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Glenn Jordan

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Occupation
  
Years active
  
1955–2003


Name
  
Glenn Jordan

Role
  
Television Director

Marsha Mason & director Glenn Jordan
Born
  
April 5, 1936 (age 87) (
1936-04-05
)
San Antonio, Texas

Awards
  
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Drama Series

Nominations
  
DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Television Film/miniseries

Movies
  
Sarah - Plain and Tall, Barbarians at the Gate, Les Miserables, Sarah - Plain and Tall: Wint, A Streetcar Named Desire

Similar People
  
Glenn Close, James Garner, Lexi Randall, Peter Riegert, Richard Jordan

Application Story - Composer Glenn Jordan Mixes it Up with Mackie XR824 Monitors


Glenn Jordan (born April 5, 1936) is an American television director and producer.

Born in San Antonio, Texas, Jordan directed multiple episodes of Family and has helmed numerous television movies, several based on real persons as diverse as Benjamin Franklin, George Armstrong Custer, Lucille Ball, Christa McAuliffe, and Karen Ann Quinlan. His directing credits include small-screen adaptions of The Picture of Dorian Gray, Les Misérables, Hogan's Goat, Eccentricities of a Nightingale, A Streetcar Named Desire, O Pioneers!, and A Christmas Memory. Additional television directing credits include Heartsounds, Botticelli, Sarah, Plain and Tall, To Dance with the White Dog, Barbarians at the Gate, The Long Way Home, Sarah, Plain and Tall: Winter's End, The Boys, and Jane's House.

Jordan has directed three feature films: Only When I Laugh, The Buddy System, and Mass Appeal.

Jordan has been nominated for thirteen Emmy Awards and won four, for producing the miniseries Benjamin Franklin, for producing and directing the Hallmark Hall of Fame production Promise, and for executive producing the HBO production Barbarians at the Gate. He won two New York area Emmys for the PBS series Actor's Choice and New York Television Theatre. He won the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in a Dramatic Series for Family and was nominated for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Specials or Movies for Television for Les Misérables. Three of his productions (Benjamin Franklin, Heartsounds, and Promise) have won Peabody Awards.

References

Glenn Jordan Wikipedia