Jeremy Podeswa
{{Short description|Canadian film and television director}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=February 2015}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox person
| image =
| imagesize =
| name = Jeremy Podeswa
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1962}}
| birth_place = Toronto, Ontario, Canada
| death_date =
| death_place =
| othername =
| alma_mater = Toronto Metropolitan University
AFI Conservatory
| occupation = Film director, screenwriter
| yearsactive = 1984–present
}}
Jeremy Podeswa (born 1962) is a Canadian film and television director. He is best known for directing the films The Five Senses (1999) and Fugitive Pieces (2007). He has also worked as director on the television shows Six Feet Under,{{Cite web |author=HBO |author-link=HBO |title=Six Feet Under cast and crew |url=http://www.hbo.com/six-feet-under/cast-and-crew/index.html |access-date=12 May 2010 |archive-date=7 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141007062909/http://www.hbo.com/six-feet-under/cast-and-crew/index.html |url-status=dead }} Nip/Tuck, The Tudors, Queer as Folk, and the HBO World War II miniseries The Pacific.{{Cite web |author=HBO |author-link=HBO |title=Jeremy Podeswa on The Pacific |url=http://www.hbo.com/the-pacific/cast-and-crew/jeremy-podeswa/index.html |access-date=12 May 2010 |archive-date=11 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140911155834/http://www.hbo.com/the-pacific/cast-and-crew/jeremy-podeswa/index.html |url-status=dead }} He has also written several films.
In 2014, he directed episodes five and six of the fifth season of the HBO series Game of Thrones,{{cite web | url=https://twitter.com/LovinGoT99/status/584416131152240640 |title=Game of Thrones Season 5: What We Know So Far| work=Watchers on the Wall | date=1 August 2014 | access-date=6 February 2015}} earning a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for the latter episode. He returned the next season, directing the season premiere and the second episode. He also directed the season premiere as well as the season finale of the seventh season.{{cite web |url=http://www.hbo.com/schedule?focusId=799563 |title=Game of Thrones 67 |publisher=HBO |access-date=22 August 2017}} In 2021, he directed episodes of the TV series adaptation of The Mosquito Coast and the miniseries Station Eleven.
Biography
Jeremy Podeswa was born in 1962 in Toronto, Ontario. He is Jewish, and his Polish Jewish father, a painter, was the only one of his immediate family to make it out of the German Nazi camps alive.{{citation |title=The Prodigal Son |first=Alec |last=Scott |periodical=Toronto Life |url=http://www.torontolife.ca/features/prodigal-son/ |date=September 2007 |access-date=19 March 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130115135729/http://www.torontolife.ca/features/prodigal-son/ |archive-date=15 January 2013}} He attended the Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto{{Cite web|url=https://www.tribute.ca/people/jeremy-podeswa/19145/|title=Jeremy Podeswa biography and filmography {{!}} Jeremy Podeswa movies|website=Tribute.ca|language=en|access-date=2019-10-08}} before graduating from Ryerson University's Film Studies program[http://tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/jeremy-podeswa "Jeremy Podeswa"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121007090515/http://tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/jeremy-podeswa |date=7 October 2012 }} Canadian Film Encyclopedia. Retrieved 16 August 2011 and the American Film Institute's Center for Advanced Film Studies (now the AFI Conservatory).{{citation |title=Contemporary North American Film Directors |first1=Yoram |last1=Allon |first2=Del |last2=Cullen |first3=Hannah |last3=Patterson |year=2002 |publisher=Wallflower Press |isbn=1-903364-52-3 |page=[https://archive.org/details/contemporarynort00yora/page/425 425] |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/contemporarynort00yora/page/425 }} He has recently identified as queer and states that it is only one part of his identity:
{{blockquote|...my sexual orientation is one element among others. I believe that the experience of belonging to a minority, whether tied to sexual orientation, religion or race, changes your perspective you can have on of our environment and things in life. My orientation is only one part of me: I am Jewish, my parents are immigrants, I am North American. All these things and many others make what I am. It would be very restrictive, even a mistake, to say that my work or any other filmmaker’s can be reduced to the dimension of sexual orientation.{{Cite web|url=http://www.mediaqueer.ca/artist/jeremy-podeswa|title=Jeremy Podeswa|website=www.mediaqueer.ca|date=30 April 2015 |access-date=2019-10-08}}}}
He was part of a loosely affiliated group of filmmakers to emerge in the 1980s from Toronto known as the Toronto New Wave.
In 1983, 21-year-old Podeswa used his student loans to make his first short film, titled David Roche Talks to You About Love —a 22-minute performance about a gay actor and his views on love. The aspiring director then took jobs as a production assistant, assistant editor and a publicist before he started directing his own films. During the eighties and nineties when he just started his career, he made Canadian indie shorts and features such as The Five Senses, Eclipse, and Fugitive Pieces (2008), loosely based on a novel by Anne Michael, which was awarded the opening night slot at the 2007 International Film Festival. The film has since received critical acclaim. Podeswa has recently made a name for himself directing critically acclaimed and commercially successful television shows, such as Boardwalk Empire, Six Feet Under, True Blood, Dexter, Game of Thrones and Queer as Folk.{{Cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/television/article-a-feeling-of-awe-for-toronto-born-emmy-nominated-director-jeremy/|title='A feeling of awe' for Toronto-born, Emmy-nominated director Jeremy Podeswa|access-date=2019-10-08}}
Awards
Altogether, Jeremy Podeswa has won 20 awards while having 34 nominations for his expert works. Podeswa was given two Genie Awards in 2000 as Best Director of The Five Senses, which was awarded Best Picture.
In addition, he won an award at NewFest: New York's LGBT Film Festival for the Best Short. Podeswa won an award at the Newport Beach Film Festival in 2008 for Best Film, Best Director, and Best Screenplay. In addition he won Best Short at the San Francisco International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival. His most recent accomplishments occurred in 2015 and 2018, where he was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Direction of a Drama Series with Game of Thrones.{{citation |url=http://www.northernstars.ca/directorsmz/podeswa.html |title=Jeremy Podeswa |periodical=Northern Stars |access-date=15 March 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071028090116/http://www.northernstars.ca/directorsmz/podeswa.html |archive-date = 28 October 2007}}
Filmography
=Television=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
2001–2004
| 4 episodes |
2001–2005
| 5 episodes |
2002
|Episode: "Just Us Kids" |
2003–2005
| 4 episodes |
2003
| Nip/Tuck | 2 episodes |
2004
| Episode: "Lagrimas de Oro" |
2004
| Episode: "Totem Mole" |
2005
| Rome | Episode: "Utica" |
2005
| Episode: "Ghost Dance" |
2005
| Episode: "Rubie Dubidoux and the Brown Bound Express" |
2007
| Dexter | Episode: "That Night, A Forest Grew" |
2007
| Episode: "His Visit: Day Six" |
2007
|Episode: "This Is Your Brain on Drugs" |
2007–2010
| 8 episodes |
2009
| Empire State |TV short |
2009
| Weeds | Episode: "Where the Sidewalk Ends" |
2010
| 3 episodes (co-directed 1 episode) |
2010
| Rubicon | 2 episodes |
2010–2014
| 7 episodes |
2011
| Camelot | 2 episodes |
2011
| 3 episodes |
2011
| Episode: "I Wish I Was the Moon" |
2012
| Homeland | Episode: "In Memoriam" |
2012–2013
| American Horror Story: Asylum | 2 episodes |
2012–2013
| 2 episodes |
2013
| Episode: "Dead Weight" |
2013
| Episode: "Road Trip" |
2014
| American Horror Story: Coven | 1 episode |
2015–2017
| 6 episodes |
2015
| Episode: "Down Will Come" |
2018
| 3 episodes |
2018
| 2 episodes |
2019
| Miniseries; 2 episodes |
2019
| On Becoming a God in Central Florida | Episode: "The Gloomy-Zombies" |
2021
| Episode: "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" |
2021
| 3 episodes, also executive producer |
rowspan="2"| 2024
| 2 episodes |
The New Look
| 2 episodes |
=Films=
class="wikitable sortable"
! Year ! Title ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
1983
| David Roche Talks to You About Love | |
1985
| In the Name of Bobby | |
1986
| Nion in the Kabaret de La Vita | Nominated - Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama |
1992
| Standards | |
1993
| Walls | |
1993
| Caveman Rainbow | |
1994
| Eclipse | |
1999
| Won – Genie Award for Best Achievement in Direction |
2000
| 24fps | |
2001
| Touch | |
2007
| |
References
External links
- {{IMDb name|id=0687964|name=Jeremy Podeswa}}
{{ACCT Best Director}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Podeswa, Jeremy}}
Category:AFI Conservatory alumni
Category:Canadian television directors
Category:Film directors from Toronto
Category:Best Director Genie and Canadian Screen Award winners
Category:Canadian LGBTQ film directors
Category:Date of birth missing (living people)
Category:German-language film directors
Category:Canadian LGBTQ screenwriters
Category:Screenwriters from Toronto
Category:Toronto Metropolitan University alumni
Category:Canadian people of Polish-Jewish descent
Category:LGBTQ television directors
Category:Canadian male screenwriters
Category:20th-century Canadian screenwriters
Category:21st-century Canadian screenwriters