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Naked Photos of Jonathan Demme are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

 

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Actresses who appeared with Jonathan Demme on screen:

Jodi Foster
Jodie Foster
Michelle Pfeiffer
Meryl Streep
Susan Sarandon
Holly Hunter
Goldie Hawn
Thandie Newton
Melanie Griffith
Joan Cusack
Anne Heche
Bonnie Hunt
Lili Taylor
Oprah Winfrey
Gretchen Mol
Mary Steenburgen


Jonathan Demme
Birthday: February 22, 1944

Birth Place: Baldwin, Long Island, New York, USA
Height: 5' 1"

Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Jonathan Demme. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@actorsofhollywood.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

 

Biography

Jonathan Demme proved to be that rare maverick filmmaker who managed to find a place for his talents within the Hollywood system while still making movies his own way and on his own terms. A director who invested his characters with an unusual depth and humanity, Demme was unafraid to take on challenging and controversial subject matters in his films, but also knew how to make his stories absorbing and entertaining, and the results have included both box-office blockbusters (The Silence of the Lambs, Philadelphia) and critical favorites (Melvin and Howard, Something Wild). Born in Baldwin, NY, on February 22, 1944, Demme's mother was an actress, and his father worked in public relations. When he was 15, his family moved to Miami, where his father had landed a job at the Fountainbleau Hotel. Demme's original career goal was to become a veterinarian, and, after working at animal clinics as a teenager, he enrolled at the University of Florida in Gainesville. College-level chemistry, however, proved to be his Achilles' heel, and, realizing animal medicine was not a practical goal, he began searching for a new path. An enthusiastic cinema fan since childhood, he applied for an open position as film critic at the university's newspaper. After finishing college, Demme continued as a film critic for a small paper in Coral Gables until his father introduced him to flamboyant producer Joseph E. Levine. Levine was impressed with the young man's writing, and, after a stint in the military, Demme was given a job as a publicist in the producer's organization. Over the next several years, Demme worked for several film companies, including United Artists, and continued to write about film and music during a stint in New York, where he helped to compile the score for a low-budget thriller called Sudden Terror. While in London in 1970, a friend from his days at UA recommended Demme as a unit publicist to Roger Corman, then in Ireland shooting Von Richtofen and Brown. The independent producer/director soon gave Demme the opportunity to write a motorcycle picture for him, and Demme teamed up with friend Joe Viola to turn the premise of Rashomon into a biker film; after a few rewrites, Corman hired Demme to produce the film and Viola to direct, and the result was called Angels Hard As They Come. After serving as producer and second unit director on another Corman production, The Hot Box, Demme was given the opportunity to direct a steamy women-in-prison picture called Caged Heat; along with the requisite nudity and violence, Demme inserted a subplot about prisoners being abused through medical experiments. After two more films for Corman — the offbeat crime feature Crazy Mama and the revenge thriller Fighting Mad — Demme was hired to make a film about the then-current CB radio craze. The result was a charming, low-key, comedy drama called Citizen's Band, which won enthusiastic reviews from a number of critics but was a dud at the box office, even after being retitled Handle With Care. But the film's notices were strong enough for Demme to be hired to direct the Hitchcockian thriller Last Embrace, and, in 1980, he landed a project perfectly suited to his style. Melvin and Howard was based upon the true story of Melvin Dummar, who claimed to have once given Howard Hughes a ride and is later named beneficiary of 150 million dollars in a will discovered after the reclusive billionaire's death. While the film was only a modest commercial success, it received uniformly positive reviews. Screenwriter Bo Goldman and supporting actress Mary Steenburgen both received Oscars for their work on the picture, while the New York Film Critics Circle named it the Best Film of 1980. The warm reception for Melvin and Howard led to Demme's involvement in Swing Shift, a picture about women working in defense plants during World War II. Demme wanted the picture to deal primarily with working women embracing their new freedoms during wartime, but leading lady Goldie Hawn felt the film should focus on her character's relationship with a musician (played by Kurt Russell) while her husband was at war. By most accounts, Demme and Hawn rarely saw eye-to-eye during the production, and he and his editor left the project before the film's final cut was completed. Although Swing Shift proved to be a commercial and critical disappointment, bootleg copies of Demme's edit have circulated among collectors, with many contending his version was markedly superior. The director's next movie was more low-key: a concert film documenting the striking multi-media stage show of the rock band Talking Heads. Stop Making Sense was both a massive critical success and a surprise commercial hit, and it confirmed Demme's fondness for music-oriented projects. He later directed music videos for artists such as Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, New Order, and Fine Young Cannibals, and helmed another concert film, Storefront Hitchcock, featuring the quirky singer/songwriter Robyn Hitchcock. (Demme later directed two other feature-length documentaries: Swimming to Cambodia, a record of Spalding Gray's acclaimed one-man show, and Cousin Bobby, about the life and work of his cousin, an Episcopal priest and political activist.)Demme's next two major projects, Something Wild and Married to the Mob, walked a fine line between the endearing and the oddball, and performed well, if not spectacularly, at the box office. But it was 1991's The Silence of the Lambs, a taut thriller with a strong feminist subtext, that propelled Demme into the first rank of American filmmakers, earning him an Oscar for Best Director, among others for Best Picture, Best Actor (Anthony Hopkins), Best Actress (Jodie Foster), and Best Adapted Screenplay (Ted Tally). Demme followed this success with the AIDS drama Philadelphia, another blockbuster and Tom Hanks' first Oscar win. Demme next tackled a controversial adaptation of Toni Morrison's novel Beloved, and then paid homage to the French Nouvelle Vague with a stylish remake of Charade entitled The Truth About Charlie. When not busy with his own projects, Demme has also served as a producer of other films, including Adaptation, That Thing You Do!, and Mandela. A political activist and collector of Haitian art, he has been married twice, first to after director/producer Evelyn Purcell and later artist Joanne Howard.

Movie Credits
Neil Young: Heart of Gold (2006)
The Manchurian Candidate (2004)
[ Denzel Washington ][ Jon Voight ][ Liev Schreiber ][ Ted Levine ][ Miguel Ferrer ]
The Agronomist (2003)
The Truth About Charlie (2002)
[ Mark Wahlberg ][ Tim Robbins ][ Ted Levine ][ Stephen Dillane ]
Bruce Springsteen: The Complete Video Anthology 1978-2000 (2001)
[ Brian De Palma ]
The Pretenders: Greatest Hits (2000)
Beloved (1998)
[ Danny Glover ][ Wes Bentley ][ Jason Robards ][ Hill Harper ][ Harold Gould ]
Storefront Hitchcock (1998)
SUBWAYStories: Tales from the Underground (1997)
[ Sam Rockwell ][ Steve Zahn ][ Denis Leary ][ Peter Sarsgaard ][ Mekhi Phifer ]
Murder Incorporated (1995)
The Complex Sessions (1994)
Philadelphia (1993)
[ Tom Hanks ][ Denzel Washington ][ Antonio Banderas ][ Bradley Whitford ][ Jason Robards ]
Cousin Bobby (1992)
The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
[ Anthony Hopkins ][ Ted Levine ][ Scott Glenn ][ Chris Isaak ][ Frankie Faison ]
New Order: Substance (1989)
[ Bill Paxton ][ Kathryn Bigelow ]
Married to the Mob (1988)
[ Alec Baldwin ][ Matthew Modine ][ Oliver Platt ][ Dean Stockwell ][ Chris Isaak ]
Famous All Over Town (1988)
Swimming to Cambodia (1987)
Something Wild (1986)
[ Ray Liotta ][ Jeff Daniels ][ Danny Elfman ][ John Waters ][ Tracey Walter ]
Stop Making Sense (1984)
Swing Shift (1984)
[ Kurt Russell ][ Ed Harris ][ Fred Ward ][ Stephen Tobolowsky ][ Doug Savant ]
Who Am I This Time? (1982)
[ Christopher Walken ]
Melvin and Howard (1980)
[ Jason Robards ][ John Glover ][ Dabney Coleman ][ Michael J. Pollard ]
Last Embrace (1979)
[ Christopher Walken ][ Mandy Patinkin ][ Roy Scheider ][ John Glover ]
Columbo: Murder Under Glass (1978)
[ Mako ]
Handle with Care (1977)
[ Bruce McGill ][ Ed Begley Jr. ]
Fighting Mad (1976)
[ Scott Glenn ][ Peter Fonda ][ Noble Willingham ]
Crazy Mama (1975)
[ Dennis Quaid ][ Bill Paxton ]
Caged Heat (1974)

Trivia

  • Awarded honorary degree by Wesleyan University (June 3, 1990)
  • He co-directed Bruce Springsteen's "Streets Of Philadelphia" music video.
  • Uncle of Ted Demme
  • Has 3 children, with wife Joanne Howard.
  • Directed Bruce Springsteen's "Murder Incorporated" music video (1995).
  • Frequently uses Pablo Ferro for his Title Sequences and montages
  • Was voted the 45th Greatest Director of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
  • Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985". Pages 255-258. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  • Father of Josephine Demme
  • He frequently casts the same actors in most of his films, including Paul Lazar, Ted Levine, Harry Northup, Charles Napier, Dean Stockwell, Robert W. Castle, Denzel Washington, Jude Ciccolella, and Tracey Walter. He also tends to use non-actor friends or musicians he likes, as long as they are "interesting".
  • Directed 7 different actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Mary Steenburgen, Jason Robards, Christine Lahti, Dean Stockwell, Anthony Hopkins, Jodie Foster and Tom Hanks. Steenburgen, Hopkins, Foster and Hanks won Oscars for their performances in one of Demme's movies.
  • He and Michael Mann have both directed a Hannibal Lecter film, and have also both been involved in a film about Howard Hughes. Mann directed Manhunter and produced The Aviator, which he was originally to have directed. One of Demme's earliest films was Melvin and Howard, and he later went on to direct The Silence of the Lambs.
  • Member of jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000

Naked Photos of Jonathan Demme are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

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