Steven Gaydos

Steven Gaydos in Karlovy Vary in 2008

Steven Gaydos is an American screenwriter, songwriter, and journalist.

Works

Steven Gaydos is a screenwriter known for writing American independent film director Monte Hellman's 2010 film Road to Nowhere,[1] which was listed in the Sight & Sound and Film Comment "Best Films of 2010" lists, as well as over 100 other 'Best Films of 2010' lists.[2] Nicolas Rapold of Film Comment wrote, "Without succumbing to any romance about the magic of motion pictures, Hellman imbues Road to Nowhere with a haunted yet hallowed quality."[3] French philosopher Jacques Rancière updated his key work "Les Ecarts Du Cinema", in which he notes the way that Road to Nowhere creatively advances the themes of Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller Vertigo.[4]

Gaydos has co-authored several other screenplays, including the 1988 Venice Film Festival prize-winner Iguana and Silent Night Deadly Night III: Better Watch Out!, both directed by Monte Hellman. He frequently collaborates with Hellman, who has been honored with several published studies of his work, including the 2010 publication Sympathy for the Devil: The Films of Monte Hellman, as well as studies authored by film scholars Charles Tatum and Brad Stevens. In both works, Gaydos is widely quoted and his contributions to Hellman's oeuvre discussed. Gaydos' association with Hellman dates back to his work as a production associate on the 1974 action-drama Cockfighter and also includes several unproduced projects such as an adaptation of Jorge Semprun's historical novel The Second Death of Ramon Mercader and Charles McCarry's spy thriller novel The Miernik Dossier.[1]

As a screenwriter, Gaydos also developed and co-authored Dutch filmmaker Ate de Jong's adaptation of Simone De Beauvoir's novel All Men Are Mortal, and contributed to the screenplay for Dutch director Nouchka van Brakel’s, One Month Later.[5]

In addition to his produced screenplays, Gaydos coauthored several screenplays with Edgar Award-winning television writer-showrunner Rene Balcer, best known for the Law & Order television franchise. Gaydos's work with Balcer includes the unproduced screenplays Paradise Gates and The Bridge.[6]

His unproduced solo works include current projects Bring Me the Head of Sam Peckinpah and The Man Who Was Not With It, based upon the novel by Herbert Gold.[1] In 2008, Gaydos received a special award for his contributions to film culture from the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.[7]

Gaydos' music projects include several recorded works including "More Than I Care To Remember" by Carl Hickman and "Chicken of the County", a popular parody record by Rod Hart based upon Kenny Rogers' hit "Coward of the County".

Gaydos’ song "Mystery Dawn"[8] (co-authored with Mitch Moon and from the 2014 record "Rain in the Drought" by Sun and Moon) is featured in the 2014 Ate de Jong film Deadly Virtues: Love.Honour.Obey..

Gaydos is an entertainment journalist and the co-author of several books on the entertainment industry, including Movie Talk From The Front Lines (McFarland) and Cannes: 50 Years of Sun, Sex and Celluloid (Miramax).[9] He has appeared regularly on American television and radio, international outlets such as the United Kingdom's BBC, and in publications around the world.[5] Gaydos is currently Vice-President and Executive Editor of Variety.[10]

Screenplays

Books

Music

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Ten Questions with ROAD TO NOWHERE Screenwriter STEVEN GAYDOS". Screenwritersutopia.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  2. "Road to Nowhere". Roadtonowherethemovie.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  3. "Road to Nowhere review". Filmcomment.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  4. "Jacques Rancière : " Vertigo " et " Road to Nowhere "". Canalblog.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  5. 1 2 "2011 ASCAP EXPO". Ascap.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  6. "LiC Interview: Screenwriter/Producer Steven Gaydos talks about Monte Hellman and "Road to Nowhere" – Living in Cinema". Living in Cinema. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  7. "Steven Gaydos". PMC.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  8. "Mystery Dawn". YouTube.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  9. Steven Gaydos. "QUO VADIS EUROPEAN CINEMA?" (PDF). Cinema.usc.edu. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  10. "Variety Ups Steven Gaydos to VP and Executive Editor". Variety.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
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