American screenwriter (born 1951)
Thomas H. Schulman (born October 20, 1951) is an American screenwriter best known for his semi-autobiographical screenplay Dead Poets Society , which won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1989.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4]
Biography
Following high school at Montgomery Bell Academy , Schulman earned a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in philosophy, graduating in 1972 from Vanderbilt University in Nashville . Schulman pursued his interest in film at the University of Southern California's Graduate School of Cinema.[ 5]
Dead Poets Society won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1989, and was nominated for Best Picture and Best Director (Peter Weir ).[ 6] The character of John Keating was inspired by one of Schulman's teachers at Montgomery Bell Academy in Nashville.[ 7]
Prior to Dead Poets Society, Schulman had already written several telemovies. However, Dead Poets Society was his first movie script to reach the screen. He was hired to rewrite the hit movie Honey, I Shrunk the Kids shortly before the film was due to begin shooting; Schulman had just seven days to turn it from a drama into a comedy.[ 8]
Other scripts written or co-written by Schulman include comedies Welcome to Mooseport , What About Bob? , Second Sight (which Schulman sold the same day as Dead Poets Society ) and Holy Man , which stars Eddie Murphy . The Sean Connery drama Medicine Man , originally entitled The Stand ,[ 6] proved a critical failure. Schulman executive produced the movie Indecent Proposal .
Schulman's directorial debut was the 1997 black comedy 8 Heads in a Duffel Bag , which stars Joe Pesci as a gangster attempting to transport a bag of severed heads across the United States. In 2022, Schulman returned to directing with Double Down South , a seedy sports drama set in Mississippi's underground keno pool scene (a world Schulman encountered as a teenager).
In 2009, Schulman was elected vice president of the Writers Guild of America, West .[ 9] He was a member of the WGA negotiating committee during the extended writers' strike of 2023.[ 10]
Filmography
Year
Film
Credit
Notes
1976
Joy Ride: An Auto Theft
Written by, assistant director
Short film, co-wrote with Bill Crain
1986
The Gladiator
Story by, executive producer
Co-wrote story with Jeffrey Walker and William Bleich
1988
A Father's Revenge
Story by
Co-wrote story with Mel Frohman
1989
Dead Poets Society
Written by
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
Screenplay by
Co-wrote screenplay with Ed Naha
Second Sight
Written by
Co-wrote with Patricia Resnick
1991
What About Bob?
Screenplay by
1992
Medicine Man
Screenplay by, story by
Co-wrote screenplay with Sally Robinson
1993
Indecent Proposal
Executive producer
1997
8 Heads in a Duffel Bag
Director, written by
1998
Holy Man
Written by
1999
Genius
Executive producer
2000
Me, Myself & Irene
Executive producer
2004
Welcome to Mooseport
Screenplay by, producer
2019
My Dad, Stephanie
Consulting producer
2022
Double Down South
Director, Written by, Producer
References
^ "Online Collections | Montgomery Bell Academy" .
^ "Montgomery Bell Academy - A Premier Independent School in Nashville, TN ~ MBA Speaker Series Videos" .
^ "15 Facts About Dead Poets Society" . June 2019.
^ "Dead Poets Society - Reviews" .
^ "Tom Schulman" . Humanitas .
^ a b J. Easton, Nina (August 10, 1990). "Cinergi OKs $2.5 Million for Script to 'The Stand' " . The Los Angeles Times .
^ Dewis, GM (2011). Dead Poets Society . Sydney: Insight Publications. p. 6. ISBN 9781921411052 .
^ McCurrie, Tom (March 15, 2004). "Dead Poets Society's Tom Schulman on the Art of Surviving Hollywood" . Writersupercenter.com. Retrieved March 31, 2015 .
^ Writers Guild of America , September 18, 2009, Writers Guild of America, West Announces Final Results of 2009 Officers and Board of Directors Election Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
^ "Meet the Negotiating Committee: Tom Schulman" . www.wgacontract2023.org . Retrieved February 28, 2024 .
External links
1940–1975
Preston Sturges (1940)
Herman J. Mankiewicz and Orson Welles (1941)
Michael Kanin and Ring Lardner Jr. (1942)
Norman Krasna (1943)
Lamar Trotti (1944)
Richard Schweizer (1945)
Muriel Box and Sydney Box (1946)
Sidney Sheldon (1947)
No award (1948)
Robert Pirosh (1949)
Charles Brackett , D. M. Marshman Jr. , and Billy Wilder (1950)
Alan Jay Lerner (1951)
T. E. B. Clarke (1952)
Charles Brackett , Richard L. Breen , and Walter Reisch (1953)
Budd Schulberg (1954)
Sonya Levien and William Ludwig (1955)
Albert Lamorisse (1956)
George Wells (1957)
Nathan E. Douglas and Harold Jacob Smith (1958)
Clarence Greene , Maurice Richlin , Russell Rouse , and Stanley Shapiro (1959)
I. A. L. Diamond and Billy Wilder (1960)
William Inge (1961)
Ennio de Concini , Pietro Germi , and Alfredo Giannetti (1962)
James Webb (1963)
S. H. Barnett, Peter Stone and Frank Tarloff (1964)
Frederic Raphael (1965)
Claude Lelouch and Pierre Uytterhoeven (1966)
William Rose (1967)
Mel Brooks (1968)
William Goldman (1969)
Francis Ford Coppola and Edmund H. North (1970)
Paddy Chayefsky (1971)
Jeremy Larner (1972)
David S. Ward (1973)
Robert Towne (1974)
Frank Pierson (1975)
1976–2000 2001–present
1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s
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