Richard Donner
Hollywood director Richard Donner, whose work included Superman, died at the age of 91, and news channels reported that his wife and film producer Lauren Schuler Donner announced his death.
Steven Spielberg
The story writer who based the chronicle of the late Gunnies film Donner described him as “gifted in many genres.”
Richard Donner and Superman
Born in the Bronx, New York, Donner began his television career in the late 1960s, including the Twilight Zone series, and made his first Hollywood debut in the mid-1970s.
His 1978 film Superman is considered to be the first modern work of a superhero.
In 1985 he directed and produced The Goonies, a comedy story of a group of children looking for treasure. The film is classified in the list of classic cinematic works.
In a tweet, British director Edgar Wright said, “You remember all the characters in Superman, The Gooney and Lethal Weapon because Richard Donner knew how to pick up that magic on the screen.”
Lethal Whipon film hero Mel Gibson told Variety that Donner was “open-hearted and open-hearted, without restriction to all who knew him “.
Born on 24, 1930, Donner is married to Lauren Shuler Donner, an American film producer, specializing in mainstream entertainment that appeals to young people and family.
Richard Donners’ wife
Donner was born in Cleveland, Ohio, to a Jewish family, her father was a wholesaler and her mother was a housewife. She grew up in Cleveland, where she began filming and often went to the movies with a relative.
She studied cinema at Boston University, specializing in production and editing. On the advice of a teacher, she traveled to Los Angeles in hopes of entering the entertainment industry.
While working in Los Angeles as an assistant editor of medical and educational films, Donner looked for other jobs, and although she did not intend to work on television, a meeting opportunity at NBC Radio headquarters led her to leave her data there.
In 1973, the station called on Schuler for temporary work for employees during the holiday. She held many jobs but decided it was best for her to operate a camera due to her expertise in photography.
After learning about photography by The Night Show, Schuller asked NBC to work on local news.
She later took a freelance job with Metromedia, photographing rock concerts, soap operas, and televised films.
Donner was an exceptional photographer working in a field dominated by men, becoming the first woman to affiliate with the International Theatre Staff Alliance, the Electricity and Camera No. 659.
Finally, Donner decided to work as an assistant producer, and in 1976 she joined ABC Wade World of Entertainment.
After a car accident that she was held captive for months, Donner began working with friends of screenwriters. He became a creative story editor/executor at Motown Production Police.
Her contribution to the screenplay Thank God, It’s Friday (1978) led her to an executive producer for the film.
She made her first appearance in 1979 with the film Actor Knight in the Dixie and Grill, written and directed by Joel Schumacher in the style of Robert Atman’s Nashville film.
She got her job by directly asking NBC Program Manager Charles Engel.