Sam Taylor-Johnson

Film director

Birthday March 4, 1967

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Croydon, London, England

Age 57 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#1163 Most Popular

1967

Samantha Louise Taylor-Johnson (née Taylor-Wood; born 4 March 1967) is a British film director and artist.

1990

Taylor-Johnson began exhibiting fine-art photography in the early 1990s.

1993

One collaboration with Henry Bond, titled 26 October 1993, featured Bond and Taylor-Wood reprising the roles of Yoko Ono and John Lennon in a pastiche of the photo-portrait made by photographer Annie Leibovitz—a few hours before Lennon was assassinated, in 1980.

1994

In 1994, she exhibited a multi-screen video work titled Killing Time, in which four people mimed to an opera score.

From that point multi-screen video works became the main focus of Taylor-Johnson's work.

1996

Beginning with the video works Travesty of a Mockery and Pent-Up in 1996.

One of Taylor-Johnson's first United Kingdom solo shows was held at the Chisenhale Gallery, east London, in September–October 1996.

1997

She won the Illy Café Prize for Most Promising Young Artist at the 1997 Venice Biennale.

1998

Taylor-Johnson was nominated for the annual Turner Prize in 1998, but lost out to the painter Chris Ofili.

2000

In 2000, Taylor-Johnson created a wraparound photomural around scaffolding of the London department store Selfridges while it was being restored; the mural featured 21 cultural icons including Elton John, musician Alex James, and actors Richard E. Grant and Ray Winstone.

The poses of the figures referenced famous works of art from the past and recent movies.

2002

In 2002, Taylor-Johnson was commissioned by the National Portrait Gallery to make David, a video portrait of David Beckham—whom she depicted sleeping.

She is perhaps best known for her work entitled 'Crying Men' which features many of Hollywood's glitterati crying, including Robin Williams, Sean Penn, Laurence Fishburne and Paul Newman.

2004

In her 2004 film installation "Strings" at White Cube, ballet dancer Ivan Putrov was suspended by a harness above four musicians playing the slow movement from Tchaikovsky's Second String Quartet, filmed in the Crush Bar of the Royal Opera House.

2006

In 2006, Taylor-Johnson had a survey exhibition at the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art in Gateshead, England.

In 2006, Taylor-Johnson contributed the short film Death Valley to the British version of Destricted.

2008

In August 2008, Taylor-Johnson was chosen to direct Nowhere Boy, a biopic about the childhood of John Lennon.

In 2008, Taylor-Johnson directed a short film Love You More, written by Patrick Marber and produced by Anthony Minghella.

The film includes two songs by the Buzzcocks and features a cameo appearance by the band's lead singer Pete Shelley.

2009

Her directorial feature film debut was 2009's Nowhere Boy, a film based on the childhood experiences of the Beatles' singer and songwriter John Lennon.

She is one of a group of artists known as the Young British Artists.

Samantha Taylor-Wood was born in Croydon, London.

Her father, David, left the family when she was nine.

Her mother, Geraldine, is a yoga teacher and astrologist.

She has a younger sister, Ashley, and a maternal half-brother, Kristian.

Taylor-Johnson grew up near Streatham Common in south London until her parents' divorce.

The family then moved into an old schoolhouse in Jarvis Brook in East Sussex, and Samantha went to Beacon Community College.

She later attended Goldsmiths, University of London.

The 53rd annual London Film Festival screened the film as its closing presentation on 29 October 2009.

The film was released in the UK on Boxing Day in 2009 to positive reviews.

In February 2009, Taylor-Johnson, collaborating with Sky Arts chose to interpret "Vesti la giubba" from Pagliacci.

She commented: "I’m really happy to be involved in such a great project. I think by capturing one of opera's most moving moments in a film short, we have put a modern spin on the aria."

2010

Speaking about her experience directing the film, in September 2010, Taylor-Johnson said,

"'I thought, I'm in too deep and if I mess this up I'm just never gonna make a film again, and I went into a panic. I got into the car and said, I just have to call these producers and pull out. I got into the car and I put the key into the ignition and Lennon's voice came straight out of the radio and it was Starting Over. It was one of those moments where I thought it was a sign: OK I'm gonna do it.'"

Taylor-Johnson was nominated for a BAFTA award on 21 January 2010 but lost, to Duncan Jones.

2011

In 2011, she directed the R.E.M. music video "Überlin".

The clip starred her then-fiancé Aaron Johnson, who "throws some kung-fu kicks, attempts some pirouettes, prances, punches the air, chicken walks, tries out some bunny impressions, and, at one point, fondles his bottom."

In September 2011, she collaborated with Solange Azagury-Partridge on the short film Daydream.

2014

2014 saw a new photographic exhibition by Taylor-Johnson, of the private apartment of Mademoiselle Chanel at The Saatchi Gallery.

Entitled ‘Second Floor’, the series of 34 photographs captured the private rooms of Coco Chanel at 31 Rue Cambon in Paris.