Australians in Hollywood : Biographical Notes
Fred Schepisi
Fred Schepisi (b. 1939) briefly trained to be a priest before
working in advertising. In 1966 he formed his own company, which produced
a variety of ads and documentaries. In 1973 he directed an episode of the
Australian feature Libido. His scriptwriter was Thomas Keneally,
another ex-seminarian. In 1976 the pair re-teamed to make The Devil's Playground
, Schepisi's first full-length feature. His next film, The Chant of Jimmie
Blacksmith (1978) was also based on Keneally source material. Following
the film's international success, Schepisi went to America to make Barbarosa
(1982), an epic Western that brought him critical praise for his reinvigoration
of the form. His subsequent films have included Iceman (1984), Roxanne
(1987), The Russia House (1989 ), Six Degrees of Separation (1993),
I.Q. (1994) and Last Orders (2001). In 1988 he returned to Australia to
make Evil Angels – released in America as A Cry in the Dark – with Meryl
Streep and Sam Neill.
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