J.F. Lawton
- Writer
- Producer
- Director
J. F. Lawton was born on August 11, 1960 in Riverside, California. His
father was the famous writer
Harry Lawton, author of the award
winning novel "Willie Boy: A Desert Manhunt" (1960). The book became
the basis for the movie
Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here (1969),
starring Robert Redford. When he
was young, Lawton was diagnosed with severe dyslexia which made school
life very difficult. His learning disability didn't make him give up
the desire of being a screenwriter. After high school he went to study
filmmaking at California State University in Long Beach. Lawton then
moved to Los Angeles and worked in various post-production companies.
During this time he wrote a number of feature film scripts including
one called "Three Thousand", which was selected by the Sundance
Institute. Touchstone Pictures purchased the script and later he
changed the title to
Pretty Woman (1990). Starring
Julia Roberts and
Richard Gere, the movie became one of the
most successful romantic comedies of all times. Julia Roberts won a
Golden Globe Award and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best
Actress. J. F. Lawton was nominated for a Writers Guild of America
Award and a British Academy Award. He then wrote and executive produced
his next original screenplay
Under Siege (1992), based on his
million-dollar spec "Dreadnought". Starring
Steven Seagal,
Tommy Lee Jones and
Gary Busey, the movie broke box office
records and a successful sequel followed,
Under Siege 2: Dark Territory (1995).
With Barry Primus, Lawton co-wrote
Mistress (1992), a movie starring
Robert De Niro,
Danny Aiello,
Christopher Walken and
Martin Landau. The comedy was one of the
first films produced by de Niro's production company, Tribeca
Productions. The next project was
Blankman (1994) a movie he co-wrote with
comedian Damon Wayans for Columbia
Pictures. Following that, Lawton wrote and directed
The Hunted (1995) for Universal
Pictures, which starred
Christopher Lambert,
John Lone and
Joan Chen. Next came
Chain Reaction (1996), an action
thriller with Morgan Freeman,
Keanu Reeves and
Rachel Weisz. For television, he created
and executive produced the Sony hit syndicated show
V.I.P. (1998), starring
Pamela Anderson. Blending action
and humor in a fast-paced adventure series, the show ran successfully
for five seasons. After that, Lawton returned to the big screen with a
script for
DOA: Dead or Alive (2006), a
film based on the huge video game series success of the same name. He
then wrote and directed Jackson (2008), a
comedy-drama-musical starring Barry Primus,
Charles Robinson,
Steve Guttenberg and
Debra Jo Rupp. His latest script with
South Park creators Matt Stone and
Trey Parker is in development at
Paramount Studios.