Tom Thurman
Tom Thurman | |
---|---|
Tom Thurman (2012) | |
Born |
Thomas Lee Thurman March 26, 1962 United States |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Tom Thurman (born March 26, 1962) is an American filmmaker.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]
Since 1992, he has produced and directed numerous independent documentaries on film, music and literary figures, including Nick Nolte, Warren Oates, Ben Johnson, Harry Crews, Jerry Wexler, Tod Browning, John Ford, Hunter S. Thompson[8] and Sam Peckinpah. As a producer/writer for Kentucky Educational Television in Lexington, Thurman directs documentaries for the series Kentucky Muse, a showcase for artists with Kentucky roots. Programs in this series created by Thurman include In the Garden of Music (about musician Harry Pickens), Picture This (about photographer Julius Friedman) and Crossing Mulholland (about actor Harry Dean Stanton).
He lives in Lexington, Kentucky, with his wife (Lynn), and two children: Lucie and Sam.
Early career
Thurman was born in Christiansburg, Kentucky, a small farming community in Shelby County. He received a bachelor's degree in 1984 from Centre College and a master's degree in English/Film Studies from the University of Kentucky in 1988. Thurman subsequently taught in the English departments at Tulane University and Berea College, and in 2012 was a visiting lecturer in film studies at Centre College.
Film career
Thurman began his role as director with a documentary on the late Kentucky character actor Warren Oates in 1992. He has since produced and directed a string of feature-length independent documentaries that have aired on PBS and cable networks such as Starz, Encore and The Documentary Channel. Nick Nolte: No Exit was acquired by IFC Films and currently airs upon the Sundance Channel. In her Jan. 6th, 2010 column for USA Today, Whitney Matheson wrote that "Nick Nolte: No Exit is one of those movies that's destined to become a cult classic…" Other reviews were harsh, however. In the March 17, 2010 edition of the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert wrote: "Nick Nolte is an interesting actor. Perhaps too interesting to appear in an independent documentary about himself. Perhaps too interesting to be interviewed by someone else. In 'Nick Nolte: No Exit,' he interviews himself. The way he does this does what it can to assist a fairly pointless documentary."[9]
Those who have appeared in Thurman's documentaries include Charlton Heston, James Coburn, Peter Fonda, Andrew Sarris, Peter Bogdanovich, Ned Beatty, Monte Hellman, Millie Perkins, Thomas McGuane, Russell Chatham, James Dickey, Lawrence Tierney, L.Q. Jones, R.G. Armstrong, Ray Charles, Wilson Pickett, Etta James, Solomon Burke, John Prine, Doug Sahm, Aretha Franklin, Oliver Stone, Stella Stevens, Benicio Del Toro, Billy Bob Thornton, Sean Penn, George McGovern, John Cusack, Jacqueline Bisset, and Johnny Depp. Frequent collaborators include songwriters Donnie Fritts and Kris Kristofferson, actor Harry Dean Stanton, writer Stanley Booth, and critics FX Feeney, David Thomson, Leonard Maltin and Elvis Mitchell. Thurman often works with writer Tom Marksbury, who teaches in the English department at the University of Kentucky.
After the Oates project, he worked on two documentaries that received limited distribution: Guilty as Charged (completed 1993, about writer Harry Crews), and Third Cowboy on the Right (completed 1996, about actor Ben Johnson). A work-in-progress print of Third Cowboy was screened at the 1996 Bergamo Film Meeting in Italy, which was attended by Thurman, Harry Carey, Jr. and Ben Johnson. After the screening, Johnson was overheard telling the director "It's a lot better than I thought it would be." Johnson died of a heart attack in Arizona before seeing the completed version of the film, which received its European premiere at the Munich Film Festival and domestic premiere at the Telluride Film Festival.
Thurman then shifted from film history to music as he embarked upon a project documenting the life and career of Atlantic Records producer Jerry Wexler. From New York City to New Orleans to Memphis and onto Muscle Shoals, he traced Wexler's work as one of the most influential, beloved and also feared figures in all of contemporary American music. In 1998, when Wexler was in Memphis receiving an award for his contributions to that city's musical heritage, Thurman asked Wexler what he wanted written on his tombstone. Wexler told the filmmaker, "Two words: More bass." This exchange was later printed in the August 15th, 2008 New York Times obituary for Wexler, who died in Sarasota at age 91.
Movies of Color: Black Southern Cinema is Thurman's homage to independent African-American films made between World War I and World War II. It has screened on numerous public television stations throughout the country since 2001. In the February 13th edition of Africana.com, critic Armand White wrote that Movies of Color documented "historical examples of regional filmmaking (and regional scholarship) that are models for an original, valuable cinema culture…Movies of Color is a road map. It is essential." The documentary was awarded a regional Emmy award in 2001 from The National Association of Television Arts and Sciences in the Arts and Culture category.
2002 marked the beginning of a relationship between Thurman and Starz Entertainment. John Ford Goes to War, which documents the propaganda films made by the director for the Office of Strategic Services during World War II, features Peter Bogdanovich, Oliver Stone, F.X Feeney, Richard Schickel, Leonard Maltin, Dan Ford (the director's grandson) and a rare on-camera appearance by influential film critic and scholar Andrew Sarris. When released on DVD in 2006, critic Mike Clark listed the documentary as his highest-ranked release for the country in the January 5th edition of USA Today.
Sam Peckinpah's West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade (2003) was produced for Starz/Encore's The Westerns Channel and premiered at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood. It later was included on the Warner Bros. release of the Sam Peckinpah boxed set collection (the documentary is included on the DVD alongside The Wild Bunch). The National Heritage Museum awarded Thurman its award for Outstanding Documentary for the Peckinpah project, and in October 2003 Centre College conferred upon him its Distinguished Alumni Award. In the November 6th, 2005 edition of The Sunday Times of London, critic Bryan Appleyard wrote: "The second-best documentary I have seen recently was Sam Peckinpah's West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade. I could have watched it all day, for the simple reason that it told me what I wanted to know about a great but flawed cinema artist. The best documentary was Martin Scorsese's two-parter about Bob Dylan—in that archival material was sculpted by another great cinema artist into a superbly coherent and resonant story."
In a 2006 production for Starz, Thurman directed Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson on Film.[8] Premiering at the 2006 Hollywood Film Festival, the documentary contained a who's who of Thompson family members, colleagues, friends, admirers and detractors, including Johnny Depp, Sean Penn, George McGovern, Tom Wolfe, William F. Buckley, Jr., Gary Hart, and Nick Tosches. The reviews were mixed, however, with the harshest opinion appearing in the December 12th, 2006 edition of The New York Times. Reviewer Anita Gates attacks the documentary's narrator (Nick Nolte), writer (Tom Marksbury) and director. She describes Nolte as sounding like "less like an outlaw than a slightly slow student who doesn't understand the words he is reading." She adds that "Marksbury's sometimes-pedestrian script doesn't help." Finally, Gates remarks that "the talking heads rattle on, and even interviews with Mr. Thompson are relatively uninformative. It seems that the director, Tom Thurman, couldn't bring himself to edit out any celebrity comment, even if that person's point had been made several times before." The Boston Globe, in a December 12, 2006 review, was more kind, saying that Buy the Ticket "impressively delivers a strong sense of Thompson the man…"
Thurman is currently making a documentary for Kentucky Educational Television about Louisville native Wendy Whelan, a principal dancer with The New York City Ballet.
Selected works
- Warren Oates: Across the Border (1992)
- Harry Crews: Guilty as Charged (1993)
- Ben Johnson: Third Cowboy on the Right (1996)
- Jerry Wexler: Immaculate Funk (2000)
- Movies of Color: Black Southern Cinema (2001)
- John Ford Goes to War (2002)
- Sam Peckinpah's West: Legacy of a Hollywood Renegade (2003)
- Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson on Film (2006)
- Nick Nolte: No Exit (2008)
- Harry Dean Stanton: Crossing Mulholland (2011)
References
- ↑ Kaufman, Anthony (April 30, 2008). "Filmmaker to DIY 'Nolte' marketing: Thurman heads to Cannes with indie doc". Variety. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
- ↑ "Nick Nolte: No Exit". Film Archive. Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. 2008. Kviff.com. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
- ↑ Horn, John (May 21, 2008). "Nolte has the answers to all his questions". Cannes Film Festival. Los Angeles Times. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ "A Large & Startling Figure: The Harry Crews Online Biography". Video. Harrycrews.com. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
- ↑ Bertin, Michael (March 9, 2001). "Immaculate Film". Musicalia at the SXSW Film Festival. The Austin Chronicle. Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ Clark, Mike (January 5, 2006). "New on DVD". Movies. USA Today Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ "National Cowboy Museum Announces Television and Music Western Heritage Wrangler Award Winners". Media Relations. February 4, 2005. National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- 1 2 Gates, Anita (December 12, 2006). "Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson on Film". The New York Times.
- ↑ Roger Ebert (17 March 2010). "Nick Nolte: No Exit". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
External links
• Tom Thurman at the Internet Movie Database