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Korty, John
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Date of birth
22 July 1936, Lafayette, Indiana
Mini biography
John Korty (July 22, 1936, Lafayette, Indiana)
John Korty (born July 22, 1936) is an American film director and animator, best known for the television film The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman and the documentary Who Are the DeBolts?
And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids?, as well as the theatrical animated feature Twice Upon a Time. He has won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature (for Who Are the DeBolts?) and several other major awards.
He is described by the film critic Leonard Maltin as “a principled filmmaker who has worked both outside and within the mainstream, attempting to find projects that support his humanistic beliefs”.
Born in Lafayette, Indiana, he began making amateur films while still in his teens. He took a liberal arts education at Antioch College in Ohio and obtained work as an animator for television commercials while still in school. He graduated in 1959.
In a 1963 article he wrote for the Bolex Reporter he notes that he first took an interest in animation during his second year at Antioch.
He developed a cut-out technique and also used various other imaging methods including scratching the film stock, painting, and using objects such as photographs, string, cloth and scissors.
He would continue to develop these techniques in projects through his career, culminating in his 1984 animated feature Twice Upon a Time. Using a Bolex H-16 camera, his television commercial work amounted to more than 30 spots, which he made with four other students at Antioch.
His 1964 short Breaking the Habit was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject.
While most of his later work has been for television, he actually started in film before moving to the small screen. In 1964, he moved to Stinson Beach in Marin County, north of San Francisco. There he made three feature films in four years.
They were successful, low-budget projects. His first was the little-seen drama The Crazy-Quilt (1966), with narration by Burgess Meredith. The others were Riverrun and Funnyman, featuring performances by the comedy troupe The Committee Theatre.
His barn was his studio (Korty Films), and it would become an inspiration for George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola who also established studios in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Korty Films would become part of what was later called the “New Hollywood”. Korty actually became a tenant at Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios in San Francisco, though he later moved out when Coppola raised the rents. The company finally settled in Point Reyes Station, California.
Other feature films directed or produced by Korty included such well-known titles as Oliver’s Story (1978) and Twice Upon a Time, a George Lucas-produced amimated fantasy originally aired as an HBO feature in June 1984 and later released theatrically by Warner Bros. The film lost money, and Korty would not return to animated productions for more than twenty years. He also served as a cinematographer for a few films including the Robert Redford feature The Candidate.
His most highly lauded work was in television. He was active in the medium from the early 1970s until the late 1990s.
He became known in the field in 1971 as director of The People. The film starred Kim Darby and William Shatner, was produced by Francis Ford Coppola, and was based on the science-fiction novel The Pilgrimage by Zenna Henderson.
In 1974, Korty won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series and a Directors Guild of America award for his filmed adaptation of The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. Four years later, the Directors Guild of America gave him an award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for his documentary feature Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids?. The film had previously won an Academy Award in the documentary category.
Other films included Go Ask Alice (1970); an adaptation of Farewell to Manzanar (1976); and A Christmas Without Snow (1980).
He also made the Star Wars spin-off adventure Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure (1984). One of his more recent films was an adaptation of the Rudyard Kipling story of the supernatural called “They”, filmed as They Watch.
In the 1970s, several Korty animated shorts were featured on the PBS children’s programs The Electric Company and Sesame Street. These segments featured moral tales including at least one adaptation of Aesop’s Fables.
There was a recurring character known as Thelma Thumb, and all of the films (some as short as 18 seconds) used Korty’s backlit cut-out technique which he called Lumage (Luminous Image).
He tended to use a synthetic fabric called Pellon for the Sesame Street animations, which lent a consistent style to the work. Improv actors often ad-libbed the dialogue, and child performers were sometimes used.
Among the children was the sister of David Fincher. David Fincher worked for Korty and would later gain recognition as a director himself.
In 2006, inspired by the state of political debate in America at the time, Korty produced two short animated pieces which he posted to the World Wide Web. They feature two characters, Brock & Throck, in cynical discussions about the political landscape.
Korty was quoted in a news release, “This summer, I found some sketches from my very first experiments. One in particular was perfect for a dialogue between two characters – a single zigzag line that can function as the profile for either face. I had put it away, waiting for the right subject matter. The wait was fifty years.”
He was one of several San Francisco film veterans profiled in the 2007 documentary film, Fog City Mavericks. --Wikipedia
Director - Selected filmography
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Oliver's Story (1978)
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