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David Benioff and D B Weiss Funny Comments

American author and producer

David Benioff

David Benioff by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg

Benioff in 2016

Built-in

David Friedman


(1970-09-25) September 25, 1970 (age 51)

New York City, U.S.

Instruction Dartmouth College (BA)
Trinity College Dublin
University of California, Irvine (MFA)
Occupation
  • Screenwriter
  • producer
  • director
  • novelist
Years active 2002–present
Spouse(s)

Amanda Peet

(yard. 2006)

Children three
Parent(s) Stephen Friedman (father)

David Friedman (; built-in September 25, 1970), known professionally as David Benioff (),[1] [2] is an American writer, director and producer. Along with his fellow collaborator D. B. Weiss, he is best known every bit co-creator, showrunner, and author of Game of Thrones (2011–2019), the HBO accommodation of George R. R. Martin'due south series of books A Song of Water ice and Fire. He is also known for writing 25th 60 minutes (2002), Troy (2004), City of Thieves (2008) and co-writing 10-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009).

Early life [edit]

Benioff was born David Friedman in New York Urban center, the youngest of 3 children in a Jewish family with ancestral roots in Republic of austria, Romania, Germany, Poland and Russian federation.[3] [4] He is the son of Barbara (née Benioff) and Stephen Friedman, a former head of Goldman Sachs.[5] He has two older sisters, Suzy and Caroline,[six] and grew up in Manhattan, first in Peter Cooper Village, then on 86th Street where he spent almost of his childhood, earlier eventually moving virtually the U.N. headquarters when he was 16.[7]

Benioff is an alumnus of Collegiate School and Dartmouth College. At Dartmouth he was a fellow member of Phi Delta Blastoff Fraternity and the Sphinx Senior Society. After graduating in 1992, he had a number of jobs: for a time equally a club bouncer in San Francisco, and every bit a high school English teacher at Poly Prep in Brooklyn for two years, where he served every bit the school'due south wrestling coach.[seven] [8]

Benioff became interested in an academic career and went to Trinity College Dublin in 1995, for a one-year program to study Irish literature. In Dublin he met D. B. Weiss, who later became his collaborator.[3] Benioff wrote a thesis on Samuel Beckett at Trinity College, but decided against a career in academia.[7] He worked as a radio DJ in Moose, Wyoming, for a year—mostly every bit a side task that he accepted mainly to spend a year in the countryside at a author'due south retreat.[nine] He and so applied to bring together the University of California, Irvine's artistic writing programme after reading The Mysteries of Pittsburgh past Michael Chabon (an alumnus there),[x] and received a Principal of Fine Arts degree in creative writing there in 1999.[11]

In 2001, People magazine included Benioff on its list of America's Pinnacle 50 Nigh Eligible Bachelors.[12]

Equally an developed, he began using the pen name Jacqueline Benioff when his start novel was published in 2001. Benioff is his mother's maiden proper name. He explained that he did this to avoid defoliation with other writers named David.[thirteen] [xiv] For legal purposes, his copyright filings from the 2010s onward listing him every bit "David Benioff Friedman".[1]

Career [edit]

Writing career [edit]

Benioff spent ii years writing his start published novel, The 25th 60 minutes,[15] [16] originally titled Firewoman Downwards, and completed the book equally his thesis for his main's degree at Irvine.[17] [18] He was asked to conform the book into a screenplay afterward Tobey Maguire read a preliminary merchandise copy and became interested in making a picture of the volume.[11] The moving picture adaptation, 25th Hr, starring Edward Norton, was directed past Spike Lee.[18] [19] In 2004 Benioff published a collection of short stories, When the Nines Whorl Over (And Other Stories).[twenty]

He drafted a screenplay of the mythological epic Troy (2004), for which Warner Bros. pictures paid him $2.5 million.[21] He also wrote the script for the psychological thriller Stay (2005), directed past Marc Forster and starring Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts. His screenplay for The Kite Runner (2007), adapted from the novel of the same name, marked his second collaboration with Forster.

Benioff was hired in 2004 to write the screenplay for the X-Men spin-off X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009). He based his script on Barry Windsor-Smith's "Weapon X" story, Chris Claremont and Frank Miller'south 1982 limited series on the grapheme,[22] [23] besides as the 2001 limited series Origin.[24] Hugh Jackman collaborated on the script, which he wanted to be more than of a character slice than the previous 10-Men films.[25] Play tricks later hired Skip Woods to revise and rewrite Benioff's script.[26] Benioff had aimed for a "darker and a fleck more brutal" story, writing information technology with an R rating in mind, merely acknowledged the film's final tone would rest with the producers and director.[22]

In 2006, Benioff became interested in adapting George R.R. Martin's novel series A Song of Ice and Fire, and began working with Weiss on a proposed television series, Game of Thrones.[27] The airplane pilot, "Winter Is Coming", was put into development past HBO in 2007 and the series greenlit in 2010. Benioff and Weiss acted equally the evidence'south executive producers, showrunners, and writers. Information technology began airing on HBO in 2011. Benioff and Weiss had previously worked together on a script for a horror picture show titled The Headmaster, but information technology was never made.[7]

In October 2007, Universal Pictures hired Benioff to write an adapted screenplay of the Charles R. Cross biography of Kurt Cobain, but the screenplay was not used.[28]

In 2008, Benioff'due south second novel, Urban center of Thieves, was published.[29] [30]

On April 10, 2014, Benioff announced he and Weiss had taken on their first feature film project to write, produce, and direct Dirty White Boys, based on a novel by Stephen Hunter.[31] [32] 21st Century Fob greenlit pre-production on the picture fifty-fifty though at the time, both producers had significant contractual obligations for other projects. Though it was causeless development on Dirty White Boys would go along slowly, promotion for the moving picture not only began slow but stopped altogether. According to Kasey Moore, it has been years since anyone once known to be involved with Dirty White Boys, has given an update on the project'south status.[33]

On July 19, 2017, Benioff announced that he and Weiss would produce another HBO serial, Confederate, after the last season of Game of Thrones. Benioff and Weiss said, "We have discussed Confederate for years, originally as a concept for a feature picture, simply our feel on Thrones has convinced us that no one provides a bigger, better storytelling canvas than HBO."[34] The announcement of Confederate met with public animosity and as of August 2019 (when Benioff'southward and Weiss'south deal with Netflix was announced) is not moving forward.[35]

On February half dozen, 2018, Disney announced that Benioff and Weiss would write and produce a new series of Star Wars films after the concluding season of Game of Thrones ended in 2019.[36]

Towards the finish of the final season of Game of Thrones, a petition to HBO was started on Change.org. Information technology called Benioff and Weiss "woefully incompetent writers" and demanded "competent writers" to remake the eighth flavor of Game of Thrones in a manner "that makes sense".[37] The petition eventually amassed over 1.5 million signatures.[38] In the Chicago Sun Times, Richard Roeper, wrote that the backlash to the eighth season was and so great that he doubted he had "ever seen the level of fan (and to a lesser degree, critical) vitriol leveled at" Game of Thrones.[39]

In early August 2019, Benioff and Weiss negotiated an exclusive multi-yr picture show and television deal with Netflix worth $200 million.[40] [41] Due to their commitments to Netflix, Benioff and Weiss exited their contract to produce Star Wars films for Disney and Lucasfilm.[42] [43] [44]

In September 2020, information technology was appear that Benioff, Weiss and Alexander Woo will write and executive produce a Netflix series based on The Three-Body Problem trilogy.[45]

Directing career [edit]

Benioff and Weiss together directed two episodes of Game of Thrones, flipping a coin to determine who would get the credit on the bear witness. Benioff was given the credit for flavour three episode 3, "Walk of Punishment", while Weiss was credited with flavour 4 episode 1, "Two Swords".[7] Benioff and Weiss co-directed the serial finale.[46]

Benioff'southward and Weiss's kickoff projection on Netflix was to direct the stand up-up comedy special Leslie Jones: Time Machine.[47]

Personal life [edit]

On September 30, 2006, Benioff married actress Amanda Peet in a traditional Jewish anniversary in New York City.[48] [3] They accept three children.[49] The family unit divides their time between homes in Manhattan and Beverly Hills. He is the cousin of software entrepreneur Marc Benioff.

Bibliography [edit]

Title Year Type Notation
The 25th Hour 2001 Novel Paperback: 224 pages
Publisher: Plume; Reissue edition (January 29, 2002)
Linguistic communication: English
ISBN 0-452-28295-0
When the Nines Roll Over (and Other Stories) 2004 Short story collection Hardcover: 223 pages
Publisher: Viking Books (Baronial xix, 2004)
Language: English
ISBN 0-670-03339-1
City of Thieves 2008 Novel Hardcover: 281 pages
Publisher: Viking Books (May 15, 2008)
Linguistic communication: English
ISBN 0-670-01870-8

Filmography [edit]

Movie [edit]

Twelvemonth Title Writer Producer Managing director Notes
2002 25th Hour Yeah No Spike Lee Nominated— Boston Gild of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay
2004 Troy Yes No Wolfgang Petersen
2005 Stay Aye No Marc Forster
When the Nines Roll Over Yes Yes Himself Short motion-picture show based on a story from When the Nines Roll Over
2007 The Kite Runner Yes No Marc Forster Christopher Laurels for All-time Feature Film
Nominated— Gilt World Laurels for All-time Foreign Language Flick
Nominated— BAFTA Honor for Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated— Satellite Accolade for Best Adapted Screenplay
2009 X-Men Origins: Wolverine Yes No Gavin Hood
Brothers Yes No Jim Sheridan
2019 Gemini Human Yes No Ang Lee
2021 Metal Lords No Yep Peter Sollett

Television [edit]

Year Championship Director Writer Executive Producer Notes
2011–2019 Game of Thrones Yes Aye Yep Co-creator
Directed and wrote episodes "Walk of Punishment" and "The Iron Throne"
Wrote 45 episodes
2013 It's Ever Sunny in Philadelphia No No Yes Wrote episode "Flowers for Charlie"
Cameo as "Bored Lifeguard #1" (In episode "The Gang Goes to a Water Park")
2020 Leslie Jones: Time Car Yes No No TV special;
Co-directed with D.B. Weiss
2021 The Chair No Yep No
TBA The 3-Trunk Problem No Yes Yep
TBA The Overstory No Yeah No

Awards and nominations [edit]

Primetime Emmy Award [edit]

Twelvemonth Category Recipient Result
2011 Outstanding Drama Series Game of Thrones Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Nominated
2012 Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
2013 Outstanding Drama Series Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Serial Nominated
2014 Outstanding Drama Serial Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Nominated
2015 Outstanding Drama Serial Won
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Won
2016 Outstanding Drama Series Won
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Won
2018 Outstanding Drama Serial Won
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Nominated
2019 Outstanding Drama Series Won
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Nominated

Writers Lodge of America Awards [edit]

Twelvemonth Category Recipient Outcome
2012 Drama Series Game of Thrones Nominated
New Series Nominated
2013 Drama Series Nominated
2015 Drama Series Nominated
2016 Drama Serial Nominated
Episodic Drama Nominated
2017 Drama Serial Nominated
Episodic Drama Nominated
2018 Drama Serial Nominated

Other awards [edit]

Twelvemonth Title Laurels/Nomination
2011–2019 Game of Thrones Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form (2012)[50]
Hugo Award for All-time Dramatic Presentation, Curt Form (2013-2014)[51] [52]
Producers Lodge of America Award for Best Episodic Drama (2015)[53]
Golden Nymph Awards for Outstanding International Producer (2012)[54]
Nominated—Producers Guild of America Honour for All-time Episodic Drama (2011-2014, 2016, 2018)[55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [lx]
Nominated—BAFTA for Best International Program (2013)[61]
Nominated—Hugo Accolade for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form (2015, 2017)[62] [63]
Nominated—USC Scripter Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (2016-2017)[64] [65]
Nominated—Humanitas Prize for 60 Minute Network or Syndicated Television (2017)[66]

See too [edit]

  • List of awards and nominations received by Game of Thrones

References [edit]

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  2. ^ "Amanda Peet Gives Nascency to Baby Boy, Welcomes 3rd Child With David Benioff Friedman: See His Name!". United states Weekly. Dec 7, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c Kamin, Debra (May 20, 2014). "The Jewish legacy behind 'Game of Thrones'". The Times of Israel . Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  4. ^ Bloom, Nate (February 2, 2012). "Jewish Stars: genealogy and fairy tales". Cleveland Jewish News.
  5. ^ "Deaths: Benioff, Florence". The New York Times. Baronial 28, 2000. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  6. ^ cityfile. "Stephen Friedman". gawker.com . Retrieved March xix, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e "The Surprising Connectedness Between Game of Thrones and Monty Python". Vanity Fair. March 24, 2014.
  8. ^ "Novelist and Hollywood Personality David Benioff: He's a Old English Teacher". Chalkboard Champions. December 18, 2013.
  9. ^ Ellis, James (October 27, 2009). "David Benioff". Metro.
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  30. ^ Wartime Rations - Book Review - 'City of Thieves,' by David Benioff, NYTimes.com, July half dozen, 2008. Fishman, Boris. www.nytimes.com/2008/07/06/books/review/Fishman-t.html. Retrieved January xx, 2021.
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  66. ^ "'Game of Thrones,' 'Black-ish' Top Humanitas Prize Finalists". Variety. January eleven, 2018. Retrieved January 11, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • David Benioff at IMDb
  • Works by David Benioff at Open Library Edit this at Wikidata
  • "David Benioff". Authortrek.com. Archived from the original on January thirteen, 2006.
  • "Excerpts: Metropolis of Thieves". bookbrowse.com.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Benioff

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