Laurence Mark

Laurence Mark (born ca. 1949)[1] is an Academy Award-nominated, Emmy-nominated, Golden Globe-winning American producer of such acclaimed hit films as Julie & Julia, Dreamgirls, I, Robot, As Good as It Gets and Jerry Maguire.

Laurence Mark
Bornca. 1949 (age 7172)

Life and career

Mark most recently produced The Greatest Showman, the movie musical starring Hugh Jackman, Zac Efron, Michelle Williams and Zendaya and directed by Michael Gracey which grossed over $425 million worldwide. In North America, it is the highest-grossing, live-action original movie musical of all time and the third highest-grossing live-action musical of all time.

Prior to that, Mark has produced Last Vegas, starring Michael Douglas, Robert De Niro, Morgan Freeman and Kevin Kline, and directed by Jon Turteltaub; Flatliners, starring Ellen Page, Diego Luna, Nina Dobrev and directed by Niels Arden Oplev; and Julie & Julia, starring Meryl Streep and Amy Adams and written and directed by Nora Ephron.

Mark is currently executive-producing Vivo, an animated musical film with music and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda. Directed by Kirk DeMicco, the film is scheduled to be released by Sony Pictures Animation on June 4, 2021.

For television, Mark was an Executive Producer of When We Rise, the critically lauded eight-hour limited series created and written by Dustin Lance Black and starring Guy Pearce, Mary-Louise Parker and Rachel Griffiths which aired earlier this year on ABC.

With Bill Condon, Mark served as producer of the highly regarded Hugh Jackman-hosted 81st Academy Awards which earned him an Emmy nomination. The show itself received ten Emmy nominations and won four of them.

Before that, Mark produced Dreamgirls starring Jamie Foxx, Beyonce Knowles and Eddie Murphy and directed by Bill Condon. The movie won three Golden Globe Awards, including one for Best Picture. It also received eight Academy Award nominations, the most of any movie in its year, and won two of them, including one for Jennifer Hudson as Best Supporting Actress.

Earlier on, Mark received an Academy Award nomination for producing Best Picture nominee Jerry Maguire, and he executive-produced two other Academy Award nominees for Best Picture, As Good as It Gets and Working Girl.

Mark garnered an Emmy nomination and a Golden Globe nomination as Executive Producer of Political Animals, a limited series created by Greg Berlanti and starring Sigourney Weaver which aired in 2012 on the USA Network. The show received four Emmy nominations, winning one for Ellen Burstyn as Best Supporting Actress.

He is also an Executive Producer of The Art Of More starring Dennis Quaid, Kate Bosworth, Cary Elwes and Christian Cooke which streaming for two seasons on Sony's Crackle TV.

Mark has also produced Romy and Michele's High School Reunion , Last Holiday, and The Lookout, which won the Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature. In addition to these films, Mark produced Finding Forrester, The Object of My Affection, Anywhere but Here, The Adventures of Huck Finn, Black Widow and Center Stage (plus its two sequels).

Laurence Mark Productions is headquartered at Sony Pictures Entertainment where the company has a tong-term production arrangement with Columbia Pictures. Mark's other producing credits include Sister Act 2, True Colors, Bicentennial Man, Simon Birch, Riding in Cars with Boys, How Do You Know and the now legendary Glitter starring Mariah Carey.

Prior to producing, Mark held several key publicity and marketing posts at Paramount Pictures, culminating in his being appointed Vice President of West Coast Marketing. He then moved into production, and as Vice President of Production at Paramount and Executive Vice President of Production at Twentieth Century Fox, he was closely involved with the development and production of such films as Terms of Endearment, Trading Places, Falling in Love, The Fly and Broadcast News.

Mark was born in New York City and educated at Eaglebrook School, The Hotchkiss School, and Wesleyan University, from which he graduated in 1971. He holds a Masters of Arts degree in Film from New York University.

He currently resides in Los Angeles and New York.

Films

He was a producer in all films unless otherwise noted.

Film

Year Film Credit
1987Black WidowExecutive producer
1988My Stepmother Is an AlienExecutive producer
Working GirlExecutive producer
1989Cookie
1990Mr. DestinyExecutive producer
1991True Colors
One Good Cop
1993The Adventures of Huck Finn
Gunmen
Sister Act 2: Back in the HabitExecutive producer
1995Tom and Huck
Cutthroat Island
Silo 3 Jane
1996Jerry Maguire
1997Romy and Michele's High School Reunion
As Good as It GetsExecutive producer
1998Deep Rising
The Object of My Affection
Simon Birch
1999Anywhere but Here
Bicentennial Man
2000Hanging Up
Center Stage
Finding Forrester
2001Glitter
Riding in Cars with Boys
2004I, Robot
2006Last Holiday
Dreamgirls
2007The Lookout
2008Center Stage: Turn It Up
2009Julie & Julia
2010How Do You Know
2013Last Vegas
2014Date and Switch
2017Flatliners
The Greatest Showman
2021VivoExecutive producer
TBA
13
Girls' Night Out
Spinning Gold
Miscellaneous crew
Year Film Role
1976Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved HollywoodAssistant: David V. Picker
Thanks
Year Film Role
2004SpanglishSpecial thanks

Television

Year Title Credit Notes
1989Sweet Bird of YouthExecutive producerTelevision film
1997Oliver TwistExecutive producerTelevision film
2001These Old BroadsExecutive producerTelevision film
Kiss My ActExecutive producerTelevision film
200981st Academy AwardsTelevision special
2012Political AnimalsExecutive producer
2015−16The Art of MoreExecutive producer
2016Center Stage: On PointeExecutive producerTelevision film
2017When We RiseExecutive producer

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryFilmResult
1997Academy AwardsBest PictureJerry MaguireNominated
2005Black Reel AwardsBest FilmI, RobotNominated
2006Producers Guild of America AwardsBest Theatrical Motion PictureDreamgirlsNominated
2007Black Reel AwardsBest FilmDreamgirlsWon
2008Independent Spirit AwardsBest First FeatureThe LookoutWon
2012Emmy AwardsOutstanding Miniseries or MoviePolitical AnimalsNominated

References

  1. Cieply, Michael (December 31, 2008). "Laurence Mark and Bill Condon Sound the Call to Academy Party Animals". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
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