Whit Stillman
Stillman was born in Washington, D.C., where his father was administrative aide to Democratic Congressman Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., and grew up in the town of Cornwall, New York, where his father was a lawyer and Democratic County Chairman. After graduating from Harvard he entered the publishing training program at Doubleday, working there from 1974 to 1978.
During the first half of Disco's last days he worked as the managing editor of ACCESS, a nightly news summary, putting it to bed at 1 or 2 a.m. every night, occasionally meeting friends to go on to clubs.
"One Harvard friend, then an executive at a tugboat company and now a Kansas City novelist, was in the retinue of Prince Egon von Furstenberg and helped me get in,' Stillman says. "I remember thinking, 'this is fantastic, I've got to come here every night,' but I didn't."
After ACCESS folded, Stillman became an unemployed job-seeker, continuing to write short fiction and beginning to get involved in the Spanish film industry, first as a foreign sales agent, then in production and as an actor (for the ridiculous American parts). While writing METROPOLITAN he also ran a cartoonist agency representing such artists as J.J. Sempe, Pierre Le-Tan and William Bramhall.
He has written for the Village Voice, Harper's, The Guardian, El Pais, Vogue, and other publications. Faber and Faber published the first two screenplays as BARCELONA & METROPOLITAN: Tales of Two Cities (Faber and Faber, 1995). Having just lost the lease to the Soho loft he built, Whit plans to move out of Manhattan this June.
Whit Stillman Facts
Birth Name | John Whitney Stillman |
Occupation | Director, Writer, Producer |
Birthplace | Washington, District of Columbia, USA |
Selected Filmography
Not available. |