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Brian Koppelman

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Nationality
  
American

Spouse
  
Amy Koppelman

Role
  
Filmmaker

Name
  
Brian Koppelman

Children
  
2


Brian Koppelman httpswwwtheinfatuationcomwpcontentuploads

Full Name
  
Brian William Koppelman

Born
  
1966 (age 49–50)
Roslyn Harbor, New York

Occupation
  
Screenwriter, director, filmmaker, record producer, essayist, podcaster, former music business executive

Books
  
Rounders: A Novelization, Rounders: A Screenplay

Parents
  
Bunny Koppelman, Charles Koppelman

Siblings
  
Jennifer Hutt, Stacy Koppelman Fritz

Movies
  
Rounders, Runner - Runner, Solitary Man, Ocean's Thirteen, Knockaround Guys

Similar People
  
David Levien, Amy Koppelman, Andrew Ross Sorkin, Charles Koppelman, John Dahl

Profiles

The hawkcast with brian koppelman


Brian William Koppelman (born in 1966) is an American filmmaker, essayist, podcaster, TV series creator, former music business executive and record producer. Koppelman is the co-writer of Ocean's Thirteen and Rounders, the producer for films including The Illusionist and The Lucky Ones, the director for films including Solitary Man and the documentary This Is What They Want for ESPN as part of their 30 for 30 series, and the co-creator, showrunner, and executive producer of Showtime's Billions.

Contents

Brian Koppelman The Moment Podcast Brian Koppelman With Colin Quinn

Early life and education

Brian Koppelman The Moment Podcast Brian Koppelman With Chuck Klosterman

Koppelman was born on April 27, 1966 in Roslyn Harbor, New York to a Jewish family, the son of Brenda "Bunny" and Charles Koppelman. His father was a producer and media executive. Koppelman holds degrees from Tufts University and Fordham University School of Law.

Career

Brian Koppelman The Tim Ferriss Show Episode 10 Brian Koppelman Co

He first started managing local Long Island bands as a teenager. He would also book bands at a local nightclub. Through booking acts, he came into contact with Eddie Murphy and helped arrange Murphy’s first record deal. As a student at Tufts University, he discovered singer songwriter Tracy Chapman and executive-produced her first album. He was later brought to Giant Records by president Irving Azoff. During his career, Koppelman was an A&R representative for music labels Elektra Records, Giant Records, SBK Records and EMI Records.

Film

Brian Koppelman wwwoneyoufeednetwpcontentuploads201403Bria

In 1997, Koppelman wrote the original screenplay for Rounders with his writing partner, David Levien. Koppelman has described his approach to writing as a team as having only one rule: no video games in the office. In 2001, Koppelman wrote, produced, and directed his first film, Knockaround Guys, which film critic Roger Ebert gave 3 out of 4 stars. Since then, Koppelman has worked on a dozen films including having written Ocean’s Thirteen and directed an ESPN 30 for 30 documentary, This Is What They Want.

Brian Koppelman Brian Koppelman briankoppelman Twitter

In 2009, Koppelman co-directed Solitary Man starring Michael Douglas. The film was included in both A. O. Scott's The New York Times "Year End Best" list, Roger Ebert's "Year End Best" list, and holds a "Fresh" rating of 81% at the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.

Other writings and podcasts

Since 2011, Koppelman has been a contributor and essayist at Grantland.com, a website dedicated to sports and pop culture. Additionally, since March 2014, Koppelman has hosted a weekly podcast, "The Moment", on ESPN Radio. In October, 2013, Koppelman received significant media attention for releasing a series of videos on the platform Vine in which he gives screenwriting advice in six seconds or less called "Six Second Screenwriting Lessons". His "Screenwriting, in Six Seconds or Less" Vine from July 31, 2014, generated over 15 million loops in less than nine days. He has also written a short story, "Wednesday is Viktor's", for the anthology Dark City Lights: New York Stories (Have a NYC), published in 2015.

Television

Showtime's drama Billions, created by Koppelman with The New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin and writing partner David Levien, and starring Paul Giamatti and Damian Lewis, premiered to strong reviews in 2016.

Awards and recognition

In 2013, Tufts University awarded Koppelman their P.T. Barnum Award for success in Media/Arts. In 2014, Koppelman won an Emmy Award for his 30 for 30 documentary.

Personal life

In 1992, Koppelman married novelist Amy Levine at the Central Synagogue in Manhattan. His sister is Jennifer Koppelman Hutt, who hosts a Sirius Satellite Radio show called Just Jenny. Regarding religion, Koppelman describes himself as culturally Jewish, but from a philosophical standpoint he identifies himself as an atheist. Koppelman is a fan of the Knicks, Jets, and Yankees.

Of his five-year practice of Transcendental Meditation Koppelman said in 2016: "For me it was a way to control anxiety, and I found that the physical manifestations of anxiety just dissipated by about 85 or 90 percent ... So that was a gigantic life change, to not feel a fluttering stomach, to not get a stress headache and things like that."

Films

  • Rounders (1998), writer
  • Knockaround Guys (2001), director, writer, producer
  • Interview with the Assassin (2002), producer
  • Runaway Jury (2003), writer
  • Walking Tall (2004), writer
  • The Illusionist (2006), producer
  • Ocean's Thirteen (2007), writer
  • The Lucky Ones (2008), producer
  • Solitary Man (2009), director, writer
  • The Girlfriend Experience (2009), writer
  • Runner Runner (2013), writer
  • I Smile Back (2015), producer
  • Television

  • The Street Lawyer (2003), producer
  • Tilt (2005), director, writer, producer
  • This Is What They Want (2013), director
  • Billions (2016), co-creator, writer
  • References

    Brian Koppelman Wikipedia