Born
in 1950 in Sligo, Ireland, Neil Jordan's early career began as a writer.
After setting up The Irish Writers'
Cooperative in 1974, he went on to win The Guardian Fiction Prize
for his book of short stories NIGHT IN TUNISIA
(1976). Since then he has gone on to publish three novels, THE
PAST (1979), THE DREAM OF A BEAST
(1983) and most recently SUNRISE WITH SEA MONSTER
(1994). Jordan's published fiction has been translated into several
languages, including French, Spanish, Italian, German, Dutch, Swedish
and Japanese.
In 1982 Neil Jordan
wrote and directed his first feature film, ANGEL,
for which he won The London Evening Standard's Most Promising Newcomer
Award. THE COMPANY OF WOLVES (1984) was
his next film and was honoured with Best Film and Best Director Awards
by the London Critics Circle and a Golden Scroll for Outstanding Achievement
from The Academy of Science Fiction and Horror Films.
MONA
LISA followed in 1986, it starred Michael Caine, Cathy Tyson
and Bob Hoskins, who won the Best Actor Award at The Cannes Film Festival,
the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor and received an Academy Award
nomination for Best Actor. The film itself was nominated for a Golden
Globe Award, a Los Angeles Film Critics Award and a Best Screenplay
nomination from The Writers Guild of America. It was also nominated
in the categories of Best Film, Best Direction and Best Original Screenplay
in the 1986 BAFTAS.
MONA
LISA was followed by two comedies. One, HIGH
SPIRITS (1988), set in Ireland starring Daryl Hannah, Steve
Guttenberg and Peter O'Toole, the other, WE'RE
NO ANGELS (1989), his first all-American production, starring
Robert De Niro and Sean Penn. He then returned to Ireland to make a much
smaller film THE MIRACLE in 1991, which
starred Beverly D'Angelo.
In 1992 Jordan wrote
and directed THE CRYING GAME which was
nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director,
Best Actor (Stephen Rea), Best Supporting Actor (Jaye Davidson) and
which won Jordan an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.
In addition, it was
voted Best Foreign Film by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association
and Best Screenplay by the New York Film Critics Circle and the Writers
Guild of America. It also received the Best Foreign Film Independent
Spirit Award and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Drama
and the Mystery of America's Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Film.
In the UK, the film won the BAFTA for Best British Film and was nominated
for five other BAFTA Awards including Best Screenplay, Best Actor,
Best Supporting Actor, Best Supporting Actress and Best Editing.
Jordan
was selected Best Director by the Guild of Regional Film Writers and
nominated for Best Screenplay by the Writers Guild of Great Britain.
It also received Norway's award for Best Foreign Film.
In 1994 Jordan returned
to the United States to film an adaptation of Anne Rice's popular
novel INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE, starring
Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Antonio Banderas and Christian Slater. Next
came the film of the Irish revolutionary MICHAEL
COLLINS (1996), starring Liam Neeson, Aidan Quinn and Julia
Roberts, which won a Golden Lion for best film at the Venice Film
Festival. In 1996 Jordan was also awarded the distinction of les Arts
et Lettres, as officer in the order, on the occasion of l'Imaginaire
Irlandais in France, for his contribution to cinema.
He went on to collaborate
with Irish novelist Pat McCabe to adapt his novel THE
BUTCHER BOY for the screen in 1997, it won Jordan a Silver
Bear award for Best Director at the Berlin Film Festival and newcomer
Eamonn Owens received a special mention for his performance in the
film.
In 1999 Jordan made
the psychological thriller IN DREAMS,
starring Annette Bening, Robert Downey Jr, Aidan Quinn and Stephen
Rea. In the same year he went on to direct his own adaptation of Graham
Greene's novel THE END OF THE AFFAIR,
starring Ralph Fiennes, Julianne Moore and Stephen Rea. The film was
nominated for four Golden Globe Awards, two Academy Awards and ten
BAFTA Awards, Jordan was honoured with the BAFTA for the Best Adapted
Screenplay.
Jordan soon went
on to direct a fourteen minute film based on Samuel Beckett's play,
NOT I, which starred Julianne Moore and
had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000.
In February 2001
Neil Jordan was the recipient of The Ireland Fund of France Wild Geese
Award. In December of the same year he was conferred with the degree
of Doctor of Literature (honoris causa) from the The Queen's
University Belfast.
Neil's next film
which he shot entirely in the South of France, THE
GOOD THIEF, starring Nick
Nolte, Tcheky Karyo, Emir Kusturica and Nutsa Kukhianidze will have
its premiere at the Toronto Film Festival in 2002.
Jordan set up the
production company Company of Wolves with Stephen Woolley
through which they have produced, THE
ACTORS, directed by Conor
McPherson, starring Michael Caine and Dylan Moran, and INTERMISSION,
directed by John Crowley, starring Colin Farrell and Colm Meaney.
Neil Jordan lives
in Dublin, Ireland.