Francis Ford "Frank" Coppola (born April 7, 1939) is a five-time Academy Award-winning American film director, producer, and screenwriter. Coppola is also a vintner, magazine publisher, and hotelier. He is a graduate of Hofstra University where he studied theatre. He earned an M.F.A. in film directing from the UCLA Film School. He is most renowned for directing the highly regarded Godfather trilogy, The Conversation, and the Vietnam War epic Apocalypse Now.
Biography
Childhood
Coppola was born in
Detroit,
Michigan, from a family of Italian ancestry (his grandparents came from
Bernalda,
Basilicata). He is son of
Italia (
née Pennino) and arranger/composer
Carmine Coppola, who, at the time, was the first
flautist for the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra. He was the second of three children (his sister is actress
Talia Shire). Two years later, Carmine became the first flautist for the
NBC Symphony Orchestra and the family moved to
New York City, finding a home in
Woodside,
Queens, where Francis spent the remainder of his childhood.
Coppola had poliomyelitis, or polio, as a boy, leaving him bedridden for large periods of his childhood, and allowing him to indulge his imagination with homemade puppet theater productions. Using his father's 8mm movie camera, he began making movies when he was 10. He studied theatre at Hofstra University and graduated from the University in 1960, prior to earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in film direction from UCLA Film School. There, he made numerous short films. While in UCLA's Film Department, Francis met Jim Morrison, whose music was used later in Apocalypse Now.
Family
Coppola often worked with family members on his films. He cast his two sons in
The Godfather as extras during the street fight scene and
Don Corleone's funeral; his daughter,
Sofia Coppola, appeared in all installments of the series(the first two movies with uncredited roles). His sister,
Talia Shire, played
Connie Corleone in all three Godfather films. His father Carmine, a composer and professional musician, co-wrote much of the music in
The Godfather,
The Godfather Part II, and
Apocalypse Now. His nephew,
Nicolas Cage, starred in Coppola's film
Peggy Sue Got Married and was featured in
Rumble Fish and
The Cotton Club.
His eldest son, Gian-Carlo Coppola, was in the early stages of a film production career when he was killed on May 26, 1986 in a speedboat accident. Coppola's surviving son, Roman Coppola, is a filmmaker and music video director whose filmography includes the feature film CQ and music videos for The Strokes, as well as co-writing the Wes Anderson film The Darjeeling Limited.
Coppola's daughter, Sofia Coppola, is an Academy Award-winning writer and -nominated director. Her films include the critically-acclaimed films The Virgin Suicides and Lost in Translation. In 2004, she became the first American woman to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director, for Lost in Translation.
Other famous members of Coppola's family include his nephews Jason Schwartzman and Robert Schwartzman. Jason Schwartzman has starred in several films, such as Rushmore and Slackers. He also co-wrote (along with director Wes Anderson and cousin Roman Coppola) and starred in the 2007 film The Darjeeling Limited. His brother, Robert Schwartzman, is the lead singer in the band Rooney and has made small appearances in several films, including his cousin's The Virgin Suicides.
Coppola, with his family, expanded his business ventures to include winemaking in California's Napa Valley at the Rubicon Estate Winery in Rutherford, California. He produced his first batch in 1977 with the help of his father, wife and children stomping the grapes barefoot. Every year the family has a harvest party to continue the tradition. His company, Francis Ford Coppola Presents, owns a winery in Geyserville, Sonoma County, California. The company also produces a line of pastas and pasta sauces, and it owns several cafes and resorts.
1960s
In the early 1960s, Coppola started his professional career making low-budget films with
Roger Corman and writing screenplays. His first notable motion picture was made for Corman, the low-budget
Dementia 13. After graduating to mainstream motion pictures with
You're a Big Boy Now, Coppola was offered the reins of the movie version of the
Broadway musical
Finian's Rainbow, starring
Petula Clark, in her first American film, and veteran
Fred Astaire. Producer
Jack Warner was nonplussed by Coppola's shaggy-haired, bearded, "hippie" appearance and generally left him to his own devices. He took his cast to the
Napa Valley for much of the outdoor shooting, but these scenes were in sharp contrast to those obviously filmed on a Hollywood soundstage, resulting in a disjointed look to the film. Dealing with outdated material at a time when the popularity of film musicals was already on the downslide, Coppola's end result was only semi-successful, but his work with Clark no doubt contributed to her
Golden Globe Best Actress nomination. During this period, Coppola lived for a time with his wife and growing family in Mandeville Canyon in
Brentwood, California, according to author Peter Biskind in
Easy Riders, Raging Bulls (Touchstone Books, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1998).
1970s
Early 1970s
In 1971, Coppola won an
Academy Award for his screenplay for
Patton. However, his name as a filmmaker was made as the co-writer and director of
The Godfather (1972),
The Conversation (1974), and
The Godfather Part II (1974). In between directing the
Godfather films, Coppola wrote the screenplay for the critically and commercially unsuccessful 1974
adaptation of
F. Scott Fitzgerald's
novel The Great Gatsby, which was directed by
Jack Clayton and starred
Robert Redford and
Mia Farrow. While at Warner Brothers Coppola hired
George Lucas as his assistant and eventually produced Lucas' breakthrough film,
American Graffiti, which was released in 1973. Also during this period, Coppola invested in San Francisco's
City Magazine, hired an all-new staff, including mob daughter and writer
Susan Berman, and named himself publisher. Although critically acclaimed, the magazine was short lived. The magazine floundered until 1976 when Coppola published its last issue.
The Godfather and The Godfather Part II
In 1972,
The Godfather was released to critical acclaim and huge commercial success. Directed by Coppola, even if the first choice was
Sergio Leone, and adapted by Coppola and
Mario Puzo from Puzo's bestselling novel,
The Godfather follows the story of the Corleone crime family during the 1940s and 50s. The film won three Academy Awards, including Best Picture,
Best Adapted Screenplay, and
Best Actor for Marlon Brando. Coppola himself was awarded Best Adapted Screenplay, along with Mario Puzo, and was nominated for Best Director.
In 1974 the highly anticipated sequel The Godfather Part II was released. Again directed and co-written by Coppola, the second film follows the story of the Corleone family under Michael Corleone throughout the 1950s and 60s, intercut with sequences depicting Vito Corleone as young man and his subsequent rise to power. The sequel was as commercially successful as the first film and received much critical praise. It became the first sequel to win the Academy Award for Best Picture; it also earned Coppola Academy Awards for Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay while winning three other awards and earning five other nominations.
THX 1138 and American Graffiti
In the early 1970s Coppola also helped launch the career of
George Lucas by producing his first two films,
THX 1138 and
American Graffiti. The latter film became a huge success at the box office and met to strong reviews, even earning Coppola a
Best Picture nomination. Lucas would later go off to create the extremely successful
Star Wars and
Indiana Jones series.
The Conversation
In between
The Godfather and
The Godfather Part II, Coppola directed
The Conversation, the story of a paranoid wiretapping and surveillance expert (played by
Gene Hackman) who finds himself caught up in a possible murder plot.
The Conversation was released to theaters in 1974 and was also nominated for Best Picture, competing against
The Godfather Part II; Coppola became one of the few directors to have two films competing for the Best Picture Oscar since the annual number of nominees was reduced to five in 1945. While
The Godfather Part II won the Oscar,
The Conversation won the 1974
Palme d'Or at the
Cannes Film Festival.
Apocalypse Now
Following the success of
The Godfather,
The Conversation and
The Godfather Part II, Coppola began filming
Apocalypse Now, an adaptation of
Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness set in
Cambodia during the
Vietnam War (Coppola himself appears as a man barking out orders). Before production of the film began, Coppola went to his mentor Roger Corman for advice about shooting in the Philippines, since Corman had filmed several pictures there. It was said that all the advice Corman offered Coppola was "Don't go". The production of the film was plagued by numerous problems, including
typhoons,
nervous breakdowns, the firing of
Harvey Keitel,
Martin Sheen's heart attack, extras from the Philippine military leaving in the middle of scenes to go fight rebels, and an unprepared
Marlon Brando with a bloated appearance (which Coppola attempted to hide by shooting him in the shadows). It was delayed so often it was nicknamed
Apocalypse Whenever. The film was equally lauded and hated by critics when it finally appeared in 1979, and the cost of production nearly bankrupted Coppola's nascent studio
American Zoetrope. The film was selected at the 1979
Cannes Film Festival and won the
Palme d'Or, along with
The Tin Drum, directed by
Volker Schlöndorff.
Like Citizen Kane, its reputation has grown in time and Apocalypse Now is regarded by many as a masterpiece of the New Hollywood era. Roger Ebert considers it to be the finest film on the Vietnam war and included it on his list for the 2002 Sight and Sound poll for the greatest movie of all time.
The 1991 documentary film Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse, directed by Eleanor Coppola (Francis's wife), Fax Bahr, and George Hickenlooper, chronicles the difficulties the crew went through making Apocalypse Now, and features behind the scenes footage filmed by Eleanor.
After filming Apocalypse Now, Coppola famously stated:
- "We were in the jungle, there were too many of us, we had access to too much money, too much equipment, and little by little, we went insane."
In 2001, Coppola re-released Apocalypse Now as Apocalypse Now Redux, restoring several sequences lost from the original 1979 cut of the film thereby expanding its length to 200 minutes.
1980s
Napoléon restoration and One from the Heart
Despite the setbacks during the making of
Apocalypse Now, Coppola kept up with film projects, presenting in 1981 a restoration by Kevin Brownlow of the celebrated 1927
Abel Gance film
Napoléon that was released in the United States by American Zoetrope. Coppola's father scored a soundtrack for this cut of the film. However, more of the film has since been found and incorporated by Brownlow, and Carmine Coppola's soundtrack is written to match the film at a different frame speed from that at which Gance shot it. Coppola's insistence on his father's score (others do exist), and his claim to have worldwide rights on showings of the film (he purchased some rights from Claude LeLouche who in turn had purchased them from a penniless Gance), mean that this film is not presently screened, and its fullest form is unavailable on DVD.
Coppola returned to directing with the experimental musical One from the Heart (1982). Unfortunately, that film was a financial failure.
Hammett
Hammett is a 1982 homage to noir films and pulp fiction directed by
Wim Wenders and completed by Francis Ford Coppola. The film is a fictionalized story about writer
Dashiell Hammett, based on the novel of the same name by
Joe Gores.
German director Wenders was hired by Coppola to direct this film, which was to be his American debut feature. But by the time the final version was released in 1982, only 30 percent of Wenders' footage remained, and the rest had been completely reshot by Coppola. Wenders made a short film called
Reverse Angle documenting his disputes with Coppola surrounding the making of
Hammett.
The Outsiders
In 1982, he directed
The Outsiders, a
film adaptation of the
novel of the same name by
S. E. Hinton. Coppola credited his inspiration for making the film to a suggestion from middle school students who had read the novel.
The Outsiders is notable for being the breakout film for a number of young actors who would go on to become major stars. These included major roles for
Matt Dillon,
Ralph Macchio, and
C. Thomas Howell. Others rising stars in the cast include
Patrick Swayze,
Rob Lowe,
Emilio Estevez, and
Tom Cruise. Matt Dillon and several others also starred in Coppola's related film,
Rumble Fish, which was also based on a S.E. Hinton novel and filmed at the same time as
The Outsiders on-location in
Tulsa, Oklahoma. Carmine Coppola wrote and edited the musical score, including the title song "Stay Gold", which was based upon a famous
Robert Frost poem and performed for the movie by
Stevie Wonder.
Captain Eo & Rip Van Winkle
In 1986 Coppola, with
George Lucas, directed the
Michael Jackson film for
Disney theme parks,
Captain Eo, which at the time was the most expensive film per minute ever made. In 1987 he directed in the
"Faerie Tale Theatre" Rip Van Winkle the
Rip Van Winkle episode.
New York Stories
in 1989 Coppola teamed up with fellow
Oscar-wining directors
Martin Scorsese and
Woody Allen for an
anthology film called
New York Stories. Coppola directed
the
Life without Zoe segment starring his sister
Talia Shire, and also co-wrote the film with his daughter
Sofia Coppola.
Life Without Zoe was mostly panned by critics and was generally considered the segment that brought the films overall quality down.
1990s
The Godfather Part III
In 1990 he released the 3rd and final chapter of
The Godfather series with
The Godfather Part III. Coppola successfully managed to get
Al Pacino,
Diane Keaton, and
Talia Shire to return to the franchise, but
Robert Duvall refused to reprise his role as Tom Hagen. While not as critically acclaimed as the first two movies, it was still a box office success. Some reviewers criticized the casting of Coppola's daughter
Sofia, who stepped into a role abandoned by
Winona Ryder just as filming began. Despite this,
The Godfather Part III went off to gather 7
Academy Award nominations, including
Best Director and
Best Picture for Coppola himself. The film failed to win any of these awards, the only film in the trilogy to do so.
Dracula and Frankenstein
In 1992, Coppola released
Bram Stoker's Dracula, an adaptation of Stoker's novel which tried to follow Stoker's novel more closely than previous film adaptations, although its closeness to the book is often debated. Coppola cast
Gary Oldman in the films title role, along with
Winona Ryder and
Anthony Hopkins. The movie's box office success enabled Coppola to keep his vineyard. The film won Academy Awards for
Costume Design,
Makeup, and
Sound Editing. Two years later Coppola produced but did not direct an adaptation of
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, which featured
Kenneth Branagh (who also directed the film) in the title role and
The Godfather Part II actor
Robert De Niro as the monster.
Zoetrope All Story
In 1997, Coppola founded
Zoetrope All-Story, a flashy
literary magazine that publishes
short stories. The magazine has published fiction by
T.C. Boyle and
Amy Bloom and essays by
David Mamet,
Steven Spielberg, and
Salman Rushdie. Since its founding, the magazine has grown in reputation to become one of the premier American journals of
literary fiction . Coppola serves as founding editor and publisher of
All-Story.
Quotes on Filmmaking
'The essence of cinema is editing. It's the combination of what can be extraordinary images of people during emotional moments, or images in a general sense, put together in a kind of alchemy.'
Politics
Over the years, Francis Coppola has given political contributions to several candidates of the Democratic Party, including Mike Thompson, Nancy Pelosi for the United States House of Representatives and Barbara Boxer and Alan Cranston for the Senate.
Recent activities
He owns the Turtle Bay hotel in Placencia, Belize.
He co-owns the Rubicon restaurant along with Robin Williams and Robert De Niro.
Coppola serves as "Honorary Consul H. E. Ambassador Francis Ford Coppola." for the Central American nation of Belize in San Francisco, California.
In November 2005, Coppola took part as a special guest at the 46th International Thessaloniki Film Festival in Greece.
The director is currently living in the San Francisco Bay Area. He also spends considerable time in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he is establishing a subsidiary of his production company. The shooting and development of the film has began in 2008 in spite of the setbacks caused by an assault to the company's offices in Buenos Aires.
In San Francisco, Coppola owns a restaurant named Cafe Zoetrope, located in the Sentinel Building. It serves traditional Italian cuisine and wine from his personal vineyard and bottling company.
Coppola plans to produce his own films in order to avoid the marketing input that goes into most films (making them appeal to too-wide an audience). His newest film Youth Without Youth was released on December 14, 2007. It was made for only around 19 million dollars, and was given a limited release.
For years he has tried to make a movie called Megalopolis, a film about an architect in a futuristic New York who tries to create utopia through architecture.
He is currently directing Tetro in Buenos Aires.
Filmography
Director
Writer
See also
References
Further reading
- Jeffrey Chown. Hollywood Auteur: Francis Coppola. New York: Praeger Publishers, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1988. ISBN 0-27592-910-8.
External links