Michael Cristofer

Michael Cristofer Biography:

MICHAEL CRISTOFER

Date of Birth: January 22, 1945

Born and raised in Trenton, New Jersey, Cristofer attended a Catholic University in Washington D.C. He moved to San Francisco in 1966, where he worked in improvisational theater, later returning to the East Coast as an actor.

After performing at a number of theaters including the Long Wharf Theater, the Arena Stage and André Gregory's Philadelphia Theatre of the Living Arts, Cristofer turned his talents toward writing.

After staging his first play, The Mandala, he traveled to Beirut and studied humanities at the American University.

Returned to New York, he performed in a number of plays, then moved in 1972 to Los Angeles where he acted under Gordon Davidson's direction.

There he also wrote The Shadow Box which was also turned into a television film, and he followed that up with an award-winning performance as Trofimov in The Cherry Orchard opposite Meryl Streep.

Cristofer landed a number of parts on television and film.

After small roles in television films such as Crime Club and The Entertainer, he played Tayeh in the film The Little Drummer Girl (1984) opposite Diane Keaton.

That same year he started working on writing feature films.

For the next decade, films like The Witches of Eastwick (1987), The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990) and Breaking Up (1997) were written and filmed.

Cristofer won a Directors Guild of America award for his television directorial debut, the telefilm Gia (1998). This was soon followed with features Body Shots (1999) and Original Sin (2001).

Filmography (director):

Fade Out (2006)
Original Sin (2001)
Body Shots (1999)

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