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Peter Yates

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Film director

Name
  
Peter Yates


Television
  
The Saint Danger Man

Years active
  
1958–2010

Children
  
Toby Yates

Peter Yates Peter Yates director of 39Bullitt39 dies at 81


Full Name
  
Peter James Yates

Born
  
24 July 1929 (
1929-07-24
)
Aldershot, Hampshire, England, UK

Occupation
  
Film director, producer

Died
  
January 9, 2011, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Virginia Pope (m. 1960–2011)

Parents
  
Constance Yates, Robert Yates

Movies
  
Bullitt, Krull, Breaking Away, The Deep, The Friends of Eddie Co

Similar People
  
Kenneth Marshall, Robert Vaughn, Jacqueline Bissett, Dennis Christopher, Albert Finney

Dennis Quaid Says Peter Yates Taught Him to Be a Film Actor


Peter James Yates (24 July 1929 – 9 January 2011) was an English film director and producer. He was born in Aldershot, Hampshire.

Contents

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Robbery jaguar chase peter yates


Life and career

Peter Yates RIP Peter Yates Deadline

The son of an army officer, he attended Charterhouse School as a boy, graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and worked for some years as an actor, director and stage manager. In the 1950s he started in the film industry as a dubbing assistant and later an assistant director for Tony Richardson and J. Lee Thompson (his 1961 The Guns of Navarone).

Peter Yates Bullitt director Peter Yates dies aged 82 Film The

Summer Holiday (1963), his first film as director, was a "lightweight" vehicle for Cliff Richard. Yates had directed the original Royal Court production of N.F. Simpson's play One Way Pendulum and was chosen to make the film version released in 1964. Robbery (1967), a crime thriller, is a fictionalised version of the Great Train Robbery of 1963. This led to Bullitt (1968), of which Bruce Weber has written, "Mr. Yates’s reputation probably rests most securely on “Bullitt” (1968), his first American film – and indeed, on one particular scene, an extended car chase that instantly became a classic." Frank P. Keller won the Academy Award for film editing on Bullitt. After Bullitt, Yates would do action films, but would intermix them with comedy and drama films.

Peter Yates Peter Yates Cinma Passion

In 1970 Yates said he would make Don Quixote with Richard Burton but the project stalled. He did finally make a television film of the Cervantes novel in 2000, with John Lithgow as Don Quixote.

Yates was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Direction for Bullitt (1968). Yates produced and directed Breaking Away (1979), which was nominated for five Academy Awards including Best Director and Best Film for Yates. Yates also produced and directed The Dresser (1983), an adaptation of the Ronald Harwood stage play. The film received seven BAFTA and five Oscar nominations, including the BAFTA Award for Best Film and for Best Direction and the Academy Award for Best Film and for Best Director for Yates. The Dresser was also entered into the 34th Berlin International Film Festival. Other notable films directed by Yates include Krull, The House on Carroll Street, The Deep, Suspect and For Pete's Sake.

Yates has two distinct styles: one used for his thriller, action and drama projects which frequently reflects on the principal character's state of alienation with a humanistic perspective and another expressive and sentimental style which focuses on the moral dilemmas of the characters, predominantly seen in his coming-of-age and other dramatic films.

Yates died in London on 9 January 2011. He was 81 years old.

References

Peter Yates Wikipedia