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Rob Epstein's

(Writer/Director/Producer)


"The Celluloid Closet" is Rob Epstein's (Writer/Director/Producer) fifth non-fiction feature. In 1985, Epstein received his first Oscar for non­fiction feature "The Times of Harvey Milk," which he conceived, directed, co­produced and co­edited. "The Times of Harvey Milk" was named one of the two best documentaries of the decade by an American Film critic's poll, and also won three national Emmy Awards, the Peabody Award, the New York Film Critics' Circle Award, the American Film Festival Blue Ribbon, the International Documentary Association's Distinguished Achievement Award, the Grand Prize at the Nyon Film Festival, and numerous other international awards. "The Times of Harvey Milk," with an original score by Mark Isham and narrated by Harvey Fierstein, premiered at the Telluride Film Festival and then went on to the New York Film Festival, the Sundance Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, and many others. "The Times of Harvey Milk" has played in theaters and on television throughout the world.

"Common Threads: Stories From The Quilt" won Epstein his second Oscar in 1990. Mr. Epstein produced, directed, wrote, and edited the feature documentary with partner Jeffrey Friedman for Home Box Office. "Common Threads" has been screened in festivals all over the world, including Berlin (where it won the Interjury Award), and has been aired on television internationally. In addition to winning the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, "Common Threads" won the distinguished George Foster Peabody Award and other awards. "Common Threads" is narrated by Dustin Hoffman, with an original score by Bobby McFerrin, for which he won an Emmy.

Epstein began his filmmaking career at 19 years old as one of six co­directors of the landmark documentary feature "Word Is Out," produced by Peter Adair. In 1987, Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman founded Telling Pictures, a film and television production company based in San Francisco. In addition to "Common Threads" and "The Celluloid Closet," their work includes "Where Are We?," a video road documentary which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival; short dramatic films for Propaganda Films; segments for the HBO Real Sex series, and the ABC News magazine Day One with Forrest Sawyer. Epstein and Friedman are currently developing fiction as well as non-fiction feature projects.

Epstein has received numerous awards for filmmaking, including a Guggenheim fellowship and an American Film Institute fellowship for a directing internship on the feature "Rambling Rose" directed by Martha Coolidge.