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Biography

American producer/director Taylor Hackford was hired by a Los Angeles TV station after his two-year hitch in the Peace Corps. On his own, he created New Visions Productions, which he eventually merged into the New Century Company before giving up producing to concentrate on directing. He won an Academy Award in 1978 for Teenage Father, a short-subject elaboration of a TV news story on which he'd previously worked. Hackford's first feature was The Idolmaker (1980), a jaundiced recreation of the "Philadelphia school" of '50s rock & roll; he later returned to the rarefied world of vintage rock in his Ritchie Valens biopic La Bamba and his revelatory documentary Chuck Berry: Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll (both 1987). He also directed Dolores Claiborne (1995), the Al Pacino vehicle The Devil's Advocate (1997), and edited the boxing documentary When We Were Kings (1996). Though Hackford has toted up some impressive credits over his career, few of his films have matched the audience appeal or box-office bankability of his biggest hit, 1982's An Officer and a Gentleman. Hackford married British actress Helen Mirren in 1997, whom he had lived with since 1986. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Most disliked movie

Everybody's All-American

Awards

Best Director (nom)
Ray 2004
Director's Guild of America

 

Best Director (nom)
Ray 2004
Broadcast Film Critics Association

 

Best Director (nom)
Ray 2004
Academy

 

Best Director (nom)
An Officer and a Gentleman 1982
Directors Guild of America

 

Best Live Action Short (win)
Teenage Father 1978
Academy

 


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