| David Winters | |
|---|---|
Winters in 1967's Movin' with Nancy |
|
| Born | David Weizer April 5, 1939 London, England |
| Other names | Maria Dante |
| Occupation | Producer, director, actor, screenwriter, choreographer, dancer |
| Years active | 1954-present |
| Awards | Christopher Award 1972 Peabody Award 1972 Sitges Film Festival Award 1982 Best International Film: The Last Horror Film (Director) Paris Film Festival Award 1982 2ND Mumbai International FICTS Festival 2007 Golden Scroll Award 1982 Bangkok Film Festival 2002 Houston Film Festival Charleston Film Festival Star Entertainment Award 3 World Television Awards 6 Emmy Nominationskids choice award winner |
| Website | |
| http://www.davidwinters.net | |
David Winters (born 5 April 1939) is an English-born American dancer, choreographer, producer, director, screenwriter, and actor.[1] Winters has participated in, directed and produced over 400 television series, television specials, and motion pictures. Of these, he has directed, produced and distributed over 50 films.
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Winters was born David Weizer in London, England, the son of Anglo-Jewish parents Sadie and Samuel Weizer.[2] His family relocated to the United States in 1953. He became a naturalized United States citizen in 1956.[2] Winters began acting a child, appearing in over 100 television roles and commercials including Rock,Rock,Rock![3] before appearing as Baby John in the original Broadway production of West Side Story, he was one of only three members to be cast in the film version.[4][5]
Following his role in West Side Story, Winters played "Yonkers" in Gypsy.[6]
Winters started teaching dance and his students included Teri Garr, who would go on to find success as an Academy Award-nominated actress. and Antonia Basilotta (better known as Toni Basil), who would become widely known for the 1980s song "Mickey". Winters would give his students acting and dancing roles in most of the movies and projects he choreographed and they would become known as David Winters and his dancers.[7][8][9]
Winters went on to appear as a regular singer/dancer and choreographer on the hit variety series Hullabaloo (1965), expanding his previous role on the earlier Shindig! (1964).[10] Under Eugene Louis Facciuto (aka Luigi), Winters was in dance class with Elliott Gould. Additionally, Winters taught dance to such world-famous actors as Ann-Margret, Raquel Welch and Elvis Presley. In addition to a credit as guest star on the 1967 Nancy Sinatra special Movin' with Nancy, the special also featured his choreography and dancing. This project earned him his first Emmy Award nomination. Winters would later team up with regular Hullabaloo director Steve Binder to choreograph dance numbers for the infamous Star Wars Holiday Special.
In addition to dancing, Winters also choreographed many major films, including four Elvis Presley movies.[11][12][13][14] and later, Barbra Streisand's A Star Is Born (1976).[15][16] Winters often choreographed the productions in which he danced. He was nominated for a Special Achievement in Choreography Emmy in 1967, which was unusual in that choreography was not a category that year. In addition to the Nancy Sinatra special, Winters choreographed and directed two episodes of The Monkees.[17] That show is sometimes considered to have launched the music video as a promotional device. In any case, former Monkee Michael Nesmith went on to be a pioneer in American music videos.[18]
In 1970 Winters teamed up with Raquel Welch and Tom Jones, John Wayne, and Bob Hope for the multi-million-dollar TV special Raquel!.[19] Now seen as a classic '70s timepiece, featuring pop-culture icons of the time, the song-and-dance extravaganza was filmed around the world—from Paris and London to Mexico. Bob Mackie designed costumes in production numbers of songs from the era, and guest performances, including John Wayne and Bob Hope in the wild West, made the show well received by critics. Winters also choreograhphed the '70s roller disco cult classic "Roller Boogie".[20]
Winters appeared in episodes of several popular dramatic and variety shows, such as The Milton Berle Show, Perry Mason, Suspense, Shindig!, Hullabaloo and Lux Video Theatre as well as appearing in some of the specials as a dancer. He was interviewed and appears in the 2005 documentary Inside Deep Throat, discussing his two year-affair with porn actress Linda Lovelace. He also made an appearance in Linda Lovelace for President.[21][22] Other feature films in which Winters has appeared include The Last Horror Film (1982), Welcome 2 Ibiza (2002) and Blackbeard (2006).
In the late 1960s Winters began directing, beginning with two episodes of The Monkees. He also directed Paul Newman in Once Upon a Wheel, Kirk Douglas in the television adaptation of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde (1973), as well as the film version of the successful Alice Cooper tour Welcome to my Nightmare (he also served as producer).[23] In the 1980s he produced, directed, wrote and co-starred in The Last Horror Film (1982), which he filmed during the Cannes Film Festival and which went on to win numerous awards including the Paris Film Festival Award, the Los Angeles Golden Scroll Award and the Sitges Film Festival Award.[24]
Winters' 1986 film Thrashin' remains a seminal piece of work in the board sport industry two decades after its initial release.[25] Mystery Science Theater 3000 chose Winters' 1988 film Space Mutiny as its target for a November 1997 episode. It is available in that series' home video collection (Volume 4), and runs ten minutes shorter than the original due to the deletion of some Battlestar Galactica footage.[26][27]
Winters' producing career began in 1966, when he co-produced the Lucy in London TV special starring Lucille Ball (who was also the special's Executive Producer), Anthony Newley and the Dave Clark Five and that was sponsored by Monsanto Company.
In 1971 Winters directed and produced Once Upon a Wheel, an ABC television documentary on the history of auto racing starring and hosted by Paul Newman and co-starring Mario Andretti, Kirk Douglas, Hugh Downs, Dean Martin, Cesar Romero, Dick Smothers and many others. Coca-Cola sponsored the show.
In the 1970s, in addition to the Raquel Welch special, Winters won a Peabody Award for producing the 1972 NBC special The Timex All Star Swing Festival.[28] In 1975 he produced the soft-core film Linda Lovelace for President[29][30] and Young Lady Chatterly. Winters' two-year affair with Lovelace has been linked to her desire for a Vegas career.[21][22] In 1978, in a jam-packed Universal Amphitheatre (now the Gibson Amphitheatre), fans of Diana Ross were treated to a concert spectacular, conceived and executed by Winters.[31]
| Theatrical Feature Film Bronze Award |
|
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Dramatic |
| Location | Charleston, South Carolina |
| Country | USA |
| Presented by | Charleston - Worldfest |
| First awarded | 1961 |
| Last awarded | 2008 |
| Official website | http://www.worldfest.org/ |
1986 was a turning point for Winters. After being overruled on a casting decision for Thrashin', Winters made the professional decision to control all aspects of future projects. Josh Brolin was ultimately cast, but Winters' choice was a pre-21 Jump Street Johnny Depp.[32][33]
The 1991 film Raw Nerve featured the unlikely pairing of Glenn Ford—in his last film role—with former porn actress Traci Lords.[34]
In 1994 Winters cast Pamela Anderson in her first starring role in Raw Justice—also known as "Good Cop, Bad Cop"—a film produced by Winters in which she co-starred with Stacy Keach, David Keith and Airplane! star Robert Hays. The film won the Bronze Award at the Worldfest-Charleston in the category for dramatic theatrical films under the title "Good Cop, Bad Cop".[35][36]
Winters' comedy Welcome 2 Ibiza (2002) won the Bangkok Film Festival Audience Award in November 2002.
Action International Pictures was organized by Winters with partners David A. Prior and Peter Yuval in 1986, the same year as the Thrashin' incident. Winters bought out his partners in AIP in 1992 and re-branded it as West Side Studios. In 1999 he and his British business partner Patrick Meehan took their Equator Films public,[37] in 2004 that company purchased HandMade Films.[38] His current American production entity is known as Alpha Beta Films International.
In Thailand, Winters is building a large movie studio with acclaimed film director Oliver Stone, which has been dubbed by the press Ollywood.[39][40][41][42]
"Quite possibly the worst science fiction/space adventure film made in English... Even the horrendously bad Shape Of Things To Come (1979) can't aspire to such depths of total putrescence. I speak of the notorious Made-In-South Africa Space Mutiny".[45][46]
| Year | Award | Result | Category | Film or series |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1968 | Emmy Award | Nominated | Special Classification of Individual Achievements | Movin' with Nancy |
| 1970 | Outstanding Achievement in Choreography | Ann-Margret: From Hollywood with Love | ||
| 1971 | Best International Sports Documentary | Won | TV Special | Once Upon a Wheel |
| World Television Festival Award | TV Special | |||
| 1972 | Christopher Award | Won | TV Special | Timex All Star Swing Festival (Shared with Burt Rosen, Bernard Rothman, and Jack Wohl) |
| 2002 | Bangkok Film Festival | Won | Audience Award for Best Picture | Welcome 2 Ibiza |
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