November / December 2007 | Bill Rauch '84
Bill Rauch '84 (Writer, Director, & Producer)
By Kim Bendheim '81
To say that Bill Rauch ’84, the new Artistic Director of The Oregon Shakespeare Festival, appreciates Harvard’s effect on his life is an understatement. The circle of friends Rauch made at Harvard shaped both his life and his career. He met his partner of 23 years (Christopher Liam Moore ‘86) at Harvard doing theater, and he met Alison Carey ‘84, another long-time theatrical collaborator, at the Coop during freshman week. Rauch asked Carey if she could help him find books on theater. They’ve been busy making theater history together ever since.
Read moreOctober 2007 | Jeff Melvoin '75
Jeff Melvoin '75 (Writer & Producer, ARMY WIVES, ALIAS, NORTHERN EXPOSURE)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Jeff Melvoin '75 was invited to Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust's recent inauguration. Since he is a big fan of the new president, he was delighted to accept the offer to make a short film in her honor. The evening of October 11 featured "A Musical Prelude to an Inauguration" in Sanders Theatre, with different acts including Melvoin's film. Melvoin snuck in as an allegedly serious film his humorous lessons from Hollywood on leadership. It's called "A Primer for the President," complete with nine 'lessons' and several corollaries. Melvoin, an Emmy-winning TV writer and producer best known for his work on "Remington Steele," "Northern Exposure," "Picket Fences," and "Alias," had a wealth of knowledge in the entertainment business to draw from.
September 2007 | Adam B. Stein '99
Adam B. Stein '99 (Writer & Director)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Adam B. Stein '99 has garnered a great deal of notice recently through the short films he made for "On The Lot", the Fox reality show for filmmakers executive produced by Steven Spielberg and Mark Burnett of "The Apprentice" and "Survivor." The process of being accepted to the show was arduous: submitting films, sitting through various rounds of interviews, and directing a new film in five days. To make the final rounds of the competition, according to the "On The Lot" website, Stein had to beat out some 12,000 other applicants. What buoyed the developing filmmaker even more was that in the finals, the judges consistently awarded him highest marks. Judges included accomplished industry professionals such as director Garry Marshall (PRETTY WOMAN), actress-screenwriter Carrie Fisher (POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE, STAR WARS), director-producer Brett Ratner ("Prison Break," AFTER THE SUNSET) and director Gary Ross (PLEASANTVILLE).
July 2007 | Gabrielle Zevin '00
Gabrielle Zevin '00 (Author & Screenwriter)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Gabrielle Zevin's '00 second novel, MEMOIRS OF A TEENAGE AMNESIAC, is coming out in September. Her first, ELSEWHERE, is about fifteen year old Liz, who dies in a car accident and finds herself in Elsewhere, living life backwards in the company of her grandmother and her adopted dog Sadie. The novel has many sweetly humorous touches, such as the dog's being named for a Beatles song and a ship captain who, having lived life backwards, becomes a toddler doing a big job. As we discover, there's an order in Elsewhere. It's just the opposite of what you'd expect on earth.
Read moreJune 2007 | Michael Roiff '01
Michael Roiff '01 (Producer, WAITRESS)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Michael Roiff '01 is ambitious in a “gee whiz, let’s put on a show” kind of way. The class of 2001 grad is upbeat, and he has reason to be: WAITRESS, his first feature as a producer, went to Sundance, where Fox Searchlight bought it for a reported 4 million dollars. The film has opened to overwhelmingly positive reviews from critics and a great response from its target audience: adult women. So far, since its May opening, WAITRESS has grossed over 15 million at the box office. It was the number four movie during the Memorial Day weekend. “We’re just thrilled to still be in theaters. No one’s ever seen such a crowded summer in terms of big blockbusters," said Roiff, whose aim as a producer is nothing less than "creating magic." Talking about his films, he is cheerful, proud and pleased at the same time.
Read moreApril 2007 | Lucy Fisher '71
Lucy Fisher '71 (Studio Executive)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Lucy Fisher, class of 1971 and studio executive for 25 years, is running for Harvard’s Board of Overseers. This is ironic because Lucy Fisher went to Harvard at the end of the Sixties, an era when she, along with many other classmates, spent much of her time protesting the Harvard administration as well as the war in Vietnam and Cambodia. Napalm recruitment on campus sparked one protest in which she participated. “It was a very heady time,” she remembers. By day, this passionate protester served up meals as a waitress at The Signet (Harvard’s literary society), which at that time did not yet admit women as members. Gradually, during her sojourn at Harvard, The Signet did become coed.
March 2007 | Nicky Weinstock
Nicky Weinstock '91 (VP of Comedy Development at 20th Century Fox TV)
By Kim Bendheim '81
The last time I saw Nicky Weinstock, he’d left Manhattan for Garrison, NY with his wife (writer Amanda Beesley) and their Yorkshire terrier, Emerson. The couple quit their jobs to move to the country and write books. He’d been a book editor at Random House; she’d been an agent at ICM. “The Golden Hour,” based on Weinstock’s experience in the Garrison Fire Dept, comes out in paperback this month. It’s his third book. Catching up with Weinstock ten years later, I learned that he’d moved his family to LA in 2004, and in 2006 he was promoted to Vice President of Comedy Development for Twentieth Century Fox Television, developing some 60 or 70 new shows a year. He has three children, Lincoln (2), Derek (5), and Savannah (7). Unlike Nicky, who grew up on the east coast, his children ride bicycles in the sunny streets of Westwood.
Read moreJanuary 2007 | Hans Canosa '93
Hans Canosa '93 (Writer, Director, & Producer, CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Hans Canosa's first feature, CONVERSATIONS WITH OTHER WOMEN (starring Aaron Eckhart and Helena Bonham-Carter), just came out on DVD. The film offers an unusual double perspective on the characters of the two leads. They are in every scene. You can see each of them, their reaction to one another, at the same time on a split screen. That gives their brief, amorous encounter at a NYC wedding another dimension, one that lingers on in the viewer's mind after the closing credits have rolled.
Read moreDecember 2006 | Marty Bowen '91
Marty Bowen '91 (Producer, Temple Hill Entertainment)
By Kim Bendheim '81
In January 2006, Marty Bowen '91, then a partner at United Talent Agency, left to start the production company Temple Hill with long-time friend and New Line Cinema creative executive, Wyck Godfrey. The company is named after the house they once shared together with John Goldstone '91 in LA. Godfrey was the odd man out -- he went to Princeton. Bowen and Godfrey's first production, THE NATIVITY STORY, came out a few weeks ago. Another project they are developing is an old-fashioned country-western love story called PAPER WINGS. Their third endeavor, GOD, THE DEVIL AND LUCY, is a love story about the battle between God and the Devil for the affections of a human heart.
November 2006 | Aline Brosh McKenna '89
Aline Brosh McKenna '89 (Screenwriter, THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA, 27 DRESSES)
By Kim Bendheim '81
Aline Brosh McKenna's career has been one slow, delectable rise, like freshly baked bread. An A-list screenwriter, she's now working on her second screenplay, an adaptation of the British bestseller "I Don't Know How She Does It", with director and fellow Harvard alum David Frankel. McKenna's previous collaboration with Frankel on "The Devil Wears Prada" grossed $235 million worldwide and cost $35 million to make.