Joe Eszterhas

Writer

Popular As József Eszterhás

Birthday November 23, 1944

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Csákánydoroszló, Hungary

Age 79 years old

Nationality Hungary

#42770 Most Popular

1944

József Antal Eszterhás (born November 23, 1944), credited as Joe Eszterhas, is a Hungarian-American writer.

Born in Hungary, he grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States.

After an early career as a journalist and editor, he entered the film industry.

1950

The family later moved to the United States, living first in Pittsburgh before settling in Cleveland in 1950, where Eszterhas was raised.

He attended Ohio University.

1966

He decided to pursue writing as a career after winning a competition in 1966 sponsored by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.

The prize was awarded at the White House by then-Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

When Eszterhas was 45, he learned that his father had concealed his World War II collaboration in Hungary's Arrow Cross Party government after the German occupation of Hungary and that he had "organized book burnings and had produced anti-Semitic propaganda."

p.201 Eszterhas later described his father's anti-Semitic pamphlets as "like the Hungarian version of Mein Kampf."

1967

Eszterhas had a daughter in 1967 who was put up for adoption at birth.

1970

Eszterhas began his career with a stint at the Dayton Journal Herald, before moving to The Plain Dealer in Cleveland, where he was one of the first reporters to cover the Kent State shootings in 1970.

He and fellow Plain Dealer journalist Michael Roberts spent the next three months reporting on the story, and their work was published as the book Thirteen Seconds: Confrontation at Kent State.

Eszterhas later joined the staff of Rolling Stone.

One of Eszterhas' articles for The Plain Dealer was the subject of a lawsuit.

He had covered the aftermath of the collapse of a bridge across the Ohio River.

It included a supposed interview of Margaret Cantrell, the widow of one of the fatal victims of the collapse.

Months after the accident, he and a photographer visited her home.

She was not there at the time, but he talked to the children as the photographer took photos.

His Sunday magazine feature focused on the family's poverty and contained several inaccuracies.

Eszterhas had made it seem as though he had spoken to her, describing her mood and attitude in the story.

1978

His first screenwriting credit was for the film F.I.S.T. (1978).

1983

He co-wrote the script for Flashdance, which became one of the highest grossing films of 1983, and set off a lucrative and prolific run for his career.

1990

By the early 1990s, he was known as the highest-paid writer in Hollywood, and noted for his work in the erotic thriller genre.

1992

He was paid a then-record $3 million for his script Love Hurts, which was produced as Basic Instinct (1992), and following its success, news outlets reported he earned seven-figure salaries solely on the basis of two-to-four page outlines.

1994

The couple divorced in 1994 after nearly 24 years of marriage.

That year, he married Naomi Baka, a fellow Ohio native, and they had four sons.

, Eszterhas lives in the Cleveland suburb of Bainbridge Township, Ohio.

1995

However, Eszterhas' screenwriting career experienced a decline over the rest of the decade, with films such as Showgirls (1995), Jade (1995), and An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1997) receiving negative reviews and performing poorly at the box office.

He mostly withdrew from Hollywood afterward, though he has since authored several books.

1996

They reunited in 1996.

Eszterhas had two children with his first wife, Gerri Javor.

2000

His publications include American Rhapsody (2000), and two volumes of memoirs: Hollywood Animal (2004), an autobiography, and Crossbearer (2008), which detailed his adulthood return to the Catholic faith he was raised in.

Eszterhás was born in Csákánydoroszló, a village in Hungary to Roman Catholic parents, Mária (née Bíró) and István Eszterhás.

He was born during World War II, and lived as a child in a refugee camp in Allied-occupied Austria.

2001

After this discovery, he cut his father out of his life entirely, never reconciling before his father's death in 2001.

After previously living in Malibu, California, he and his wife moved to Bainbridge in 2001, as they felt it provided a better environment to raise their children in.

During his first marriage, he was a resident of Tiburon, California.

Politically, Eszterhas has described himself as an "independent centrist", whose votes for president have included Democrats Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, Independent Ross Perot, and Republicans George W. Bush and Donald Trump.

He is a supporter of Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán.

2012

He later expressed regret at not seeing his father before his death, saying in 2012, "When he was in a Hungarian old-age home, the nurses kept calling and saying, 'He's dying, and he needs to see you.' Not going was a huge mistake. I've asked God to forgive me, but I don't think I'll be forgiven."