Barry Levinson
- Awards And Honors:
- Academy Award (1989)
- On the Web:
- PBS - American Masters - Barry Levinson (Nov. 12, 2024)
Barry Levinson (born April 6, 1942, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.) is an American film director and screenwriter known for his versatility.
Levinson worked as a comedy writer for Carol Burnett and Mel Brooks in the 1970s. During that time he also cowrote the screenplay for the crime drama …And Justice for All, which earned him an Academy Award nomination. In 1982 Levinson made his directorial debut with Diner (1982), a coming-of-age story that was the first of several movies set in his native city, Baltimore, Maryland. He was again nominated for an Oscar, for his screenplay for Diner. He continued to earn acclaim with such films as The Natural (1984), which starred Robert Redford as a mythical baseball hero; Young Sherlock Holmes (1985); Tin Men (1987), a story about two men who sell aluminum siding; and the comedy Good Morning, Vietnam (1987), about a military disc jockey (played by Robin Williams).
In 1988 Levinson directed the highly popular Rain Man (1988), which earned him an Academy Award for best director. The drama centres on the relationship between a selfish young man (Tom Cruise) and his autistic savant brother (Dustin Hoffman). He next helmed Avalon (1990), a family saga about immigrants for which his screenplay earned him an Oscar nomination, and the best-picture nominee Bugsy (1991), in which Warren Beatty starred as mobster Bugsy Siegel. Levinson’s later films included the revenge thriller Sleepers (1996), the political satire Wag the Dog (1997), the coming-of-age story Liberty Heights (1999), the political thriller Man of the Year (2006), and the comedy Rock the Kasbah (2015).
Levinson also directed the HBO television movies You Don’t Know Jack (2010), a comedy-drama about Jack Kevorkian (Al Pacino), a doctor who supported physician-assisted suicide; The Wizard of Lies (2017), about Bernie Madoff (Robert De Niro), who operated the largest Ponzi scheme in history; and Paterno (2018), about Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, whose legacy was tarnished by a sex-abuse scandal that occurred during his tenure. In 2021 Levinson directed several episodes of the miniseries Dopesick, about the opioid crisis in the United States.