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William Monahan, at The Departed's Boston Premiere, Loews Boston Common, on October 3, 2006. | |
Occupation | Screenwriter Novelist Journalist Essayist Critic |
Nationality | American |
Notable works | Novel Light House: A Trifle (2000) Film Kingdom of Heaven (2005), The Departed (2006) |
William Monahan (Template:PronEng) (born November 3, 1960) is an Academy Award-winning American screenwriter, literary novelist, and former journalist. After attending the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where he studied Elizabethan and Jacobean drama, Monahan, already a professional writer while an undergraduate, as well as a musician in Northampton, Massachusetts, moved to New York City to pursue a career as a journalist, writer and critic. He wrote many satirical pieces for the New York Press, a few reviews for The New York Post, and contributed to the magazines Talk, Maxim, and Bookforum. He was also an editor at Spy magazine. He won a 1997 Pushcart Prize when the Amherst literary magazine Old Crow Review nominated one of his short stories. After Spy failed, he concentrated on writing films and published Light House: A Trifle, a novel that was critically praised and led to Monahan's move into film when in 1998, Warner Bros. bought the film rights to the novel and commissioned Monahan to adapt it to the screen for director Gore Verbinski.
In 2001, 20th Century Fox bought Monahan's spec script about the Barbary Wars called Tripoli, with Ridley Scott, who was to become Monahan's primary collaborator, attached to direct. Monahan has since worked with Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg, among other filmmakers. His first produced screenplay, Kingdom of Heaven was made into a film by Ridley Scott and released to theaters in 2005. His second produced screenplay was The Departed, a film that earned him a WGA award and an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. The second film that Monahan completed with Ridley Scott was Body of Lies, which was released in the United States on October 10, 2008.
Monahan has a company called Henceforth. He has a wife and two children.
Early years
Monahan was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and spent his early years in the neighborhood of Roslindale. Monahan had a strongly literary home environment and developed an early interest in Elizabethan drama. He recalls developing a keen interest in movies at age seven, when it occurred to him that a screenwriter was behind the story in Lawrence of Arabia. He wrote his first screenplay at age twelve.
Monahan attended the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and seems to have lived in Northampton, Massachusetts after leaving the university. In the late 1980s Monahan played guitar in the Slags, a band that performed in and around Northampton. In the early 1990s he wrote songs and played with a band called Foam.
Writer and Editor
His earliest known published piece, a short story titled "At the Village Hall", appeared in 1991 in the Northampton's Perkins Press. Two years later, a novella that was later expanded into the novel Light House: A Trifle appeared serially in the Amherst literary magazine Old Crow Review over five installments.
In the Nineties, Monahan became a journalist and editor in New York City, contributing essays and short fiction to the alternative weekly New York Press, where editorial control was unusually permissive compared with most papers. At first, the letters from readers reacting to Monahan's satire were favorable, however, in 1995, he regularly courted controversy and reactions from readers became highly polarized: their discourse is best exemplified in the letters responding to the essays "The Angel Factory", "Heroin", and "Dr. Rosenthal, I Presume". He wrote a cover story titled "Ceci n'est pas une bombe", in which he theorized that the Unabomber was communicating through a hidden code involving Old English, which, according to Alston Chase in his book Harvard and the Unabomber, was the only instance where the lexical clues left by the Unabomber were correctly identified prior to his capture. In another essay, Monahan wrote that Press writers weren't reporters in the traditional sense: "We're all sort of essayists, actually." Former New York Press colleague Dawn Eden recalled him "as charming, libertarian-leaning, with a razor-sharp wit that he used in print to anger as many people as possible" and Newsday's Jon Fine called him "an excellent and scabrous writer". Monahan wrote literary pieces on literary subjects.
Apart from freelance work for the New York Press, Monahan worked as a book reviewer for The New York Post and wrote for men's magazine Maxim.
After writing a weekly column for the seasonal Hamptons, a publication that covers The Hamptons summer colony, Monahan was named an editor of the magazine for the summer of 1996 but he quit after 3 issues, writing that the environment there was "ridiculously unworkable." In 1997, Monahan was hired to work as an editor at Spy magazine, a satirical monthly, by the editor-in-chief Bruno Maddox. He later reminisced, in an interview with The Boston Globe, that he "had God's own job there". In 1998, Spy magazine was shut down; he had worked on the last four issues as a rewrite man and editor. Shortly after the collapse of Spy, Monahan's 1993 novella was expanded into the novel Light House: A Trifle and in 1998 was sold to Riverhead Books, a division of Penguin Putnam.
Monahan had already won recognition for his short fiction, having been awarded a 1997 Pushcart Prize for his short story, "A Relation of Various Accidents Observable in Some Animals Included in Vacuo", following a nomination by Old Crow Review; and, in the following year's Pushcart volume, his Perkins Press short story "At the Village Hall", another nomination by Old Crow Review, garnered a special mention. An early and avid user of the internet, Monahan frequently participated in discussions at EchoNYC, a distinctly New York online community.
Light House: A Trifle was published in 2000 to critical acclaim. William Georgiades, in a review for The New York Times, called the novel "a sort of old English farce that allows Monahan to skewer whatever comes to mind: modern art, magazine writing, education, the young"; while BookPage Fiction's Bruce Tierney declared Monahan "a worthy successor to Kingsley Amis". However, Claire Dederer, in an editorial review for Amazon.com, cautioned that " is not a novel for the culturally illiterate", and criticized the occasional inside-jokes that " most sensible people very tired". The work intentionally references the satirical novels of the early 19th century British author Thomas Love Peacock and tells the story of an artist named Tim Picasso who runs afoul of a drug lord, seeking refuge at a New England inn in the middle of a nor'easter.
Although now a novelist and WGA screenwriter Monahan continued to work as a journalist, contributing to the New York Press, as well as Talk magazine's debut issue in August 1999. Monahan's last act at the NYPress and as a periodical writer was a comic serial narrative titled Dining Late with Claude La Badarian, published over thirteen weeks under the pseudonym Claude La Badarian, a fictional restaurant critic. These short stories made satirical reference to his first novel and literary career. At the conclusion of the serial, Monahan and Bruno Maddox went on a joint book tour that was interrupted by the 9/11 attacks. Shortly afterward he sold his spec script Tripoli to 20th Century Fox, and was commissioned to write Kingdom of Heaven by Ridley Scott. Monahan continued editing for Details magazine and reviewing books for Bookforum, but had committed to film writing.
Screenwriting
William Monahan"I wanted to be an old-fashioned man of letters, so I essentially prepared myself very carefully through my 20s for a job that doesn't exist anymore; you may be able to find a man of letters in Syria or the Horn of Africa, but you could work Manhattan or London with dogs for a year and never find one. Anthony Burgess is dead, Vidal is the last lion, and at any rate belles-lettres aren't where they were left. Anyway, I'm making movies now. Just before all this happened, I thought, 'Out of everything you can do or think you can do, pick one thing and be it.' What I picked was to be the screenwriter."
Monahan had become a working screenwriter at the age of 36 when Warner Bros. optioned the film rights to his novel Light House: A Trifle — at that point still in manuscript — and contracted him to write the adaptation. Gore Verbinski was slated to direct. His breakthrough, however, came with the sale of a script he had written in his twenties, Tripoli, about William Eaton's epic march on Tripoli during the Barbary Wars. While working at Spy magazine, Monahan routinely spent two weeks working in Manhattan followed by two weeks writing his own material in Massachusetts; during this period he took the Tripoli script out of a drawer and placed it with an agent. In 2001, Tripoli sold to 20th Century Fox, in a deal worth mid-six figures in American dollars with Mark Gordon attached as the producer. The historical epic follows Eaton's campaign against Yusuf Bashaw to restore Yusuf's brother, the exiled heir Hamet Karamanli, to the throne of the Barbary Coast nation of Tripoli, and features a French mercenary named Joubert. Ridley Scott signed to direct. Monahan met with Scott to discuss Tripoli and Scott mentioned his desire to direct a film about knights. Monahan suggested the fall of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem as a setting, and Ridley Scott and Fox commissioned Monahan to write the original screenplay that became Kingdom of Heaven.
Before the start of production on Kingdom of Heaven in January 2004, Monahan was hired to write several scripts for big-budget films, beginning with Jurassic Park IV which he was hired to write for Universal Pictures as reported in 2002. Columbia Pictures then hired him to write a script based on a manuscript by journalist Doug Stanton, later published as The Horse Soldiers: A True Story of Modern War, which recounted the bloody uprising in the Afghan city Mazari Sharif following the American incursion against the Taliban. Subsequently, Brad Pitt's production company Plan B hired him to adapt the Hong Kong action film Infernal Affairs, which Martin Scorsese directed under the title The Departed for Warner Bros.; the film won Monahan two Best Adapted Screenplay awards, from the Writers Guild of America and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. John Sayles was later hired to write a subsequent draft for Jurassic Park IV when Monahan became indisposed: he had entered into a production write-through contract for Kingdom of Heaven, requiring him to be on location to potentially modify its shooting script.
Kingdom of Heaven released to theaters
William Monahan, on developing a screenplay."The crucial skill of a working screenwriter is that you have to have some depth of ability and ideation. Your ninth idea has to be as good or better than your first, and that's where a lot of people crack up. You have to remain on top of your game and in absolute control of the text and a successful advocate of your own intentions no matter what influences hit the picture or from which direction. You do that by having the best ideas in the room. If you don't, you will be replaced. It's nothing personal."
After production on Kingdom of Heaven completed, Monahan was hired to collaborate once again with director Ridley Scott on an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's ultra-violent Western novel Blood Meridian for producer Scott Rudin. In post-production on Kingdom of Heaven, Scott edited a 3-hour long cut but decided to pare it down after it was discovered at a preview screening that the audience felt the film was too long; Scott was gradually convinced as well and settled on a 145-minute cut.
The months leading up to Kingdom of Heaven's theatrical release were troubled when author James Reston Jr. claimed that Monahan's Kingdom of Heaven script violated the copyright of his 2001 novel Warriors of God: Richard the Lionheart and Saladin in the Third Crusade. Reston claimed that a producer had previously offered Ridley Scott the book for a movie deal but was turned down. He alleged that the entire second half of Monahan's shooting script was based on the first 105 pages of his book, and noted that "Kingdom of Heaven" is the title of the second chapter. 20th Century Fox denied all of Reston's claims and Monahan, in an e-mail, commented, "There was no infringement, period. I've been familiar with the fall of the Latin Kingdom for thirty-odd years." Reston did not pursue the matter and never filed a lawsuit.
In the meantime, it was reported that Monahan had secured work on two Warner Bros. projects. He was hired to adapt Louis Begley's novel Wartime Lies for Warner Independent Pictures, previously in development as a Stanley Kubrick project called Aryan Papers. A second script was to be based on Marco Polo's autobiography Travels, as a star vehicle for actor Matt Damon, titled The Venetian, and set during Polo's Far East explorations.
Kingdom of Heaven was released theatrically in May 2005. Peter Canavese of Groucho Reviews described Kingdom as a "confusing compromise at best and a dull obfuscation of history at worst" and Jeffrey M. Anderson of Combustible Celluloid wrote that Kingdom "has at its center a bold story, and yet it sits there like a stone pillar". Ridley Scott later remarked that he got carried away with cutting the film in the editing room and learned that "the enemy is previews" because these test screenings are tantamount to asking an inexperienced group of people to be film critics. Kingdom was reappraised by critics when it was released on DVD in the form of a director's cut, containing an additional 45 minutes of footage previously shot from Monahan's shooting script. Critics were pleased with the extended version of the film and James Berardinelli of ReelViews remarked how "now that the director's cut is available, there's no reason for anyone to watch the neutered theatrical edition".
Best Adapted Screenplay Awards for The Departed
While Monahan was on the set of The Departed his wife gave birth to a daughter. He was already a step-father to his wife's son. Monahan managed to get two days off to spend with them. In the run-up to The Departed's theatrical release, Monahan was hired by Warner Bros. to adapt David Ignatius' novel Body of Lies into a film of the same title, about a CIA operative who goes to Jordan to track a high-ranking terrorist, with Ridley Scott directing. It was reported that Monahan had started his own company on the Warner Bros. lot called Henceforth and negotiated a first-look producing deal that gave the studio the first right of first refusal on any films produced by Henceforth. In return Monahan and producer Quentin Curtis received from Warner Bros. the film rights to produce John Pearson's true crime novel The Gamblers; reportedly Monahan will write the adaptation.
When Martin Scorsese's The Departed was released to theaters in October 2006, Monahan received considerable praise from critics and was applauded for his depiction of the city of Boston. Monahan had chosen not to watch Infernal Affairs so that he could create an original interpretation of the Hong Kong action film, and instead worked from an English translation of the Chinese script. He used his intimate knowledge of the way Bostonians talk and act, learned from his youth spent in the many neighborhoods of Boston, to create characters that The Boston Globe described as distinctly indigenous to the city.
The Departed won many critics' prizes. The Los Angeles Times reported that Monahan had hired a publicist to run a campaign promoting his screenplay during the awards season, although he had in fact hired the publicity firm to manage relations with the studio involved, and had respectfully refused most publicity offers during the awards season, including an appearance on The Charlie Rose Show; he rarely does in-person interviews. He was honored by the US-Ireland Alliance for his writing in film and ended up winning two Best Adapted Screenplay awards for The Departed, from the Writers Guild of America and from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. He was later invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As of 2007, he is working on a film treatment for a follow-up to The Departed, which may be either a prequel or a sequel.
Taking on producing roles and directing
After winning the 2006 Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for The Departed, it was announced that Monahan had been hired to work on two film projects: an adaptation of the Hong Kong film Confession of Pain and an original Rock and Roll film titled The Long Play. Monahan signed to both executive produce and write the adaptation of the Hong Kong film Confession of Pain for Warner Bros. Pictures, later given the title Nothing in the World; it would be his second adaptation of a Media Asia Films production created by directors Andrew Lau and Alan Mak and screenwriter Felix Chong. Monahan's other commission was to rewrite a script about the history of the rock music business titled The Long Play, whose first drafts were written by Rolling Stone writer Rich Cohen who was commissioned in 1999 by Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese, while subsequent drafts were written by Matthew Weiss.
In 2007, the movie rights to Robert Graves' novel I, Claudius, expired and consequently were brought back into the marketplace on behalf of the author's estate. Monahan was briefly linked in the press with a new film project involving the book, but the project eventually passed to another writer.
In the weeks following the end of the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, it was reported that Monahan had been hired by Warner Bros. to adapt the South Korean action film The Chaser. He shortly thereafter entered into a first look deal with GK films, the production company of Graham King, a producer on The Departed, who had hired Monahan in 2007 to write a feature film adaptation of the six-hour 1985 BBC mini-series Edge of Darkness. As part of this deal, Monahan was enlisted to write a script about drug dealer Jim Keene, based on Hillel Levin's Playboy article, "The Strange Redemption of James Keene". Monahan was also reported to have acquired, in conjunction with producer Quentin Curtis, the rights to Ken Bruen's London Boulevard. The Daily Mail noted that while London Boulevard has a sense of Sunset Boulevard about it, Monahan's screenplay "has more of an echo of Performance". Monahan will direct the film in and around London in the summer of 2009.
Body of Lies was released to theaters in October 2008 to mixed reviews and did not do well at the box office. Following the film's release, it was reported that Tribeca Productions, in partnership with Media Rights Capital, would produce a pilot written by Monahan for a drama set in New York City for a potential TV series targeted for CBS's fall 2009 schedule. In February 2009, it was reported that Monahan would direct an adaptation of art thief Myles Connor's memoir, The Art of the Heist, and that he would write an adaptation of John Grisham's novel The Associate for Paramount. Graham King and Monahan will also produce an historical drama titled The Essex about Captain David S. Porter and his command of the American frigate USS Essex through several daring sea battles against the British during the War of 1812.
Writing process
Monahan prefers that screenplays be written by one author and does not support the collaborative model in which multiple screenwriters write competing drafts. His interest in motion pictures began at an early age, but he admittedly steered clear of the film industry because he mistakenly surmised that the collaborative model was a de facto practice for creating screenplays. However, in his mid 30s, he went to Hollywood to adapt his first novel into a film and later discovered that if you produce exceptional work, you can "stick to your own model of work, instead of caving in to industry expectations", however, he acknowledged that the writer does need to have the backing of a powerful film director who will protect his vision. Since then, he has generally been the sole writer on his screenplays, except for Jurassic Park IV, which was taken over by John Sayles and rewritten when Monahan had to go on location for Kingdom of Heaven.
Monahan has quipped that, having studied English drama for over 30 years, he is "post-conscious about craft". When doing historical fiction he reads the available primary sources and will not look at a contemporary book. He is critical of the instruction given by people running screenwriting courses, and has said that "classes and books on screenwriting do far more harm than good, because writing drama is intuitional and case-by-case". He does not support general rules to writing and believes that "ach work has its own inherent rules. You discover them. You don’t import them."
In his experience he has found that "when you’re writing a character, you are that character", musing that "It’s probably no joke that Shakespeare was an actor."
Monahan has said that he would prefer to work on an old Olivetti Praxis typewriter in many instances because there are too many distractions on a modern computer.
Credits
Essays, criticism, reviews, and short fiction
Main article: List of works by William MonahanNovels and serialized work
- — (2000). Light House: A Trifle. New York: Riverhead Books. ISBN 9781573221580.
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ignored (help) - —. Dining Late with Claude La Badarian (Weekly serial in New York Press under the pseudonym Claude La Badarian, 21 June 2001 to 12 September 2001).
Films
- Kingdom of Heaven (2005; screenplay)
- The Departed (2006; screenplay)
- Body of Lies (2008; screenplay)
- Edge of Darkness (2009; in production; screenplay)
Screenplays (yet to be produced)
- Light House (2000; adaptation of Monahan's satirical novel Light House: A Trifle)
- Tripoli (2001; Monahan's first sale of a spec script)
- Mazar e Sharif (adaptation of author Doug Stanton's book The Horse Soldiers: A True Story of Modern War)
- Blood Meridian (adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian)
- Wartime Lies (adaptation of Louis Begley's Wartime Lies)
- The Venetian
- Nothing in the World (adaptation of the Hong Kong action film Confession of Pain)
- London Boulevard (adaptation of novelist Ken Bruen's London Boulevard (2001); Monahan is also directing)
- Jurassic Park IV (first drafts of screenplay)
Screenplays (unwritten)
- The Gamblers (adaptation of John Pearson's The Gamblers)
- The Long Play (rewrite)
- Untitled Jim Keene Project (adaptation of a Playboy article about drug dealer Jim Keene)
- The Chaser (adaptation of the South Korean crime movie The Chaser)
References and notes
- ^ Sam Allis (2006-10-03). "Standing at the corner of Shakespeare and Scorsese". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
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(help) - ^ William Monahan interviews David Thewlis (2007-10-15). "Fiction (With a Twist of Lennon)". BlackBook magazine. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
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(help) - John Koch (2007). "Profane Eloquence: Through the words of William Monahan, Boston swagger meets Hong Kong crime drama". Written By. The Writers Guild of America, West. Retrieved 2007-03-07.
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ignored (help) - ^ Susan Wloszczyna (2007-02-15). "William Monahan: His 'Departed' left Hong Kong for the USA". USA Today. Retrieved 2007-02-25.
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(help) - "Pronunciation of William Monahan". inogolo.com. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ Michael Fleming (2006-10-05). "'Departed' scribe digs WB: Studio inks overall deal with Monahan". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
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(help) - ^ Dylan Callaghan (2006-10-13). "A Man of Letters". Writers Guild of America, West. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
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(help) - William Georgiades (1991). "Contributors Notes". Perkins Press. 2 (4)."William Monohan 'writes fiction and plays guitar for the Slags.'
- William Georgiades (2004-11-17). "Adventures in Journalism: Petty Games". Mediabistro.com. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
It was the free weekly newspaper that was independent and angry enough to say whatever it wanted, and the paper that had made minor stars (cloudy satellites, really) of two writers I'd first published back in Massachusetts.
- Brian Berger (2007-12-12). "Jim Knipfel: A Swell Looking Babe". WhoWalkInBrooklyn.com. Retrieved 2008-08-15.
… it was inspiring to see such a diverse, weird group of writers successfully published.
- ^ Dawn Eden (2005-05-07). "Crusades-Film Writer's Personal Jihad". The Dawn Patrol. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
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(help) - ^ Jon Fine (2007-02-26). "Oscar-Winner William Monahan's (Poorly Documented) Past Life". BusinessWeek. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
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(help) - "Closing in on the Unabomber". Fortune. 1995-08-21.
- Alston Chase (2003). Harvard and the Unabomber: The Education of an American Terrorist. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 43–44.
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ignored (help) - William Monahan. "Manhattan Samurai: Swords and Sensibilities", New York Press, vol. 8, no. 48 (November 29–December 5, 1995).
- William Georgiades (2007-02-25). "Required Reading". The New York Post. Retrieved 2007-03-04.
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(help) - Tony Silber (1999-04-15). "Felix Dennis — owner of Dennis Publishing forwards Maxim magazine". Folio: The Magazine for Magazine Management reprinted by FindArticles.com. Retrieved 2007-11-10.
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(help) - William Monahan. "The Burning Deck: My Brilliant Career at Hamptons", New York Press, vol. 9, no. 29 (July 17-23, 1996). "A few weeks after flattening Manhattan File on behalf of western civilization, I got a call from an associate editor at Hamptons, who said that a person or concept named 'Randy' wanted to reprint the article for any reasonable figure I might like to name. The reason? I had whacked his treasonous former employees. This struck me as disgusting and sleazoid, so I said no; but I did accept an offer to write for the magazine for the summer season of 1995— 500 words a week on anything I liked, at better than the usual rate, cash on the barrelhead."
- ^ Juan Morales (2005-05-04). "His success story? An epic: 'Kingdom of Heaven' is William Monahan's first produced script, but Ridley Scott, for one, expects more". Los Angeles Times through LexisNexis Academic.
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(help) - Bill Henderson, ed. (1996). "Contributors' notes". The Pushcart Prize XXI: Best of the Small Presses (1997). Pushcart Press. ISBN 978-1888889000.
WILLIAM MONAHAN has edited a magazine on Long Island, lived in New York City, and is now on the road.
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ignored (help) - Bill Henderson, ed. (1997). "Special Mention". The Pushcart Prize XXII: Best of the Small Presses. Pushcart Press. p. 609. ISBN 978-1888889017.
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ignored (help) - ^ Aaron Barnhart (2008-07-08). "TV critics play the blues". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
- James Wolcott (2007-02-25). "Night of the Big O (live)". Vanity Fair.
- William Monahan. "Daily Billboard: Defeat Death: Kill Someone", New York Press, vol. 14, no. 21 (May 21, 2001).
- "Van Morrison, Terry George and Bill Monahan honored in LA" (Press release). US-Ireland Alliance. 2007-02-26. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
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(help) - William Georgiades (2000-07-23). "An Offshore Farce". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
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(help) - Bruce Tierney (2000). "Review: Light House". BookPage Fiction. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
- Claire Dederer. "Amazon.com Editorial Review of Light House". Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- William Monahan. "So Seedy! Smell that fish bait! Gloucester's a perfect town for pictures", Talk magazine, September 1999, Premiere issue, p. 82.
- Russ Smith (1999-08-11). "MUGGER: I'm in Bermuda and Rick Lazio Isn't". New York Press. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
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(help) - William Monahan (2001-06-21). "The Last Supper: Being eventually a PROPOSAL for a column called DINING LATE WITH CLAUDE LA BADARIAN, By Claude La Badarian". New York Press. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
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(help) - ^ Garth Franklin (2005-05-04). "Interview: Ridley Scott "'Kingdom of Heaven'"". Dark Horizons. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
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(help) - Chris Petrikin (1998-08-04). "Gerber nabs 'Lighthouse': 'Mouse' helm Verbinski takes reins of offbeat comedy". Variety.
Monahan's unpublished first novel is an offbeat comedy ... "The Lighthouse" currently is on submission to publishers.
- ^ Chris Petrikin, Dan Cox (1999-01-12). "'Mars' loses Verbinski: Studio, director cannot agree". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-07.
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(help) - Cathy Dunkley, Jonathan Bing (2001-11-27). "Monahan 'Tripoli' spec lands on Gordon's shore". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
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(help) - Stax (2003-08-07). "The Stax Report: Script Review of Tripoli". IGN. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
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(help) - Dana Harris (2002-11-06). "Lizards leap again for U: 'Tripoli' scribe returning to 'Park' pen". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Claude Brodesser (2003-03-16). "Monahan eyes war script for Col: Busy writer has two tales for Scott, a 'Jurassic' sequel". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Claude Brodesser, Cathy Dunkley (2004-02-12). "Scorsese takes on Hong Kong gangs: Pitt considering role in popular 'Infernal' redo". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Dade Hayes (2006-12-14). "Brad Pitt's role as filmmaker threatens to eclipse his actorly exploits and tabloid profile". Variety. Retrieved 2007-03-03.
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(help) - Sasha Stone (2007-02-16). "William Monahan Talks The Departed". OscarWatch.com. Retrieved 2007-02-26.
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(help) - Paul Davidson (2004-09-17). "Rewriting Jurassic Park IV: Silver City scribe tackles new dinosaur tale". IGN. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - ^ Michael Fleming (2005-05-02). "Warner Bros. plays 'Polo': Historical epic to feature Damon as explorer". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Liza Foreman (2004-05-10). "The Vine: Monahan eyed for 'Blood' work". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Rob Carnevale. "Kingdom of Heaven: The Director's Cut — Ridley Scott interview". IndieLondon. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- William Triplett, Claude Brodesser (2005-03-28). "Inside Move: Scribe on crusade over 'Heaven' script: Reston fires on Fox over 'Kingdom'". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Sharon Waxman (2005-03-29). "Historical Epic Is Focus of Copyright Dispute". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
- ^ Bob Thompson (2005-05-01). "Hollywood on Crusade: With His Historical Epic, Ridley Scott Hurtles Into Vexing, Volatile Territory". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2007-01-08.
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(help) - Claude Brodesser (2005-05-10). "WIP a 'Wartime' recruit: Warner catches WWII 'Lies'". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Peter Canavese. "Kingdom of Heaven (2005) Review". Groucho Reviews. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- Jeffrey M. Anderson. "Kingdom of Heaven (2005) Review". Combustible Celluloid. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
- Edward Douglas (2006-11-03). "Ridley Scott's French Invasion". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved 2007-03-18.
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(help) - James Berardinelli (2006). "Kingdom of Heaven: Director's Cut: A Film Review". ReelViews.net. Retrieved 2007-03-04.
- "William Monahan's 2007 Oscar Acceptance Speech". OSCAR.com. 2007-02-25. Archived from the original on 2007-03-02. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
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(help) - Michael Fleming (2006-03-13). "Warner sets spy team: Scott to helm Monahan-adapted 'Penetration'". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - ^ "William Monahan – Exclusive Interview". Collider.com. 2007-02-18. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
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(help) - Beth Accomando (2006-10-06). "Movie Review: The Departed". KPBS.Org. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
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(help) - David S. Cohen, Justin Chang (2007-02-25). "Oscar winners weigh in on victory: Backstage notes at the Academy Awards". Variety. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
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(help) - Sam Allis (2006-12-31). "The Storyteller". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2007-01-02.
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(help) - Wesley Morris (2006-12-11). "'The Departed' tops Boston film critics' awards". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - "'Departed' tops Chicago critics' list". Chicago Sun-Times. 2006-12-29. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - "Oscar 2006: Southeastern Film Critics Select The Departed". Hollywood News. 2006-12-19. Retrieved 2007-01-06.
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(help) - Jay Fernandez (2007-02-21). "SCRIPTLAND: Publicists get ink for screenwriters: Even Oscar-nominated writers need someone looking out for their interests in the crush of award season". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2007-02-21.
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(help) - "Van Morrison, Terry George and Bill Monahan honored in LA" (Press release). US-Ireland Alliance. 2007-02-26. Retrieved 2007-03-05.
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(help) - Dave McNary (2007-02-11). "'Departed' shines at WGA kudos: 'Miss' a hit with scribes". Variety. Retrieved 2007-02-21.
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(help) - Gregg Kilday (2007-02-26). "Scorsese cuffs Oscar: 'Departed' named best pic". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
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(help) - Associated Press (June 19, 2007). "Film Academy Invites 115 New Members". abc7.com. Retrieved 2007-06-22.
- Pamela McClintock (2007-01-30). "Inside Move: 'Departed' to arise? Monahan makes case for sequel". Variety. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
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(help) - ^ Borys Kit (2007-02-27). "Monahan, DiCaprio reconnect". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
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(help) - "Media Asia's event film "Confession of Pain"" (Press release). Media Asia Entertainment Group Ltd. 2006-07-10. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
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(help) - ^ Variety staff (2008-06-18). "Scribes list celebrates tenth edition: Variety marks occasion with alumni update". Variety. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
- Jonathan Bing (2001-01-17). "HBO gets 'Tough' with rock scribe Cohen". Variety. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
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(help) - "Matthew Weiss: Filmography". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-03-21.
- Michael Fleming, Pamela McClintock (2007-02-26). "Scorsese, Monahan ready to 'Play': 'Departed' duo rock on at Paramount". Variety. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
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(help) - Michael Fleming (2007-09-05). "Scott Rudin seizes 'I, Claudius': Producer nabs screen rights to Graves book". Variety. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
- Borys Kit (2008-09-12). "Relativity says aye, 'Claudius': Jim Sheridan to co-write, direct". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
- Borys Kit (2007-09-06). "Rudin picks up 'Claudius' film rights: DiCaprio, Monahan eye project". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
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(help) - Marc Graser (2007-10-05). "Hollywood's family fray: Streamlined Disney fights to keep crown". Variety. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
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(help) - Steven Zeitchik and Borys Kit (2008-02-22). "All too quiet on the post-strike front". Hollywood Reporter.
- Hillel Levin. "The Strange Redemption of James Keene", Playboy, vol. 55, no. 8 (August 2008), pp. 54–56, 64, 121–124. NOTE: Levin is currently expanding this article into a book, to explore in greater depth several larger issues he has raised.
- Baz Bamigboye (2009-03-20). "Baz Bamigboye on how Vanessa Redgrave's tragic loss echoes her new acting role". Daily Mail.
- K. Robert Einarson (Spring 2007). "'London Boulevard' by Ken Bruen". Spinetingler magazine. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
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(help) - Michael Fleming (2009-01-22). "Farrell, Knightley latch onto 'London'". Variety.
- Stuart Levine (2008-11-14). "World directors take dark view of U.S." Variety.
- John Anderson (2008-10-03). "Gambling With a Return to the Mideast". The New York Times.
- Michael Fleming (2008-10-14). "CBS, Tribeca pact for pilot trio". Variety.
- Michael Fleming (2009-02-10). "William Monahan to direct 'Heist'". Variety.
- Michael Fleming (2009-02-16). "Monahan set for Grisham's 'Associate'". Variety.
- Michael Fleming (2009-03-26). "Monahan sets sail on 'Essex' :Writer, King try fleet feat". Variety.
- Richard Corliss and Jeanne McDowell (2004-10-03). "A burly war epic and a gay TV channel. Next year should be fun". Time Magazine. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
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(help) - Michael Fleming (2008-04-28). "Mel Gibson returns for 'Darkness': Actor back onscreen with 'Edge'". Variety.
- "About This Book: Light House: A Trifle". Powell's Books. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- Michael Fleming (2008-04-02). "Monahan takes Bruen's 'Boulevard': Scribe to make directing debut on crime drama". Variety.
- ^ Michael Fleming (2008-03-19). "Monahan to write Paramount thriller: Story based on upcoming Playboy article". Variety.
- "Untitled Jim Keene Project (2010)". IMDB.
- Michael Fleming and Darcy Paquet (2008-03-06). "Warner Bros. to remake 'The Chaser': Studio picks up rights to South Korean hit". Variety.
Further reading
Main article: List of works by William Monahan- The first draft for Kingdom of Heaven is available on Disc 3 of the Kingdom of Heaven Director's Cut (Four-Disc Special Edition) DVD.
- The shooting script for The Departed is available for download on Warner Bros. website
- William Monahan (2007-02-15). "One flew over the Boston fence". Variety. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
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Interviews
- Mr.Beaks (2006-04-09). "Collider Exclusive – Ridley Scott and William Monahan Q&A". Collider.com. Retrieved 2008-08-08. NOTE: Contains two audio interviews, each approximately twenty-five minutes long.
- Dylan Callaghan (2006-10-13). "A Man of Letters". Writers Guild of America, West. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
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(help) - Frosty (2007-02-18). "William Monahan – Exclusive Interview". Collider.com. Retrieved 2007-02-20.
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External links
- William Monahan at IMDb
- Short video of William Monahan on the red carpet for Body of Lies.
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