Jessie Nelson

American film director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jessie Nelson is an American film producer, director, actress and writer.

OccupationsFilm director, screenwriter, producer, actress
ChildrenMolly Gordon
Quick facts Education, Occupations ...
Jessie Nelson
EducationUniversity of California Santa Cruz
OccupationsFilm director, screenwriter, producer, actress
SpouseBryan Gordon
ChildrenMolly Gordon
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Career

Nelson began her career acting with the theater group Mabou Mines at the Public Theater in New York and she went on to perform in Shakespeare In The Park.

Nelson began her directing career with the award-winning short film To the Moon, Alice (1990), which she also wrote. The film starred Chris Cooper[1][2] and was part of a television program for Showtime titled The Showtime 30-Minute Movie.[3]

Her first feature film was Corrina, Corrina (1994) which she wrote, directed, and produced. It starred Whoopi Goldberg and Ray Liotta. The film was suggested by her life.[4][5] She went on to write, direct, and produce I Am Sam (2001) starring Sean Penn.[6] Despite doing well at the box office, Nelson did not direct another film until Love the Coopers (2015). "The door did not open for me," she told The Hollywood Reporter in 2021. "Now, when you look at the statistics, so many women have had the experience that I've had, where they couldn't get their next movie made. At the time, you think, 'Is it something about me?' Or, 'Oh, doing a movie that wasn't successful, that's what puts people in directors' jail.' But for so many women at the time, it was just being a woman that put you in a different category."[7]

She received the first Stanley Kramer Award from the Producers Guild for I Am Sam in 2002.[8]

Her most recent film is Love the Coopers (2015), starring a large ensemble cast, including Diane Keaton, John Goodman, and Alan Arkin.[9]

She co-wrote Stepmom (1998) and The Story of Us (1999), and co-wrote and produced Because I Said So and Fred Claus, the latter of which is based on a bedtime story she would tell her daughter. In 2014 she produced Danny Collins which starred Al Pacino and Annette Bening.

She wrote the Broadway musical adaptation of the movie Waitress with music and lyrics by Sara Bareilles, directed by Diane Paulus, which premiered on Broadway in April 2016.[10] She also co-directed and co-produced the live film recording of the musical's 2021 remounting, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in June 2023.[11] She co-wrote and directed the musical Alice by Heart with Steven Sater and music by Duncan Sheik, which opened Off-Broadway in February 2019.[12]

Nelson co-authored the 2011 children's book Labracadabra (Penguin, 2011, ISBN 9780670012510) with Karen Leigh Hopkins.[13]

Personal life

She is married to director Bryan Gordon. They have a daughter, actress Molly Gordon (b. 1995).[14][15]

She is Jewish.[16][17]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes
1991 To the Moon, Alice Yes Yes No Short film
1994 Corrina, Corrina Yes Yes Yes Directorial feature debut
1998 Stepmom No Yes No
1999 The Story of Us No Yes Yes
2001 I Am Sam Yes Yes Yes
2007 Because I Said So No Yes Yes
Fred Claus No Story Yes
2015 Danny Collins No No Yes
Love the Coopers Yes No Yes
2023 Waitress No Yes Yes Live film recording of her and Sara Bareilles' stage musical
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More information Year, Title ...
Acting roles
Year Title Role
1988 Tucker: The Man and His Dream Woman on Steps
1993 So I Married an Axe Murderer Ralph
1999 The Story of Us Realtor
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Executive
Producer
Notes
1987 Daniel and the Towers No Yes No Television film
1996 Chicago Hope No Story No Episode: ''Women on the Verge''
2005 Earth to America No Yes No Television special
2017 Curb Your Enthusiasm Yes No No Episode: ''Namaste''
2020 Little Voice Yes Yes Yes Creator and executive producer (9 episodes)
Director (5 episodes)
Writer (5 episodes)
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More information Year, Title ...
Acting roles
Year Title Role Notes
1993 The Switch Elizabeth Garland Television film
1994 Hoggs' Heaven Poet Television short film
1997 ER Bite Victim's Mother Episode: ''Ambush''
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References

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