Pen Densham

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}

{{Infobox person

| name =

| image = CFC in L.A. 17(Pen Densham).jpg

| alt =

| caption = Densham in 2011

| birth_name =

| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1947|10|14}}[http://www.filmreference.com/film/90/Pen-Densham.html "Profile: Pen Densham"], filmreference.com

| birth_place = Ruislip, Middlesex, England

| death_date =

| death_place =

| nationality =

| other_names =

| occupation = Film and television writer, producer

| known_for =

}}

Pen Densham (born 14 October 1947) is a British-Canadian film and television producer, writer, and director,{{Cite web|url=http://www.cfccreates.com/mentors/40|title=Pen Densham|website=www.cfccreates.com|language=en|access-date=1 October 2018}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.writersstore.com/authors/pen-densham/|title=Pen Densham|website=www.writersstore.com|language=en|access-date=1 October 2018}} known for writing and producing films such as Robin Hood: Prince of ThievesKasindorf, Jeanie. "Million Dollar Babies: How a Bunch of Hollywood Screenwriters Struck It Rich." New York Magazine. 23.24 (18 Jun 1990): 40–50. and television revivals of The Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone, as well as writing, producing and directing MGM's Moll Flanders.{{Cite web|url=https://schoosgallery.com/artists-pen-densham/|title=Artists – Pen Densham|website=Schoos Night Gallery|language=en-US|access-date=1 October 2018}}

Early life

Born in Ruislip, Middlesex, England in October 1947 to Raymond Densham who worked in the British film industry, Pen left school at age 15 and was hired by British TV to photograph The Rolling Stones to sell to national magazines. At 19 he moved to Canada where he directed commercials and documentaries, working with Marshall McLuhan.

Densham went on to found Insight Productions in Toronto with John Watson. The company gained recognition for documentaries such as Life Times Nine, one of two Insight films that earned Academy Award nominations. In total, Densham and Watson received over 70 international awards for their works including medals from the Queen of the United Kingdom for their contribution to the Arts of Canada. The first drama Densham wrote and directed, If Wishes Were Horses, won 14 awards, was reviewed by TV guide as "The best film of any length shown on Canadian TV", and brought Densham's work to the attention of Norman Jewison. Jewison, with Telefilm Canada, sponsored Densham to move to Hollywood.

Career

=Trilogy Entertainment Group=

In Hollywood Densham and Watson founded Trilogy Entertainment Group.Parke, Catherine N. "Adaptation of Defoe's Moll Flanders." In Eighteenth-Century Fiction on Screen. Edited by Robert Mayer. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2002. 58. They were employed as creative consultants on films such as Rocky II and Footloose. In 1988 Densham directed Trilogy's first studio feature, The Kiss,Puchalski, Steven. Slimetime: A Guide to Sleazy, Mindless Movies. Manchester, UK: Critical Vision, 2002. 174. for Tri-Star. In 1990 Densham re-envisioned the Robin Hood story, creating a new characterization and adding new concepts. Densham and Watson sold their spec script for Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and produced the film for Morgan Creek Productions and Warner Brothers. The film became one of Warner Brothers' largest grossing movies ever, spinning off games, toy lines and the No. 1 music single from Bryan Adams, "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You". In the same year they were producers on Backdraft with Ron Howard directing for Imagine Entertainment and Universal Pictures. Backdraft generated one of the longest-lasting attractions at the Universal Studios Tour.

Inspired by the loss of his mother, Densham wrote and directed a personal version of Moll Flanders for MGM and Spelling Entertainment, based loosely on the novel by Daniel Defoe, starring Morgan Freeman and Robin Wright. Densham also wrote and directed Houdini, an $8 million TNT feature for television starring Johnathon Schaech, Mark Ruffalo and Emile Hirsch. In 1992, Trilogy Entertainment Group jumped into its television foray by signing it with RHI Entertainment, with potential off-net syndication rights handled by Columbia Pictures Television.{{Cite news|date=1992-02-10|title=Trilogy links with RHI|work=Broadcasting|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-Business/Magazines/Archive-BC-IDX/92-OCR/BC-1992-02-10-OCR-Page-0035.pdf|access-date=2021-10-06}}

In television Densham wrote and supervised the re-franchising of The Outer Limits science fiction anthology series, which he executive-produced with his partners for its award-winning seven-year-run on American television. In the process Densham earned the unique distinction of being named number eight in the 50 Most Powerful People in Science Fiction list compiled by Cinefantastique magazine. In 2003 he re-introduced The Twilight Zone fantasy anthology series to American audiences on UPN.

=Emergence as an author=

Densham became a published author with his book about screenplay writing and selling creativity in Hollywood, Riding the Alligator: Strategies for a Career in Screenplay Writing (And Not Getting Eaten), published by Michael Wiese Books in January 2011.[http://www.mwp.com Michael Wise Books website] The title comes from the cover photo of Densham at the age of four astride a live seven-foot alligator in one of his parents' theatrical short films. Written with the goal of supporting emerging creative people finding their own voice and path through the Hollywood industry as well as artistic endeavors in general, the book includes supportive essays by professional screenwriters Shane Black, Nia Vardalos, Andrea Berloff, Eric Roth, John Watson, Robin Swicord, Todd Robinson, Alan McElroy, Anthony Peckham, Ron Shelton and Laeta Kalogridis. The book received positive reviews from Academy Award-winning writer-director-producers like Paul Haggis and Ron Howard, as well as actors like Jeff Bridges, Morgan Freeman, Robin Wright and Emile Hirsch.

Filmography

= Film =

class="wikitable"

!Year!!Film!!Producer!!Director

!Writer

!Other

!Notes

rowspan="2" |1973

|Life Times Nine

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Documentary short
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film

Streetworker

|

|

|{{yes}}

|

|Documentary short

1974

|Thoroughbred

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|Documentary short
Also cinematographer

1978

|F.I.S.T.

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Creative consultant
Directed by Norman Jewison

1979

|Rocky II

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Supervisor: fight and training montages
Directed by Sylvester Stallone

rowspan="2" |1980

|Coal Miner's Daughter

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Creative consultant
Directed by Michael Apted

Don't Mess with Bill

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Documentary short
Directed by John Watson
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject)

rowspan="2" |1981

|Escape to Victory

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Creative consultant
Directed by John Huston

Nighthawks

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Creative consultant
Directed by Bruce Malmuth

rowspan="2" |1984

|Success Is the Best Revenge

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Jerzy Skolimowski

Footloose

|

|

|

|{{yes}}

|Creative consultant
Directed by Herbert Ross

1985

|The Zoo Gang

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|

|

1988

|The Kiss

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|Also lyrics: song "Under My Skin"
Nominated – Fantasporto International Film Festival Award

1990

|A Gnome Named Gnorm

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|

|Directed by Stan Winston

1991

|Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|

|Directed by Kevin Reynolds

1994

|Blown Away

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Stephen Hopkins

1995

|Tank Girl

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Rachel Talalay

rowspan="2"|1996

|Moll Flanders

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|

|

Larger than Life

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|

|Directed by Howard Franklin

2002

|The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys

|{{yes|Executive}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Peter Care

2005

|Taj Mahal: An Eternal Love Story

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Akbar Khan

2007

|Just Buried

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Chaz Thorne

2013

|Phantom

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

| rowspan="2" |Directed by Todd Robinson

rowspan="2" |2019

|The Last Full Measure

|{{yes}}

|

|

|

Harriet

|{{yes|Executive}}

|

|

|

|Directed by Kasi Lemmons

2020

|Meeting the Beatles in India

|{{yes|Executive}}

|

|

|

|Documentary film
Directed by Paul Saltzman

= Television =

class="wikitable"

!Year!!Program!!Executive producer!!Director!!Writer!!Notes

1976

|If Wishes Were Horses

|

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|Television special

rowspan="2" |1993

|Lifepod

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|Television film

Taking Liberty

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|Television pilot

1993–94

|Space Rangers

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|Series creator

1995–2001

|The Outer Limits

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|87 episodes
Won – CableACE Award for Dramatic Series
Nominated – Gemini Award for Best Dramatic Series

1996–99

|Poltergeist: The Legacy

|{{yes}}

|

|

|70 episodes

1997

|Buffalo Soldiers

|{{yes}}

|

|

|Television film

1997–98

|Fame L.A.

|{{yes}}

|

|

|22 episodes

rowspan="5" |1998

|The Wonderful World of Disney

|{{yes|Co-executive}}

|

|

|1 episode

The Magnificent Seven

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|Series creator

Creature

|{{yes}}

|

|

|Miniseries

The Taking of Pelham One Two Three

|{{yes}}

|

|

| rowspan="3" |Television film

Houdini

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

|{{yes}}

rowspan="4" |2002

|Brother's Keeper

|{{yes}}

|

|

The Twilight Zone

|{{yes}}

|

|{{yes}}

|3 episodes

Breaking News

|{{yes}}

|

|

|13 episodes

Carrie

|{{yes}}

|

|

|Television film

=Books=

  • Why We Write (contribution) – 1999
  • Riding the Alligator: Strategies for a Career in Screenplay Writing – 2011
  • Now Write! Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror (anthology contribution) – 2014

Awards and nominations

= Academy Awards =

= CableACE Award =

= Fantasporto Fantasy Film Festival =

= Gemini Awards =

References

{{Reflist}}