Anthony Minghella

Filmmaker

Birthday January 6, 1954

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Ryde, Isle of Wight, England

DEATH DATE 2008, London, England (54 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#12164 Most Popular

1954

Anthony Minghella, (6 January 1954 – 18 March 2008) was a British film director, playwright and screenwriter.

1972

The latter recorded an album titled Tales of the Riverbank in 1972, although it was not released until 2001.

He attended the University of Hull, studying drama.

1975

As an undergraduate he had arrived at university with an EMI contract for the band, in which he sang and played keyboards; while at university he wrote words and music for an adaptation of Gabriel Josipovici's Mobius the Stripper (1975).

Minghella graduated after three years and stayed on to pursue a PhD. He also taught at the university for several years, on Samuel Beckett and on the medieval theatre.

Ultimately, he abandoned his pursuit of a PhD to work for the BBC.

Minghella's debut work was a stage adaptation of Gabriel Josipovici's Mobius the Stripper (1975) and it was his Whale Music (1985) that brought him notice.

1978

His double bill of Samuel Beckett's Play and Happy Days was his directorial debut and debut feature film as a director was A Little Like Drowning (1978).

1980

His family are well known on the island, where they ran a café in Ryde until the 1980s and have run an eponymous business making and selling Italian-style ice cream since the 1950s.

His parents were Edoardo Minghella (an Italian immigrant) and Leeds-born Gloria Alberta (née Arcari).

His mother's ancestors originally came from Valvori, a small village in southern Lazio, Italy.

He was one of five children, his sisters Gioia Minghella-Giddens, Edana Minghella and Loretta Minghella, and a brother Dominic Minghella who also became a screenwriter and producer.

Minghella attended St. Mary's Catholic Primary School, Ryde, Sandown Grammar School, and St John's College, Portsmouth.

Early interests suggested a possible career as a musician, with Minghella playing keyboards with local bands Earthlight and Dancer.

During the 1980s, he worked in television, starting as a runner on Magpie before moving into script editing the children's drama series Grange Hill for the BBC and later writing The StoryTeller series for Jim Henson.

He wrote several episodes of the ITV detective drama Inspector Morse and an episode of long-running ITV drama Boon.

1986

Made in Bangkok (1986) found mainstream success in the West End.

1988

Radio success followed with a Giles Cooper Award for the radio drama Cigarettes and Chocolate first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1988.

1990

Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990), a feature drama written and directed for the BBC's Screen Two anthology strand, bypassed TV broadcast and instead had a cinema release.

He turned down an offer to direct another Inspector Morse to do the project, even though he believed that the Morse episode would have been a much higher-profile ll assignment.

1991

He directed Truly, Madly, Deeply (1991), The English Patient (1996), The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), and Cold Mountain (2003), and produced Iris (2001), The Quiet American (2002), Michael Clayton (2007), and The Reader (2008).

1996

He received the Academy Award for Best Director for The English Patient (1996).

The English Patient (1996) brought him two Academy Awards nominations, Best Director (which he won) and Adapted Screenplay.

1999

In addition, he received three more Academy Award nominations; he was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay for both The English Patient and The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), and was posthumously nominated for Best Picture for The Reader (2008), as a producer.

Minghella was born in Ryde, on the Isle of Wight, an island off the south coast of England that is a popular holiday resort.

He also received an Adapted Screenplay nomination for The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999).

2003

He was chairman of the board of Governors at the British Film Institute between 2003 and 2007.

2005

He directed a party election broadcast for the Labour Party in 2005.

The short film depicted Tony Blair and Gordon Brown working together and was criticised for being insincere: "The Anthony Minghella party political broadcast last year was full of body language fibs", said Peter Collett, a psychologist at the University of Oxford.

"When you are talking to me, I'll give you my full attention only if I think you are very high status or if I love you. On that party political broadcast, they are staring at each other like lovers. It is completely false."

Premiered at the English National Opera (London, 2005), then at the Lithuanian National Opera and Ballet Theatre (Vilnius, March 2006) and at the Metropolitan Opera (New York City, September 2006).

2006

With Samuel Beckett's 100th birthday celebrations, he returned to radio on BBC Radio 3 with Eyes Down Looking (2006), with: Jude Law, Juliet Stevenson and David Threlfall.

An operatic directorial debut came with Puccini's Madama Butterfly.

2008

It was revived on 3 May 2008 as a tribute to its author director following his death.

His production starred Juliet Stevenson, Bill Nighy and Jenny Howe.

His first radio play Hang Up, starring Anton Lesser and Juliet Stevenson, was revived on 10 May 2008 as part of the BBC Radio 4 Minghella season.

The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, a pilot episode television adaptation which he co-wrote and directed, was broadcast posthumously on BBC One (23 March 2008); watched by 6.3 million viewers.

He vocally supported I Know I'm Not Alone, a film of musician Michael Franti's peacemaking excursions into Iraq, Palestine and Israel.

2009

The latter was transmitted live into cinemas worldwide (7 March 2009) as part of the Met's HD series and is now available on DVD.

The ENO work was to have led to other operatic projects, directing again at English National Opera and collaborating with Osvaldo Golijov on a new opera for the Met and ENO, writing the libretto and directing the production.