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"Far and Away" Production Notes
Photographed in Panavision System 65 |
Read more at in70mm.com The 70mm Newsletter
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Written by: Universal Pictures, 1992 |
Date:
22.06.2024 |
The land was ours before we were the
land's. She was our country more than a hundred years Before we were her
people. . .
Such as we were, we gave ourselves
outright.
Robert Frost, "The Gift Outright"
For two young people, Joseph Donelly and Shannon Christie, there was no
greater prize imaginable than the chance to possess their own land. It was a
dream that ran like fire in their blood.
The Ireland of their birth was a beautiful but divided country: tenant
farmers like Joseph began at last to rebel against the cruel rents and
evictions imposed by their landlords--men like Shannon's father, who
governed from remote estates and never saw the land they owned.
Joseph and Shannon become unlikely travelling companions and escape to
America for a new beginning: starting out with nothing but their dreams,
discovering the strength of their courage and ingenuity along the way, and
heading west to win freedom and opportunity in the great Oklahoma land rush.
It was an adventure that could only happen in America. Directed by Ron
Howard, "Far and Away" stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman in a romantic
adventure from Imagine Films Entertainment and Universal Pictures. Also
co-starring are Thomas Gibson, Robert Prosky, Barbara Babcock, Colm Meaney
and Eileen Pollock. Written for the screen by Bob Dolman (based on a story
by Dolman and Howard), the film is produced by Brian Grazer and Ron Howard,
with Todd Hallowell as executive producer, Dolman as co-producer and Larry
DeWaay as co-producer/unit production manager.
Starring as Joseph Donelly is Tom Cruise, an actor who in the course of ten
years has risen to become one of the entertainment profession's leading
artists (in such films as "Risky Business," "Top Gun," and "Born on the
Fourth of July"). Taking the role of Shannon Christie is Nicole Kidman, one
of Australia's favorite actresses, best known in the U.S. for her compelling
performances in "Days of Thunder," "Dead Calm" and "Billy Bathgate."
"'Far and Away' is romantic,
emotional and even whimsical at times," says Howard. "It's about
the strange twists of fate that guide us to our destiny. It's the type
of story that we all wish had happened in our family."
Although both Shannon and Joseph were born
in Ireland, they came from entirely different worlds. "They could never have
accomplished the things they did in Ireland," says screenwriter Bob Dolman.
"They were both prisoners of the class system. Joseph was a tenant farmer
kept in poverty by the landed classes, and Shannon grew up in a world where
no woman--however well-born--could ever hope to control her own destiny."
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Production Notes
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Talent Bios
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Cast / Credit
The voyage to America changed everything. Swelled by the second wave of
immigrants in 100 years, Boston in 1892 was just hitting its stride as one
of the country's great metropolises. It was also, like many a powerful
industrial city, racked by poverty and corruption. Raised in privilege,
Shannon was determined to succeed, but ill-prepared to survive in such a
world. For Joseph, however, new challenges brought new opportunities.
Growing up on the farm, Joseph learned to use his fists. And there was
nothing Boston loved more than an Irish boxer. This was an age when
prizefighters like John Sullivan battled it out with their bare fists for
more than thirty rounds at a time. Almost overnight, Joseph is raised to a
new kind of American aristocracy. For a time, the dream of land nearly
fades.
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More in 70mm reading:
A Conversation with Cinematographer and
Academy Award nominee Mikael Salomon, DFF, ASC
Imagine Films Entertainment Presents "Far
And Away"
“Far and Away”: The 70mm Engagements
DoP Mikael Salomon's
introduction to "Far and Away"
Panavison Large Format Motion
Picture Systems
Motion pictures
photographed in Super Panavision 70 & Panavision System 65
“Far and Away”: The 70mm Engagements
in70mm.com's Library
Presented on the big screen in 7OMM
Peripheral Vision, Scopes,
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In the end, however, the ambition that brought Shannon and Joseph to America
draws them inevitably to the Oklahoma territory. As they discover, the race
they run is not always to the swift; but, through enterprise, determination
--and a few miracles--they earn at last the chance to fulfill their dreams.
"Far and Away" is the first feature film ever to be photographed with the
new Panavision Super 70 camera equipment, using 65mm stock recently
developed by Eastman Kodak. The result is a visual experience that matches
the breadth and scope of "Far and Away," whose sweeping narrative spans some
of the most beautiful landscapes in the world: from the haunting west coast
of Ireland to the crowded streets of Boston to the majestic plains of the
American West.
Although Ron Howard, Bob Dolman and Brian Grazer have been developing "Far
and Away" for eight years, the inspiration for the project goes back much
further, to the early days of Howard's childhood.
"I was just four years old, on my
first transatlantic flight from New York to Vienna, for my first movie
role in 'The Journey,'" says Howard. "I fell asleep on the way.
When I woke up, I looked out and we were flying over this beautiful
green island." When the plane landed in Ireland to refuel, Howard
ventured out for a moment. An airport worker tousled his hair and said,
"You look like you belong here. Maybe you should stay."
Over the years, Howard developed an avid interest in stories of his family's
immigrant past. A product of the American melting pot, Howard can trace his
bloodlines back to Dutch, English, German and even Cherokee Indian roots.
But it was the romance of his Irish ancestors that continued to sway his
imagination over the years.
Three of Howard's great-grandparents took part in the 1893 Cherokee Strip
Land Race in Oklahoma. When he was six years old, his great-grandmother
showed him a scrapbook full of newspaper clippings about this dramatic
chapter in American history, which now forms the centerpiece of "Far and
Away."
"There's a point in the script where
Joseph's father says, 'Land is a man's very soul,"' says Howard.
"That's why I was so deeply moved by these family stories: these were
people who cherished the land, and they were willing to risk everything
they had for the chance--however slim--to claim a small piece of it for
themselves."
In 1983, Howard directed a TV pilot written by Bob Dolman. Both of them
confessed a dream to make a film about Ireland. One night, Howard was at a
concert of the traditional Irish group The Chieftains (whose music can be
heard in "Far and Away"). He was touched by a tragic song about a couple in
love, torn apart when one of them departed for America.
That same night, Howard resolved to make a film about Irish immigrants to
America from the last century. As he and Dolman began their collaboration,
it became clear that the Oklahoma land rush would play a pivotal role in
their story.
Dolman followed textbooks on American and Irish history for some time; but
the turning point in the script's development was reached when he discovered
a cache of letters written by a 19th-century woman on her way to meet her
husband in Oklahoma.
"The letters breathed fresh life
into what easily could have become dry and laborious research," says
Dolman. "They were funny, exciting, tender and courageous, and the
film is driven by the success and the eccentric adventures of these two
beautiful young people, now long gone. We get this very grim perspective on people from a hundred years ago, only
because of the photographs we have," Dolman continues. "In those days, you
had to hold a pose for over a minute. Who could keep smiling for that long?
So of course everyone looks like the faces on Mount Rushmore. But people on
the frontier enjoyed life. Their lives were so full of hardships, they
couldn't afford not to have a sense of humor."
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Howard likewise developed a keen sympathy for his human subjects. "It's easy
to be daunted by the hugeness of the events that are covered in this film.
That's why we wanted to keep the focus on the human level. The people who
immigrated to this country and settled the West didn't always start out as
remarkable individuals--the adventures they lived made them remarkable."
Howard's father Rance, who plays a small role in the film, is impressed by
how his son has translated their family's real-life stories to the screen:
"My grandfather was like Joseph--a man of the land. My grandmother was more
like Shannon--worldly and sophisticated."
The script for "Far and Away" was developed over the course of eight years.
These were eventful years for Ron Howard: his career as a director of
feature films, launched by "Grand Theft Auto," "Night Shift" and "Splash,"
helped lead to the creation of Imagine Films Entertainment, an independent
production company Howard co-founded with Brian Grazer, whose career as a
producer has included such films as "Splash," "Parenthood" and last year's
hit "My Girl."
Active pre-production for "Far and Away" began even as Howard and Grazer's
last collaboration, the Imagine/ Universal hit "Backdraft," was in principal
photography. Casting the film's lead roles required a turn of events that
was no less serendipitous than Joseph and Shannon's voyage to America.
"Almost from the beginning, Tom Cruise was the person I visualized in the
role of Joseph," says Howard. "We first talked about the project in 1983,
after he'd already made a big hit with 'Risky Business.' I thought he'd be
perfect, but I harbored little hope that we'd actually get him for the film.
In 1986, when 'Top
Gun' came out and broke $100 million, little hope became
no hope."
As it happened, the script reached Cruise in 1989, at a time when he was
already looking for a strong romantic vehicle. Cruise felt an immediate
kinship with the brash, enterprising Joseph Donelly, and expressed his
enthusiasm to Howard during a visit to the set of "Backdraft."
Meanwhile, Brian Grazer had already been pitching Nicole Kidman for the role
of Shannon. "Ever since 'Dead Calm,' I knew we had to find a leading role
for her," says Grazer. "She was everything we wanted Shannon to be--poised,
assured, focused--and, as we later discovered, she has a wonderful sense of
comic timing."
By the time Cruise was approached for the film, Kidman had already been
moved to the top of Howard's list. "Tom had mentioned that he enjoyed
working with Nicole Kidman on 'Days of Thunder.' I told him that was an
interesting coincidence, since we we already wanted her to play Shannon,"
says Howard. "When I told this to Brian, he said, 'Ron, will you read a
newspaper once in a while? Don't you know they're dating?"
"It would be hard to think of a
better on-screen pairing than Tom and Nicole in any case," says
Grazer. "Individually or together, they shine in these roles."
As in all his feature films, Cruise prepared for the role of Joseph with a
singleminded passion for detail: in "Taps," he worked out for months to beef
himself up for his role as a hyper-aggressive military cadet; in
“Born on the Fourth of July”, he immersed himself in the world of handicapped veteran
Ron Kovic, painstakingly learning the hardships of maneuvering in and out of
wheelchairs.
Though preparation for the role of Joseph was less physically daunting, it
proved no small challenge. Many who see "Far and Away" may be surprised to
hear Cruise speaking with an Irish accent--an authentic working-class
dialect he carefully studied with the help of dialect coach Tim Monich,
which Cruise continued to polish over the weeks of production in Ireland.
Principal photography began on May 28, 1991, three days after the release of
“Backdraft”. Billings, Montana doubled for the Oklahoma territory of 1893.
The land run sequences were staged on July 8 and 9, a massive operation
involving over 800 extras on 400 horses and 200 wagons on a "set" over a
quarter of a mile wide. Working on a 12,000-acre ranch, the production
company was housed in a city of tents, which functioned as a fully
independent community during the shoot.
Starting with a cannon shot (as did the real Cherokee Strip land rush), all
parties took off at once as the cameras rolled--one of the most memorable
scenes of its kind, and certainly one of the largest exterior scenes ever
captured on film.
To Cruise, the experience of riding in the land rush scenes seemed to carry
him away to another time and place.
"My horse, Greenbroke, was very
much like Joseph's horse in the film--a free spirit, headstrong and a
bit cantankerous," says Cruise. "But once the cannon sounded, he
was as steady as a Ferrari's engine.
"As soon as we took off, there was a cloud of dust, and I couldn't see a
thing--all I could hear was the echo of the stampede in my ears. For a
moment, I was completely caught up in what was happening. I began to sense
what a monumental event the real land rush actually was."
"This was the kind of scene that 65mm film was famous for at its height,"
says director of photography Mikael Salomon. "Big land, big sky, big crowds.
That was the way it had to be, because wide-format film just wouldn't work
without sufficient light. With the new lenses and film stocks being
developed, plus the lightweight cameras we used on 'Far and Away,' we can do
anything--interiors, low-light scenes--with a depth and richness that have
never been seen before."
Many of these scenes were realized in Ireland, where production moved after
the completion of the land rush sequences. The spectacular house and gardens
of the Kilruddy Estate, built in 1651, served as the home of Shannon
Christie's family (the house was built by the 2nd Earl of Meath--like the
Christies, a Protestant landlord).
With a little refurbishing, Irish production designer Allan Cameron was able
to transform a quarter-mile section of Dublin's historic Temple Bar district
into the streets of old Boston. Part of the Guinness Brewery was used as
Joseph and Shannon's port of entry into the U.S. The beauty of "Far and
Away's" final location, however, required no human embellishment at all.
South of Limerick is the Dingle Peninsula, one of the westernmost points of
Ireland. It is a country frozen in time: as in Joseph Donelly's lifetime,
horse-drawn carts make their way across dirt roads, and thatch cottages ring
the coastline. The centuries that have passed since Ireland's conversion to
Christianity have hardly left their mark--making it the ideal setting for
the opening scenes of "Far and Away."
"Looking at this countryside, it is
astonishing that the immigrants of the last century actually wanted to
leave," says Howard. "But, beautiful as it was, it was land they
didn't own. And if there's anything stronger in Irish blood than the
love of land, it's their spirit of independence. That's what brought
them to America."
In many ways, the conclusion of principal photography in Dingle has brought
Ron Howard back to his beginnings: in his first glimpse of Ireland as a
child, the inspiration for "Far and Away" was sown. Years later, scouting
locations over Ireland by helicopter, Howard was filled with a deep sense of
nostalgia.
Yet, though the film finds its beginnings in legends of the past, its story
is one that looks not backward, but ahead.
"In some ways, this is a grand, old-fashioned film, the kind of movie you
grew up with but don't often get to see nowadays," says Howard. "What we've
done is to put a new twist on that classic vision, to create a story for a
modern audience. A different kind of movie."
"Audiences are challenging us to make better films," says Grazer.
"All of us
have to dig a little deeper inside of ourselves, and do better. That's why
we're so proud of what we've achieved with 'Far and Away.' Because of our
commitment to the highest level of entertainment, to the best in film and
sound technology, we can offer moviegoers a theatrical experience they've
never seen before."
"'Far and Away' is a new beginning,"
says Howard.
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About the Cast
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Over the past decade, TOM CRUISE (Joseph) has
emerged as one of the most accomplished actors of our time, one whose
performances have brought him both critical and public acclaim--earning him
a Golden Globe Award, an Academy Award nomination and a People's Choice
Award for Best Actor for his haunting portrayal of war-scarred veteran Ron
Kovic in "Born on The Fourth of July." In less than a decade, his films have
grossed more than $1.5 billion worldwide.
Cruise first attracted attention as a headstrong young military cadet in
1981's "Taps." Two years later, his starring role in "Risky
Business" demonstrated his ability to command a wide audience. His portrayal
of Maverick in the highest grossing film of 1986,
“Top Gun”, created a nationwide sensation. In 1990, Cruise's film
“Days of Thunder”--his first on-screen collaboration with "Far and Away" co-star
Nicole Kidman--became the highest-grossing race-car film in cinematic
history, with a cumulative gross of $195 million worldwide.
Cruise has earned the accolades of peers and public alike for his
collaborations with many of the entertainment profession's most
distinguished filmmakers: with Paul Newman in Martin Scorsese's
“The Color of Money”, opposite Dustin Hoffman in Barry Levinson's Academy Award-winning
film "Rain Man," and with five-time Academy Award winner Oliver Stone in
"Born on the Fourth of July"--a performance which earned Cruise an Academy
Award nomination for Best Actor.
Nicole Kidman
One of Australia's best-known young performers, Nicole Kidman first came to
the attention of American audiences with her critically acclaimed
performance in the psychological thriller "Dead Calm." She co-starred with
Tom Cruise in the 1990 international box-office hit, "Days of Thunder." This
year, she was featured opposite Bruce Willis and Dustin Hoffman in the
screen version of E. L. Doctorow's Pulitzer prize-winning novel, "Billy
Bathgate," for which she received a Golden Globe nomination.
Born in Hawaii, Kidman spent her childhood in Australia and began a
successful film career at the age of fourteen in "Bush Christmas." In 1985,
when she was only seventeen, Kidman became an overnight sensation in
Australia for her award-winning performance in the acclaimed mini-series,
"Vietnam." Between films, she continued to hone her craft at the St.
Martin's Youth Theatre in Melbourne, the Australian Theatre for Young People
in Sydney and the Philip Street Theatre, where she learned voice, production
and theatre history.
Kidman won her plum role in "Dead Calm" over a pool of many of the film
community's most established actresses. She received special notice both for
her technical virtuosity and her visceral emotional presence.
Thomas Gibson
Thomas Gibson, who plays Stephen Chase, Shannon's fiance, is a newcomer to
feature films. Having graduated from the Juilliard School's drama division
in 1985, Gibson has spent the last seven years working mostly on New York's
theatrical stages on and off Broadway.
In productions by the New York Shakespeare Festival, he has starred in
"Henry IV" (Parts I and II) as Prince Hal, as Malcolm in "Macbeth" with Raul
Julia, as Count Orsino in "Twelfth Night" and as Proteus in "The Two
Gentlemen of Verona" with Elizabeth McGovern.
Gibson has performed in premieres of many new plays by playwrights David
Hare, Howard Brenton, Romulus Linney, and Anna Cascio and is active in
theater groups committed to the development of new plays.
Audiences may also recognize Gibson from his television work. Daytime
appearances include stints as Sam Fowler on "Another World" and as Derek
Mason on "As The World Turns." Gibson also appeared in the mini-series "The
Kennedys of Massachusetts" and the mini-series version of Gore Vidal's,
"Lincoln," starring Sam Waterson and Mary Tyler Moore.
Robert Prosky
ROBERT PROSKY (Daniel Christie) plays Shannon's father, an eccentric but
essentially kindly landlord who is not always aware of what is being done in
his name. Christie is sympathetic to Joseph at heart, and endeavors to
understand his daughter's restlessness as well.
Prosky is best known for his roles on screen and as Sgt. Stanislaus
Jablonski on "Hill St. Blues," though he has spent most of his professional
career on stage. Prosky has two Tony Award nominations for his work in
"Glengarry Glen Ross" and "A Walk in the Woods." Other Broadway credits
include "Moonchildren," "A View From the Bridge," "Pale Horse, Pale Rider"
and "Arms and the Man."
Prosky has spent over 25 years at the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. where
he has taught acting and appeared in over 150 plays: as Willy Loman in
"Death of a Salesman," "Twelfth Night," "An Enemy of the People" and the
title role in "Galileo." In the company's tour of the Soviet Union, he
played the stage manager on "Our Town," which gave him the opportunity to
reprise the first role he had at age 15 in a high school production.
In 1980 director Michael Mann cast him as the intimidating mobster in
"Thief" with James Caan and suddenly Prosky was in demand for the big
screen. Other film credits include "Outrageous Fortune," Big Shots," "The
Lords of Discipline," "Christine," "Monsignor," "The Keep," "Hanky Panky,"
"The Natural," "The Great Outdoors," "Things Change" and "Broadcast News."
Barbara Babcock
BARBARA BABCOCK (Nora Christie) appears as Shannon's mother, a model of
decorum who can't quite understand why her daughter feels trapped in such
luxurious surroundings.
Babcock is one of the industry's most versatile actresses. She earned an
Emmy Award for Best Actress for her memorable role as the lusty Grace on
"Hill St. Blues." She has also been a series regular on "The Law and Harry
McGraw" and "The Four Seasons." She has guest starred on scores of
television programs, including "China Beach," "Golden Girls," "Murder, She
Wrote," "Wings" and the original "Star Trek" series.
On screen, she co-starred in "Heart of Dixie," "Happy Together," "That Was
Then, This Is Now," "The Lords of Discipline," "The Black Marble," "Bang The
Drum Slowly," "Day of The Evil Gun," "Gypsy Moths" and "Heaven With A Gun."
On stage, Babcock recently starred in "Passion" at the Mark Taper Theatre,
with Mildred Natwick in "The Torchbearers," the noted off-Broadway
production of "Nature of The Crime" and the Los Angeles productions of
"Charley's Aunt" and "Auntie Mame."
Colm Meaney
COLM MEANEY (Kelly) is featured as the Boston ward boss who takes in Joseph
and Shannon when they arrive in Boston. A native of Dublin, Meaney made a
sudden splash in films with his work in "Dick Tracy," "Come See The
Paradise," "Die Hard II" and the Alan Parker film, "The Commitments."
Forthcoming is his role in the remake of "Last of The Mohicans." He
currently can be seen as O'Brien on television's "Star Trek: The Next
Generation."
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About the Filmmakers
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Ron Howard
During the development of "Far and Away," director Ron Howard was inspired
by stories of his ancestors, especially those who--like Joseph and
Shannon--took part in the Oklahoma land rush. One story in particular,
however, illustrates one of Howard's favorite themes: the strange and often
comic twists of fate that guide people to their destiny.
"One of my great-grandfathers--the only one who didn't take part in the
Cherokee Strip land rush--was thrown off a train near a small town out
west," says Howard. "As it happened, he later became the mayor of that town,
and one of its most prosperous citizens. But it wouldn't have happened if
they hadn't thrown him off."
"Much of the humor and excitement of 'Far and Away' is driven by these kinds
of small miracles," says Howard.
"It's romantic, emotional and even whimsical at times. It's the type of
story that we all wish had happened in our family."
Ron Howard has been involved with feature films and television programming
as a writer, producer, actor and director for many years. Born in Duncan,
Oklahoma, he made his acting debut at the age of 18 months in a Baltimore
production of "The Seven Year Itch," and his first screen appearance in "The
Journey," when he was four years old. As a child actor, he appeared in "The
Music Man" and the long-running television series "The Andy Griffith Show."
He also starred in the popular television series "Happy Days," and drew
favorable reviews for his performances in "American Graffiti" and "The
Shootist."
Howard directed his first feature film, "Grand Theft Auto," in 1978, when he
was 23 years old. This began a string of popular hits, ranging from domestic
comedy to science-fiction/fantasy: "Night Shift," "Splash," "Cocoon," "Gun g
Ho," "Willow" and, in 1989, "Parenthood." Last year he directed "Backdraft,"
which received four Academy Award nominations and was one of the
highest-grossing films of the year.
Together with Brian Grazer, he is a founder and chief executive officer of
Imagine Films Entertainment, Inc., a public company that independently
produces theatrical feature films. Since Imagine went public in 1986, Howard
has served as executive producer for "No Man's Land," "Vibes" and "Clean and
Sober." In 1989 Howard produced Imagine's "The 'burbs," starring Tom Hanks.
Howard currently resides in Connecticut with his wife and four children.
Brian Grazer
Producer Brian Grazer was recently honored as NATO/Showiest '92 Producer of
the Year. In addition to "Far and Away," he serves as producer on the
upcoming Universal release "Housesitter," a romantic comedy starring Steve
Martin and Goldie Hawn directed by Frank Oz, and "Boomerang," a comedy
starring Eddie Murphy.
Mr. Grazer also produced the recent sleeper hit "My Girl," starring Macaulay
Culkin and Anna Chlumsky, as well as "Backdraft," "Kindergarten Cop," "The
Doors" and "Parenthood."
Co-chairman (with Ron Howard) and CEO of Imagine Films Entertainment, Inc.,
Grazer has established himself as a creative producer with a sharp eye for
new talent. He has helped launch the film careers of such stars as Michael
Keaton, Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Daryl Hannah, John Candy, Johnny Depp and, most
recently, Anna Chlumsky.
Grazer, whose keen sense of story earned him an Academy Award nomination for
"Splash," has harnessed his talent for combining story with stars to produce
three top-ten box office hits: "Parenthood," starring Steve Martin, "Spies
Like Us," starring Chevy Chase and Dan Aykroyd, and "Splash," starring Tom
Hanks and Daryl Hannah. Grazer's other films include "Clean and Sober"
(Michael Keaton), "Night Shift" (Michael Keaton and Henry Winkler) and "Real
Genius" (Val Kilmer).
Bob Dolman
BOB DOLMAN (Screenwriter/Co-producer) has been associated with Ron Howard
since 1983, when Howard directed Dolman's NBC pilot "Little Shots." Soon
after, they started discussing preliminary ideas for the project that would
later become "Far and Away."
In the meantime, Dolman wrote the film "Willow," directed by Howard in 1986,
and was also a staff writer on "WKRP" and "SCTV." The last of these brought
Dolman two Emmy Awards for writing. In 1988, Dolman conceived and produced
the Showtime series "Poison."
Todd Hallowell
TODD HALLOWELL (Executive Producer) started his career as assistant art
director (and photo double for Ron Howard) on Roger Corman's "Grand Theft
Auto," Howard's directorial debut in 1977.
He subsequently was an art director on "Back To The Future," "Down and Out
in Beverly Hills," "Fletch," "Cloak and Dagger" and the pilot for "Miami
Vice." He was also production designer for the films "Tough Guys,"
"Burglar," "Adventure in Babysitting," "The Dream Team," "Vital Signs" and
"Parenthood."
On "Backdraft" he served as second unit director and associate producer. He
also was the second unit director on "Adventures in Babysitting" and
directed the feature film "Love or Money" starring Timothy Daly.
LARRY DE WAAY (Co-producer) served as co-producer for "Backdraft" and was
executive producer on "The Hunt For Red October," "Next of Kin" and "Yentl,"
co-producer of "Hamburger Hill" and "Electric Dreams," and was the producer
of "The Dogs of War."
After serving as a location manager for such films as "The Russians Are
Coming, The Russians Are Coming" and "Hallelujah Trail," DeWaay joined
Norman Jewison's company in 1971 and worked as production supervisor for
such films as "Fiddler on The Roof," "Jesus Christ Superstar," "Rollerball,"
"FIST" and "...And Justice For All."
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Mikael Salomon
MIKAEL SALOMON (Director of Photography) has, in less than five years in the
United States, become one of the most respected and sought after
cinematographers in the film industry. His reputation was further enhanced
by his recent camera work on Ron Howard's "Backdraft."
A native of Denmark, Salomon received an Academy Award nomination in 1990
for his work on "The Abyss." Other credits include,
“Always”
,
“Arachnophobia”, "Torch Song Trilogy," "Zelly and Me" and the HBO movie,
"The Man Who Broke 1000 Chains," for which he won an ACE Award.
Starting his career as a camera assistant in Denmark, Salomon was the
director of photography on his first feature at age 19. In addition to a
short stint at a Danish film school, he was a cinematographer on over 40
films, including
"Wolf at the Door," starring Donald Sutherland as Gaugin; "Flying Devil,"
for which he received a Danish Academy Award and "Early Spring," for which
he won the Spanish award, Mejor Fotografia. Salomon also shot a British film
in Yugoslavia called "Stealing Heaven."
John Williams
Over the last three decades, the name of JOHN WILLIAMS (Composer) has become
virtually synonymous with motion picture music.
His film career began in 1961 with the music for "The Secret Ways." In the
early 1970's, he created gripping and suspenseful scores for popular
"disaster" films such as
“The
Poseidon Adventure”,
“Earthquake” and
“The Towering Inferno”.
A master of every genre and emotional nuance, Williams has composed many of
the most familiar themes in movie history, including "Jaws" and
“Star
Wars”
(both of which earned him Academy Awards for Best Original Score),
“Close Encounters of the Third Kind”, "Dracula," "Superman,"
“E.T. - The
Extra Terrestrial”, the
“Raiders of the Lost Ark” trilogy, "The River" and
"Born on the Fourth of July." For many years he also served as conductor of
the Boston Pops Orchestra.
Daniel Hanley And Michael Hill
DANIEL HANLEY and MICHAEL HILL (Editors) have worked with Ron Howard since
the late 1970's, when both were assistant editors on Howard's
movies-of-the-week "Cotton Candy" and "Skyward." They later served as the
editors for "Night Shift," as well as a number of Howard's other films,
including "Splash," "Cocoon," "Gung Ho," "Willow" and "Parenthood." Other
feature credits include "Backdraft," "Armed and Dangerous," "Pet Sematary"
and "Problem Child."
Jack T. Collis
JACK T. COLLIS (Production Designer/Montana) received an Academy Award
nomination for "The Last Tycoon." He previously worked with Ron Howard on
“Cocoon”, "Splash" and "Night Shift." His other films include, "Flight of
The Intruder," "Next of Kin,"
“Alien Nation”,
“The
Running Man”,
“Star
Trek IV: The Voyage Home”, "Crossroads," "National Lampoon's Vacation," "Tex," "Paternity," "The
Four Seasons," "The Long Riders" and "The Jerk."
ALLAN CAMERON (Production Designer/Ireland) won a British Academy Award for
Best Design for "Edward and Mrs. Simpson" and was nominated for the film
"1984." Other film credits include "The Honorary Consul," "Lady Jane," "The
Fourth Protocol,"
“Highlander”,
“Air
America” and Ron Howard's
“Willow”.
Joanna Johnston
JOANNA JOHNSTON (Costume Designer) began her career in the entertainment
industry with the international costumers Bermans and Nathan. Her credits
include "The French Lieutenant's Woman," "Death on the Nile," "Tess," "Evil
Under The Sun,"
“Indiana
Jones and The Temple Of Doom”, "The Color Purple,
“Out of Africa”,
“Who Framed Roger Rabbit”,
“Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade”,
“Back to the Future Part II” and
“Back to the Future Part III”. Her
work will next be seen in the upcoming Universal comedy "Death Becomes Her,"
a Bob Zemeckis film starring Goldie Hawn, Meryl Streep and Bruce Willis.
Tom Cruise. Nicole Kidman. Imagine Films Entertainment Presents A Brian
Grazer Production. A Ron Howard Film. "Far and Away." Music by John
Williams. Costumes Designed by Joanna Johnston. Co-Producers, Larry DeWaay
and Bob Dolman. Film Editors, Michael Hill and Daniel Hanley. Production
Designed by Jack T. Collis and Allan Cameron. Director of Photography,
Mikael Salomon, A.S.C. Executive Producer, Todd Hallowell. Story by Bob
Dolman & Ron Howard. Screenplay by Bob Dolman. Produced by Brian Grazer and
Ron Howard. Directed by Ron Howard. A Universal Release.
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• Go to
"Far and Away" Production Notes
• Go to
Imagine Films Entertainment Presents "Far And
Away" |
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05-01-25 |
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