Lenny Abrahamson

Film director

Birthday November 30, 1966

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Rathfarnham, Dublin, Ireland

Age 57 years old

Nationality Ireland

#49538 Most Popular

1930

Both sides of his family were originally from Eastern Europe; his maternal grandparents were Polish Jews who settled in Ireland in the 1930s, while his paternal grandfather, after whom he was named, was surgeon Leonard Abrahamson, a Ukrainian Jew from Odesa.

Abrahamson's mother was a childhood friend of the future President of Israel, Chaim Herzog; both were the children of Jewish immigrants to Ireland, and grew up on Bloomfield Avenue in Portobello.

1966

Leonard Ian Abrahamson (born 30 November 1966) is an Irish film and television director.

1988

The film received four nominations at the 88th Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director for Abrahamson.

He was educated at The High School and Trinity College Dublin, where he was elected a scholar in philosophy in 1988, having transferred after a year of studying theoretical physics.

Abrahamson was offered a scholarship to study for a PhD in Philosophy in Stanford University.

He abandoned his studies after six months and returned to Ireland to take up filmmaking, initially directing commercials, filming a popular series of adverts for Carlsberg.

His first film was Adam & Paul, a black comedy that featured a pair of heroin addicts as they made their way around Dublin in search of a fix.

2004

He is best known for directing independent films Adam & Paul (2004), Garage (2007), What Richard Did (2012),

2007

The follow-up film to this was 2007's Garage, starring Pat Shortt as a lonely petrol station attendant in rural Ireland.

Both films won the IFTA award for best film.

Also in 2007, RTÉ screened Abrahamson's four-part TV miniseries Prosperity, which was written in collaboration with Mark O'Halloran, the co-writer of Adam and Paul and Garage.

Like these two films, Prosperity focused on people on the fringes of Irish society, with each one-hour episode focusing on a specific character, including an alcoholic, a single mother, and an asylum seeker.

2008

Prosperity was nominated for six Irish Film and Television Awards in 2008 and won in two categories, Best Directing for Lenny Abrahamson, and Best Script for Mark O'Halloran.

2012

In 2012, Abrahamson won his third IFTA for best film with What Richard Did.

Abrahamson revealed that he was working on a film called Frank, which is set in Britain, Ireland, and the USA, in a December 2012 interview with Eurochannel.

"It's a comedy about a young musician who joins an eccentric band led by an enigmatic singer called Frank. It's a kind of road movie, strange, funny and quite original, I hope. It stars Michael Fassbender and Domhnall Gleeson."

2014

Frank (2014), and Room (2015), all of which contributed to Abrahamson's six Irish Film and Television Awards.

Frank premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2014.

The film is about an eccentric musician modeled after Frank Sidebottom.

It stars Michael Fassbender, Domhnall Gleeson and Maggie Gyllenhaal.

In 2014, it was announced that Abrahamson would direct an adaptation of Laird Hunt's Civil War novel Neverhome.

2015

In 2015, he received widespread recognition for directing Room, based on the novel of the same name by Emma Donoghue.

He next directed the film adaptation of Emma Donoghue's novel, Room (2015), for which he received his first Academy Award nomination.

The film was successful, both critically and commercially.

In 2015, Abrahamson was working on A Man's World, a film based on Emile Griffith's boxing rivalry with Benny Paret.

2016

In 2016, it was confirmed that Abrahamson was attached to direct Neal Bascomb's upcoming book The Grand Escape, a true story of three daredevil World War I pilots being held in Germany's most infamous POW prison.

The story chronicles WWI's greatest mass prison escape, and the pilots' subsequent flight to freedom.

A writer to adapt Bascomb's book has not yet been attached.

Element Pictures and Film4 Productions are producing.

Abrahamson is married to Monika Pamula, a Polish-born film studies teacher; the couple have two children.

Abrahamson is an atheist.

Academy Awards

British Academy Television Awards

British Academy Television Craft Awards

Primetime Emmy Awards

Irish Film & Television Awards

2020

In 2020, he directed six episodes of and executive produced the television series Normal People, for which he was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series.

Abrahamson was born in Rathfarnham, Dublin, the son of Jewish parents Edna (née Walzman) and Max Abrahamson, a solicitor.

Although his upbringing was not devoutly religious, his family belonged to an Orthodox synagogue, and he had a bar mitzvah ceremony and attended a cheder.