Charles Stuart Kaufman (born November 1, 1958) is an Academy Award winning screenwriter, identified by Premiere magazine as one of the 100 most powerful people in Hollywood.
He first came to prominence as the writer for Being John Malkovich, earning an Oscar nomination for his effort and a BAFTA. He also wrote Human Nature, which was directed by Michel Gondry and then worked with Spike Jonze again as the screenwriter for Adaptation., which earned him another Oscar nomination and his second BAFTA. Adaptation featured a "Charlie Kaufman" character that is a heavily fictionalized version of the screenwriter; in real life, however, he does not have an identical twin brother, is married rather than single and hardly experienced that story's fabulist drama.
He also penned Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, a biopic of Chuck Barris, a gameshow host who believed he was a CIA hitman; this was directed by George Clooney in his directorial debut. Kaufman angrily criticized George Clooney for making dramatic alterations to the Confessions of a Dangerous Mind script without consulting him whatsoever. Kaufman said in an interview with William Arnold: "The usual thing for a writer is to deliver a script and then disappear. That's not for me. I want to be involved from beginning to end. And these directors Jonze know that, and respect it."
His most recent film script and story is for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, his second film with director Michel Gondry, for which he received his first Oscar for best screenplay and third BAFTA. Kaufman also received the prestigious PEN American Center 2005 prize for screenplay for the film *. David Edelstein described the film in Slate as "The Awful Truth turned inside-out by Philip K. Dick, with nods to Samuel Beckett, Chris Marker, John Guare—the greatest dramatists of our modern fractured consciousness. But the weave is pure Kaufman."
An interesting pattern in Kaufman's works is that they often focus on an introverted, somewhat shy, male protagonist and a more dominant female figure. This is true of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (Joel/Clementine), Adaptation. (Charlie) and Being John Malkovich (Craig/Maxine).
He lives in Pasadena, California.
- Craig Schwartz (John Cusack) in Being John Malkovich
"You are what you love, not what loves you."
- Donald Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) in Adaptation.
"I liked Woody Allen when I was younger. The early Woody Allen is a complete mess, which I liked as a kid, but he was also a person that I could aspire to be, you know, short Jewish guys up there on the screen. I wanted to write comedies when I was younger, and yeah I liked his style. But I had a different idea of things then." (...)
"I don’t really have anything against stories, but I just want to feel something happening. I read something that Emily Dickinson said that I’m going to paraphrase: you know something’s poetry if a shiver goes up your spine."
- In an Interview with Michael Koresky and Matthew Plouffe, Reverse Shot Online, Spring 2005
1958 births | American screenwriters | Jewish American writers | Living people | Best Adapted Screenplay Academy Award nominees | Best Original Screenplay Academy Award winners
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