Beta Sigma Profile: Taylor Hackford
Producer-director Taylor Hackford established himself in the
1980s as a Hollywood craftsman of appealingly old-fashioned and
conventional entertainments that were often buoyed by exuberant
music and/or song and dance sequences. His biggest hit as a
director, "An Officer and a Gentleman" (1982), became one of the
signature films of the decade. Though derided in some circles
for its militarism and reactionary view of gender roles, the
film was embraced by the Reagan-era public, won a Best
Supporting Actor Oscar for Louis Gossett Jr. (as a tough drill
sergeant) and a Best Song Oscar for its rousing love song "Up
Where You Belong", and catapulted romantic leads Richard Gere
and Debra Winger to the A-list. The success of this outing gave
Hackford the power to begin producing his own features beginning
with "Against All Odds" (1984), a loose but reasonably
satisfying remake of the 1947 noir classic "Out of the Past",
starring Jeff Bridges, James Woods and Rachel Ward. Rocker Phil
Collins was recruited to write and sing the haunting theme song.
After majoring in international relations, Hackford finished out
the 60s as a Peace Corps volunteer in Bolivia. (An interest in
things Latin American would resurface later in his career.)
Hackford began his entertainment career at age 24 at KCET, the
Los Angeles PBS affiliate, where he was an early prime mover in
the presentation of rock music specials on public television.
Also serving as an investigative reporter in their news
division, Hackford won two local Emmy Awards.

After producing some TV music specials, Hackford shifted to
drama as the producer-writer-director of an earnest
Oscar-winning short entitled "Teenage Father" (1978). Hackford
branched out in feature directing with "The Idolmaker" (1980), a
slick, cynical and energetic look at the late 50s pop music
industry starring Ray Sharkey. As a successful
producer-director, he displayed an interest in dance as well as
conventional Cold War romance and intrigue with "White Nights"
(1985) starring Mikhail Baryshnikov, Gregory Hines and Isabella
Rossellini. Hackford combined his concerns about pop and Latino
culture as a producer of the popular Ritchie Valens biopic, "La
Bamba" (1987), which opened doors for Hispanic Hollywood. In a
similar vein, he personally helmed "Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll!"
(1987) a documentary-cum-performance film commemorating rock
pioneer Chuck Berry's 60th birthday. Hackford returned to
fiction with "Everybody's All-American" (1988), a sentimental
romantic drama starring Dennis Quaid and Jessica Lange set in
the world of college football. The film received a mixed
reception but Lange's performance was singled out for praise.
Hackford's most ambitious and heartfelt project was "Bound By
Honor" (1993), a gritty three-hour drama about three cousins in
early 70s East Los Angeles, one of whom gets involved with the
Chicano Mafia. Often brutally realistic, the bilingual film was
shot on location and featured extensive sequences in San Quentin
prison with actual inmates in the cast.
Hackford subsequently helmed and oversaw the classy Stephen
King adaptation "Dolores Claiborne" (1995). Boasting powerhouse
performances from Kathy Bates, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Judy
Parfitt, high production values and florid stylistics, the film
was evocative of 1950s Hollywood melodramas. Hackford's
follow-up was the hard-to-take-seriously courtroom thriller with
supernatural overtones, "The Devil's Advocate" (1997), with
Keanu Reeves as a hotshot Florida lawyer with a knack for jury
selection who get hired by the demonic owner of a NYC law firm
(Al Pacino). Next came the hostage drama "Proof of Life" (2000),
a competently assembled thriller overshadowed by the scandalous,
highly publicized off-screen love affair between stars Russell
Crowe and Meg Ryan, wha was still married to Dennis Quaid at the
time. After a long hiatus, Hackford rebounded spectacularly with
the Ray Charles biopic "Ray" (2004), a story that suited the
typical biopic framework but was made all the more explosive by
Charles' larger-than-life story, his outstanding music and a
tour-de-force performance by Jamie Foxx. After being ignored by
the Golden Globes for directing "Ray", Hackford was honored with
an Academy Award nomination for Best Director, the first of his
career. The biopic also received four other Oscar nods,
including Best Picture, Sound Mixing and Editing.
Selected Filmography
Ray (2004)
Proof of Life (2000)
The Devil's Advocate (1997)
Dolores Claiborne (1995)
White Nights (1985)
Against All Odds (1984)
An Officer and A Gentleman (1982)
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