Larry Fessenden
Larry Fessenden | |
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Larry Fessenden in August 2010 | |
Born |
Laurence T. Fessenden March 23, 1963 New York City, New York, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1978–present |
Spouse(s) | Beck Underwood (1 child) |
Laurence T. "Larry" Fessenden (born March 23, 1963)[1] is an American actor, producer, writer, director, film editor, and cinematographer.[1] He has starred in films such as The Last Winter (2006), I Can See You (2008), Bitter Feast (2010), You're Next (2011), and We Are Still Here (2015). His screenwriting efforts include Habit (1997), Wendigo (2001), and The Last Winter (2006), all of which he also directed. He has also directed Beneath (2013), and a segment of the anthology horror comedy film The ABCs of Death 2 (2014).
Personal life
Larry Fessenden was born in New York City, New York.[1] he attended St. Bernard's School, then Phillips Academy, from which he was expelled.[2] He is married to Beck Underwood and the couple has one child.
Career
Fessenden has operated the production company Glass Eye Pix since 1985.[3] Fessenden was influenced by the old Universal Monsters.[4]
An actor, screenwriter, director and film editor, he has worked, in addition to feature films, on such television projects as the NBC horror anthology Fear Itself (2008), directing the episode "Skin and Bones". He wrote the screenplay of Orphanage (2007) with Guillermo del Toro, an English-language remake of El Orfanato.[5]
Fessenden has worked as a mentor to young directors, such as Jim Mickle and Ti West.[6] He has been a producer on projects including Ilya Chaiken's Liberty Kid (2007), Kelly Reichardt's Wendy and Lucy (2008), James McKenney's Satan Hates You (2010), West's The House of the Devil (2009) and The Innkeepers (2011), Joe Maggio's The Last Rites of Joe May (2011), and Rick Alverson's The Comedy (2012). Under his low-budget horror banner ScareFlix, Fessenden has produced films including West's The Roost (2005) and Trigger Man (2007), Glenn McQuaid's I Sell the Dead (2008), Maggio's Bitter Feast (2010), and Mickle's Stake Land (2010).
As a character actor, Fessenden has appeared in numerous films, including Martin Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead (1999), Steve Buscemi's Animal Factory (2000), Brad Anderson's Session 9 (2001) and Vanishing on 7th Street (2010), Jim Jarmusch's Broken Flowers (2005), Neil Jordan's The Brave One (2007), McQuaid's I Sell the Dead (2008), Reichardt's Wendy and Lucy (2008), Mickle's Mulberry Street (2006) and Stake Land (2010), and Joe Swanberg's Silver Bullets (2011). Fessenden stars in and has directed the films Habit (1997), Wendigo (2001), and The Last Winter (2006).[7] Fessenden also starred in the Sundance Film Festival pictures River of Grass (1994) directed by Reichardt, and Margarita Happy Hour (2001) directed by Chaiken.
In 2010, Fessenden produced Tales from Beyond the Pale, a 10-episode audio series.[6] In 2011, he released his third rock album with the band Just Desserts.[8] In 2012, he executive produced and was interviewed in the documentary Birth of the Dead, which examines the legacy of Night of the Living Dead.[9] In 2015, he starred alongside Alexandra Turshen and Lauren Molina in the thriller Body[10] and portrayed Smith in the mystery thriller film Pod,[11] in which he also acted as executive producer.[12] Fessenden will star alongside Noah Segan as one of the leads in Joe Begos' revenge thriller The Mind's Eye.[13][14]
In 2015, played the role of a mysterious stranger armed with a flamethrower in interactive game Until Dawn.
Awards and honors
Awards
- Won – 1997 Independent Spirit Award Someone to Watch (Habit)
- Nominated – 1997 Independent Spirit Award for Best Director (Habit)
- Nominated – 1997 Austin Film Festival Award for Best Feature Film (Habit)
- Won – 1999 Williamsburg Brooklyn Film Festival Audience Award for Feature Film (Habit)
- Won – 1999 Williamsburg Brooklyn Film Festival Award for Best Editing (Habit)
- Won – 1999 Williamsburg Brooklyn Film Festival Award for Best Actor (Habit)
- Won – 2001 Woodstock Film Festival Jury Prize for Best Feature Film (Wendigo)
- Nominated – 2003 Fangoria Chainsaw Award for Best Screenplay (Wendigo)
- Won – 2007 Sitges Film Festival Maria Honorary Award (Himself)[15]
- Nomination – 2009 Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature Film (Wendy and Lucy)
- Won – 2009 AFI Award for Movie of the Year (Wendy and Lucy)
- Nominated – 2010 Piaget Spirit Award for Producing (Himself)[16]
- Nominated – 2010 Independent Spirit Award Producers Award (I Sell the Dead and The House of the Devil)[17]
- Won – 2011 Chlotrudis Award for Career So Far (Himself)
- Nominated – 2014 Chicago International Film Festival Audience Choice Award (The ABCs of Death 2)
Honors
- 2011 – Inducted into the Fangoria Hall of Fame
- 2011 – Total Film Icon of Horror at the London FrightFest Film Festival
Filmography
As actor
- In a Valley of Violence as Roy (2016)
- The Transfiguration (2016) as Drunk Man
- Darling (2015) as Officer Maneretti
- Carnage Park (2015)
- Until Dawn as the Stranger (2015) (Video game; voice and likeness)
- We Are Still Here as Jacob Lewis (2015)
- Body as Arthur (2015)
- Pod as Smith (2015)
- Worst Friends as Jerry (2014)
- Late Phases as O'Brien (2014)
- We Are What We Are as Bearded Tenant (2013)
- The Battery as Frank (2012)
- Jug Face as Sustin (2012)
- Bro as Louis (2012)
- All the Light in the Sky as Rusty (2012)
- Wolf Dog as Wolf Dog (2012)
- Hellbenders as Detective Elrod (2012)
- Wolf Dog Tales as Wolf Dog (2012) (Video short; voice only)
- Silver Bullets as Sam (2011)
- You're Next as Erik Harson (2011)
- Stake Land as Roadhouse Bartender (2010)
- Vanishing on 7th Street as Bike Messenger (2010)
- Satan Hates You as Glumac (2010)
- Bitter Feast as William Coley (2010)
- Hypothermia as Fishing Host (2010)
- Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever as Bill (2009)
- Blood Red Earth as Cowboy (2009) (Short)
- I Sell The Dead as Willy Grimes (2008)
- Wendy and Lucy as Man in Park (2008)
- I Can See You as Mickey Hauser (2008)
- Trigger Man as Henchman (2007)
- The Last Winter as Charles Foster (2006)
- Session 9 as Craig McManus (2001)
- Habit as Sam (1997)
- No Telling as Eden Ridge Employee (1991)
- Habit as Sam (1982) (Video)
- A Face in the Crowd as Narrator (1981) (Voice only)
- Lifeline as Man (1981) (Short)
- White Trash as Man Who Looks Through Trash (1980) (Short)
As writer
- Until Dawn (2015) (Video game)
- Santa Claws (2008) (Short)
- The Last Winter (2006)
- Wendigo (2001)
- Habit (1997)
- No Telling (1991)
- Hollow Venus: Diary of a Go-Go Dancer (1989)
- Habit (1982) (V)
- A Face in the Crowd (1981)
- Lifeline (1981) (Short)
- The Field (1980) (Short)
- White Trash (1980) (Short)
- The Eliminator (1979) (Short)
As director
- The ABCs of Death 2 (2014) (Segment: "N is for Nexus")
- Frankenstein Cannot Be Stopped (2014) (Video short)
- Beneath (2013)
- Fear Itself (2008) (TV series; episode: "Skin and Bones")
- The Last Winter (2006)
- Searching for the Wendigo (2002) (Documentary short)
- Wendigo (2001)
- Habit (1997)
- No Telling (1991)
- Hollow Venus: Diary of a Go-Go Dancer (1989)
- Stunt: A Musical Motion Picture (1989) (Short)
- Mismatch (1987) (Documentary short)
- Chinatown (1986) (Documentary short)
- Experienced Movers (1985)
- Habit (1982) (Video)
- A Face in the Crowd (1981)
- Lifeline (1981) (Short)
- The Field (1980) (Short)
- White Trash (1980) (Short)
- The Eliminator (1979) (Short)
- Jaws (1978) (Short)
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Southern, Nathan. "Larry Fessenden Biography". Allmovie. Retrieved August 4, 2011 – via The New York Times.
- ↑ Adams, Sam (August 31, 2009). "Larry Fessenden". The A.V. Club. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- ↑ Truitt, Brian (2013-06-25). "Sunday Geekersation: The many horrors of Larry Fessenden". USA Today. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- ↑ "Icons Interview with Larry Fessenden". IconsOfFright.com. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- ↑ "New York horror mogul Larry Fessenden". Fangoria.
- 1 2 Kohn, Eric (April 15, 2011). "A Kingmaker in the Realm of Cheapie Horror". The New York Times. Retrieved January 19, 2014.
- ↑ "Larry Fessenden". Fangoria.
- ↑ Sojourn Records - Just Desserts
- ↑ Casciato, Cory (October 23, 2013). "Larry Fessenden on Birth of the Living Dead". Westword. Retrieved September 8, 2015.
- ↑ 'Body' Trailer Delivers Horror On Christmas!
- ↑ Lauren Ashley Carter, Dean Cates, Brian Morvant, Larry Fessenden, and John Weselcouch star in Pod
- ↑ POD
- ↑ Joe Begos Enters The Mind's Eye with Telekinetic Revenge Thriller
- ↑ “ALMOST HUMAN” Director Returns with "THyrE MIND's EYE"
- ↑ "Larry Fessenden and Gualberto Baña receive the Honorary Maria Award in Sitges 07'".
- ↑ Larry Fessenden - Awards - Movies & TV - NYTimes.com
- ↑ Larry Fessenden Awards + Nominations - Fandango
External links
- Larry Fessenden at the Internet Movie Database
- Glass Eye Pix
- "Must-Read Interview with 'Bitter Feast' Indie Producer Larry Fessenden!". Bloody-disgusting.com. Retrieved 2011-08-04.