Andrzej Krakowski

Andrzej Krakowski is an award winning film producer, screenwriter and director. His production of a 10-episode dramatic TV series titled We Are New York, which was funded and produced for the Mayor’s Office of New York, won two Emmy Awards in 2010.

Early life

Krakowski was born in Warsaw in 1946. Krakowski’s father Jozef, was at different times a high-ranking politician, head of national tourism, political prisoner and finally the production head of a government owned motion picture studio ‘Kamera’. His mother Henryka, a radio correspondent, had held several important international posts in her field. His maternal grandmother was a Polish revolutionary, killed in Auschwitz, whose name is still affixed to schools, factories and streets throughout Poland. Andrzej Krakowski thus grew up surrounded by the powerful men of politics on the one hand, and the creative, often politically daring, geniuses of Polish cinema on the other. Artists, writers and philosophers such as Diego Rivera, Pablo Picasso, Ilia Ehrenburg, Nazim Hikmet, Yves Montand and Leszek Kolakowski were just a few of the many guests at the Krakowski home.

Education

Krakowski was a student at the Polish National Film School in Łódź. He studied under several prominent film directors and worked as an intern assistant to Andrzej Wajda during the making of Ashes. Attacked in the press after the March ’68 student demonstrations, Krakowski was unexpectedly offered a scholarship in Hollywood. Shortly after his arrival in the U.S., he was stripped of his Polish citizenship and forbidden to return.

Career

While Krakowski began learning English, his father’s old friend and protégé Roman Polanski began introducing him to the ways and names of Hollywood. In 1970, alongside David Lynch, Terrence Malick, Paul Schrader and Jeremy Kagan, he became a producing, first auditor, and then fellow at the American Film Institute. During this period he worked on and line-produced two features and several short films for his AFI colleagues: Terrence Malick's Lanton Mills, Richard Patterson’s The Open Window, Jeremy Kagan’s Love Song by Charles Faberman and Oscar Williams’ The Final Comedown, launching careers of such actors as Ron Rifkin and Billy Dee Williams. Some of those films eventually attained a cult status and are being taught at American colleges as part of film curriculum.

Krakowski then joined YASNY Productions, Inc.[1] as head of production. Among films he had green-lighted and supervised production of was the 1976 Oscar nominated feature documentary California Reich. After leaving YASNY, he continued producing films with his own Filmtel, Inc, including Portrait of a Hitman, starring Rod Steiger and Jack Palance, and White Dragon with Christopher Lloyd and Dee Wallace Stone. The latter was the first co-production between CBS network and a Polish government owned studio “Perspektywa”. As Filmtel grew from a small production company into an international production and distribution conglomerate, Krakowski burst onto television scene with such successful TV shows as The Richard Simmons Show (for 4 years #1 daily-strip show) and Showtime’s XIV International Championship of Magic, hosted by the legendary Tony Randall.

After selling Filmtel Krakowski returned to his first love and today his screenwriting credits include: Triumph of the Spirit, starring Willem Dafoe and Edward James Olmos, Eminent Domain, with Donald Sutherland and Anne Archer, Tides of War, a vehicle for Ernest Borgnine and David Soul, Genghis Khan with Charlton Heston, the most expensive Italian production to date, Ogniem i Mieczem (With Fire and Sword), the highest-grossing film in Poland, and Managua, with Louis Gossett, Jr and Assumpta Serna in the lead. Facing the loss of his wife to breast cancer, Krakowski wrote, produced and directed a feature-length documentary The Politics of Cancer, which received theatrical distribution in the U.S., and were shown at the Cannes, Palm Springs and Santa Barbara Film Festivals.

In the last decade Krakowski has produced and directed a feature film based on a popular comic book “Campfire Stories”, which has been sold to over 30 countries, a hit stage musical in Tokyo titled, Felix The Cat’s Musical Journey, a feature-length docudrama Farewell To My Country, chronicling the expulsion of the last Polish Jews from their homeland in 1968,[2] and several commercials featuring Geoffrey Holder.

Krakowski’s latest feature film “Looking for Palladin” was shot in Antigua, Guatemala.[3][4] The cast includes such veteran American actors as:Ben Gazzara, Talia Shire, David Moscow and Vincent Pastore, as well as Latin Americans stars: Anjelica Aragon, Pedro Armendariz Jr., Roberto Diaz Gomar and the Morales Brothers. The film won several awards at international film festivals such as Best Feature Film at the Queens International Film Festival; Best Feature Film and Best Ensemble Cast at the Orlando Hispanic Film Festival, and Best Production Company at the Napa/Sonoma International Film Festival."[5] It was released theatrically in 2010-11.

Krakowski’s latest production, a 10-episode dramatic TV series titled “We Are New York”, which was produced for the Mayor’s Office of New York, has been nominated for four and won two Emmy Awards in 2010.[6][7]

Krakowski is the author of several books, among them: Pollywood and The World Through The Eye of a Screenwriter, as well as contributing co-author of the New York Times bestseller "No Better Friend". Krakowski holds Ph.D. in Film Art from the famed Polish National Film School in Łódź and is one of the founders of the highly awarded (5 student Oscars within its first 8 years) SUNY-Purchase film program. He is a tenured professor and the former Chair of Media & Communication Arts Department at the City College where he currently teaches film directing, screenwriting and production.

References

  1. "Looking for Palladin". gaiff.am. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  2. "The Wesleyan Argus". The Wesleyan Argus. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  3. Ronnie Scheib. "Looking for Palladin". Variety. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  4. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/30/movies/30looking.html?_r=0 NYTimes. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  5. "Looking for Palladin". cuny.edu. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  6. "Maria Royo Wins Student Emmy". cuny.edu. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
  7. "Two Professors Programs Receive Nine Emmy Nominations". cuny.edu. Retrieved 4 April 2015.

External links