt, Showtime
As a Writer
- 1982 – Renata (short film, with others)
- 1982 – Bad Timing (short film, with others)
- 1989 – True Love (with Richard Guay)
- 1993 – Household Saints (with Richard Guay)
- 1996 – If These Walls Could Talk (with others)
- 1999 – The 24 Hour Woman (with Richard Guay)
- 2008 – The Secret Magdalene (pre-production)
- 2010 - Union Square (with Mary Tobler)
References
- ^ "The Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made" The New York Times
- ^ Lucy Award, past recipients WIF web site
- ^ [1]
- Women Filmmakers and Their Films, St. James Press, 1998
External links
- Nancy Savoca at the Internet Movie Database
- The book of Savoca's next movie in pre-production
- Tisch School of Film
- Nancy Savoca Facebook fanpage
- Savoca's movies on Fandango
- On Hollywood.com
- Reno on IMDb
- Come Back, Nancy Savoca, "Women in Hollywood," New York Times
Films directed by Nancy Savoca 1980s True Love (1989)1990s Dogfight (1991) • Household Saints (1993) • If These Walls Could Talk (1996) • The 24 Hour Woman (1999)2000s Reno: Rebel without a Pause (2003) • Gato Barbieri (2007) • The Secret Magdalene (2008)2010s The Guest Room (2010)Categories:- 1959 births
- American experimental filmmakers
- American film directors
- American film producers
- American screenwriters
- Female film directors
- Living people
- People from the Bronx
- Women screenwriters
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