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Ron Shelton

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Name
  
Ron Shelton

Role
  
Film director

Children
  
Valentina Shelton


Ron Shelton Showtime Developing Basketball Drama With LA Lakers Ron

Born
  
September 1945 (age 70)
United States

Occupation
  
Film director, screenwriter

Spouse
  
Lolita Davidovich (m. 1997)

Books
  
Blue Chips, Under Fire: Screenplay

Education
  
Santa Barbara High School, Westmont College, University of Arizona

Movies
  
Bull Durham, White Men Can't Jump, Dark Blue, Tin Cup, Hollywood Homicide

Similar People
  
Lolita Davidovich, Tyra Ferrell, Robert Wuhl, Rosie Perez, Cylk Cozart

Ron shelton talks movies with suzy shuster on the re show 10 24 14


Ronald Wayne "Ron" Shelton (born September 15, 1945) is an American Oscar-nominated film director and screenwriter. Shelton is known for the many films he has made about sports.

Contents

Ron Shelton Bull Durham39 Writer Ron Shelton Returns to Sports Films

A former minor league baseball infielder in Baltimore's farm system, he played with the Bluefield Orioles (Rookie), Stockton Ports (A), Dallas-Fort Worth Spurs (AA) and Rochester Red Wings (AAA) between 1967-1971.

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Writer director ron shelton talks michael jordan tin cup april 8 2016


Film career

Ron Shelton Book Reviews The Bilko Athletic Club

After working on the scripts for a number of films, including co-writing the Nick Nolte and Gene Hackman political drama Under Fire, Shelton made his directorial debut with Bull Durham in 1988. Set in the world of minor league baseball, the romantic comedy stars Kevin Costner and Susan Sarandon. Shelton's screenplay netted him multiple awards, including Best Original Script from the Writer's Guild of America, and Best Script from the US National Society of Film Critics. It was also nominated for an Academy Award.

Ron Shelton David Denby amp Ron Shelton Hammer Museum

Shelton worked with Costner again on the 1996 golf-themed romantic comedy Tin Cup. Other films as writer and director included the boxing comedy Play It to the Bone, a critical and commercial flop, and acclaimed 1992 comedy White Men Can't Jump, starring Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes as two basketball hustlers. Calling the latter film "very smart and very funny", and "not simply a basketball movie," critic Roger Ebert wrote that Shelton "knows how his characters talk and sound, and how they get into each other's minds with non-stop talking and boasting."

Shelton has also written and directed two biopics: Cobb, in which Tommy Lee Jones portrayed record-breaking baseballer Ty Cobb, and Blaze, which starred Paul Newman as colourful Louisiana Governor Earl Long. He wrote or co-wrote other sports-themed films including The Best of Times, starring Robin Williams and Kurt Russell as former football teammates; the basketball drama Blue Chips, starring Nick Nolte, and a boxing comedy, The Great White Hype, starring Samuel L. Jackson.

He also directed two Los Angeles-based crime films, Dark Blue, a drama starring Kurt Russell, and Hollywood Homicide, a comedy with Harrison Ford.

Personal life

Shelton grew up in Montecito, California, the oldest of four brothers. He is an alumnus of Santa Barbara High School and of the University of Arizona and Westmont College.

Shelton is married to Canadian-born actress Lolita Davidovich, who has appeared in several of his films, including taking the title role of Blaze Starr in Blaze. The couple have two children and reside in Los Angeles and Ojai, California. Shelton has two daughters with his first wife, filmmaker Lois Shelton.

On July 7, 2017, Shelton was inducted into the Rochester Red Wings Hall of Fame.

As writer/director

  • Bull Durham (1988)
  • Blaze (1989)
  • White Men Can't Jump (1992)
  • Cobb (1994)
  • Tin Cup (1996) with John Norville
  • Play It to the Bone (1999)
  • Hollywood Homicide (2003) with Robert Souza
  • Jordan Rides the Bus (2010, TV)
  • Hound Dogs (2011, TV)
  • Just Getting Started (2017)
  • As writer only

  • Under Fire (1983) with Clayton Frohman
  • The Best of Times (1986)
  • Blue Chips (1994)
  • The Great White Hype (1996) with Tony Hendra
  • Bad Boys II (2003) with Jerry Stahl, story credit shared with The Wibberleys
  • As director only

  • Dark Blue (2002)
  • References

    Ron Shelton Wikipedia