David Green (director)

This article is about the director. For other people, see David Green.

David Green is a British film director, television producer and media executive.

Green, born on 12 November 1948 in London to Evelyn Morris and Louis Green, was educated at Bury Grammar School and at Trinity College, Oxford, from where he graduated as a Master of Arts in English Language and Literature. He joined Yorkshire Television where, within a year, he became the youngest YTV programme director,[1] cutting his directorial teeth on the launch of Emmerdale,[2] before going on to direct 29 episodes of Whicker's World,[2] a three-part American medical series with Austin Mitchell, two European political documentaries narrated by Robert Kee and a film fronted by David Frost about Elvis.

Green is now a major figure in the British and American film and television industries, having worked on motion pictures and TV projects in virtually every genre over the past 25 years. His moviedirecting credits include the award-winning romantic comedy and crime-drama Buster featuring Phil Collins and Julie Walters, and the $22m action adventure Wings of the Apache[3] starring Nicolas Cage, Tommy Lee Jones and Sean Young (released in the USA as Fire Birds by Touchstone.) Other feature film directing credits include the psychological thriller Breathtaking with Joanne Whalley and Jamie Foreman, and the comedy Car Trouble featuring Julie Walters and Ian Charleson.

For television, Green has directed over 100 dramas and documentaries, including The Golden Land for BBC1, The Boy in the Bubble for ITV,[4] Wilfred and Eileen and East Lynne for BBC Drama, and the ITV movie 1914 All Out, which was awarded the Public Prize at the Reims Festival of Television.[2] Other TV drama credits include Nobody's House for ITV and The Chinese Detective for BBC1. Green was also a leading commercials director with James Garrett & Partners for whom he filmed over 50 campaigns, including Peter Ustinov presenting Masterpiece Theatre for Mobil and the award-winning Red Mountaincoffee campaign.

In 1992 Green was founder (and until 2007, chairman) of September Films,[5] an independent film and television production company with offices in London and Los Angeles. The company made over two thousand hours of prime time television, including the landmark Hollywood Women series, which was the first part of a ten-season Hollywood franchise for ITV, and ten seasons of the American flagship show Bridezillas - both of which he created. The company's feature films include the Oscar-nominated Solomon & Gaenor (7 awards) and House of America (6 awards). September Films was also awarded the Montreux Rose d'Or for Ozzy Osbourne Uncut. Green was executive producer of all three award-winning productions.

He joined production and distribution Group DCD Media plc in 2007, when September Films was acquired by DCD. He took on the role of group chief creative officer before becoming CEO in 2009 and executive chairman in 2012. From October 2012 to August 2016 he was president and chairman of September Films USA and executive, then non-executive, director of DCD Media.

Green has three children; Jessica, Samuel and Jacob, and is a lifelong, passionate supporter of Manchester City Football Club.

External links

David Green at the Internet Movie Database

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.