- Thom Mount
Thom Mount (born
May 28 ,1948 ) is the former President ofUniversal Pictures and one of America's most well-known independent producers.Biography
Born in
Durham, North Carolina , Thomas Henderson Mount grew up in the sleepy southern town, graduating from Durham High School and, like so many of his generation, leaving home to travel across America. Following graduation fromBard College , Mount went to CalArts to earn a Master’s Degree in Fine Arts.In 1973, Mount was hired at Universal Pictures as an assistant to then Vice-President
Ned Tanen . Mount oversaw the development on numerous black exploitation films and theRichard Pryor hits "Car Wash", "Which Way is Up? " and "Bustin’ Loose ". After brief stints working forRoger Corman (whose "Frankenstein Unbound " he would later produce in 1990),Danny Selznick and Ned Tanen ofMCA/Universal , Mount was given responsibility for producing low-budget films for Universal.In 1976, at the age of 26, Mount was named President of Universal Pictures, achieving perhaps his greatest satisfaction when appointed to the position his former boss Tanen had held less than a decade earlier.
Mount was an innovator at Universal and in the industry as a whole. In an age when studios only focused on big, expensive blockbusters, and over a decade before smaller mini-studios such as
Fox Searchlight ,Miramax orSony Pictures Classics came into prominence or were even developed, Mount's Universal became the first studio to focus on smaller budget movies. He developed an independent division of the studio called the “Youth Unit,” which was devoted to low-budget pictures targeting a young audience and featuring new writers, directors and actors. The Youth Unit produced such well-known films as "Fast Times at Ridgemont High ", "The Breakfast Club ", "Cheech and Chong's Next Movie ", "Monty Python's The Meaning of Life " and others. In addition, Mount also created and headed MCA/Universal's theatrical division which helped produce such Broadway shows as "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" (1979) and "Nuts" (1980).Both "
TIME " and "New York Magazine " labeled Mount as one of Hollywood's new “Baby Moguls” due to his remarkably quick ascent to producing success and executive status.Mount ran Universal from 1976 to 1983, overseeing production on 140 films, mainly high concept comedies, action films, horror films and adult drama. Some of the hits made during his tenure include "
Car Wash " (1976), "Smokey and the Bandit " (1977), "National Lampoon's Animal House " (1978), "Coal Miner's Daughter " (1980), "Missing" (1982), "Psycho II " (1983) and "Scarface". According to legend, Mount had to go on the set and coaxAl Pacino to come out of his trailer after Pacino had gotten so caught up in his role as gangsterTony Montana that he became paranoid.After leaving Universal in 1983, Mount founded his own company,
The Mount Company , and developed such feature films as "Can't Buy Me Love " (1987), which was released by Disney during the summer of 1987; "Tequila Sunrise" (1988), Warner’s Christmas hit that year starringMel Gibson ,Michelle Pfeiffer andKurt Russell ; "Bull Durham " (1988) starringKevin Costner andSusan Sarandon ;Sean Penn ’s first directorial effort, "The Indian Runner " (1991) which starredCharles Bronson ,Valeria Golino andDennis Hopper and was released throughMGM ; andSidney Lumet 's "Night Falls on Manhattan " (1996). Mount also developed a friendship and creative relationship withRoman Polanski and helmed production chores on three of the director's films: "Pirates" (1986), "Frantic " (1988) (which starredHarrison Ford ) and "Death and the Maiden " (1994), which was first produced by Mount as a Broadway play. Directed byMike Nichols and starringGlenn Close ,Richard Dreyfuss andGene Hackman , the play was a Broadway hit and a Tony Award winner.Roman Polanski directed the film version for Mount in Paris, starringSigourney Weaver ,Ben Kingsley and Stuart Wilson. The film was released throughFine Line Features . In addition, Mount executive producedOliver Stone ’s "Natural Born Killers ". Mount's taste in projects is best described by a sign kept in his office to remind him about what makes a good screenplay: "Make me laugh, make me cry, make me come, make me think, or leave me alone."The Mount Company also made music videos for
The Bangles ,Los Lobos andJoe Cocker , as well as the 2-hour CBS movie "Open Admissions ", starringJane Alexander . With ABC-TV, the company produced the 4-hour miniseries "Son of The Morning Star ", written by "E.T." scribeMelissa Matheson .Mount was allegedly was the inspiration for the
Michael Tolkin Hollywood novel "The Player ", which was later turned into a film starringTim Robbins and directed byRobert Altman .Mount has been an adjunct professor at
Columbia University and taught atDuke University under aNational Endowment for the Humanities grant. He is also Co-Founder ofThe Los Angeles Film School and was elected to two consecutive terms as President of theProducers Guild of America , an organization which he helped to revitalize.Quotes
* "Hollywood regards the South as an ethnic backwater and a cultural backwater, and I think it is nonsense. I'd like to point out that anything from "
Bull Durham " to "Smokey and the Bandit " to "An Officer and a Gentleman " has some sort of Southern setting, and there are lots of compelling commercial stories to be made there."* "The worst enemy of American education is the tenured faculty. Anybody who's ever been to college knows that. If the L.A. Film School is valuable in any way to the educational community, it's as a laboratory for finding out what the possibilities for the future of education are--not just for this school, but for every school."
* After Columbine, Mount said: "It is not that violent pictures create more violence, but that the constant litany of "gratuitous" violence [emphasis added] is destructive of the fabric of the culture because it lowers our threshold for sensitivity to the issue."
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