About Alexander Payne

Constantine Alexander Payne (born February 10, 1961 in Omaha, Nebraska) is an Academy Award winning American film director and screenwriter. His films are noted for their sense of humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. He also tends to set his films in Omaha, Nebraska. He has scenes of historical landmarks and museums in his films, and tends to use actual people for minor roles (real cops play cops, real teachers play teachers, etc.). He frequently incoporates telephone monologues as a dramatic device. He also tends to cast actor Phil Reeves in his films. He is on the short list of directors who have final cut rights for their films. In 2005 he became a member of the Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Directors Branch). His writing partner is Jim Taylor.

Biography
Early life
Payne, a Greek American (his grandfather's family name was Anglicized from Papadopoulos), grew up in the same neighborhood as billionaire Warren Buffett. He went to Creighton Preparatory School for high school. He attended Stanford University, where he double majored in Spanish and History. As a part of his Spanish degree, he studied at the University of Salamanca (Spain). Payne got his MFA in 1990 from the UCLA Film School. He worked in various capacities on films and television before he wrote and directed his first full-length film Citizen Ruth in 1995.

Career & Awards
His film Election, starring Matthew Broderick and Reese Witherspoon, which takes aim at politics and education in America, attracted attention when New Yorker film critic David Denby named it the best film of 1999. Payne was nominated for an Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay for Election. In 2000 he did an uncredited polish-up of the screenplay for the comedy hit Meet The Parents. In 2001 Payne wrote a draft of Jurassic Park III. In 2003 he received a Golden Globe for his screenplay for About Schmidt which also won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. To the surprise of many who kept track of Hollywood news, Payne and his writing partner Jim Taylor were not nominated for an Oscar for the About Schmidt screenplay. He won both the Academy Award and Golden Globe in 2005 for Best Screenplay for Sideways while the film also won the Golden Globe for Best Picture - Musical or Comedy. In total, Sideways received five Academy Award Nominations. Payne served as an executive producer on the films King of California and The Savages. He also teamed up once again with writing partner Jim Taylor to write a draft of the screenplay for the film I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, a comedy directed by Dennis Dugan starring Adam Sandler and Kevin James.

He is on the Board of Directors of an Omaha non-profit film theater, Film Streams. Payne also has a passion in film preservation. In recent years he helped preserve a historic film theater in Scottsbluff, Nebraska.

Filmography
Feature Films
Citizen Ruth (1996)
Election (1999)
Jurassic Park III (screenwriter only) (2001)
About Schmidt (2002)
Sideways (2004)
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (screenwriter of early draft only) (2007)

Short Films
Carmen (1985)
Paris, je t'aime (segment "14th arrondissement") Also appeared as Oscar Wilde in the segment entitled "Père-Lachaise"

Student Films
The Passion Of Martin (1991)

Books
"The Coffee Table, Coffee Table book"[1] with James Zemaitis (a Coffee table book)
"The Sideways Guide to Wine and Life" with Jim Taylor and illustrated by Rex Pickett

External links
Alexander Payne at the Internet Movie Database
Film Streams non-profit film theater in Omaha, Nebraska, which has Payne on the Board of Directors
Nebraska Life magazine article on Scottsbluff, Nebraska movie theater saved with the help of Alexander Payne

Data provided by Wikipedia.