Dan Mirvish is a director, screenwriter, producer and author. His newest feature, "18½," an award-winning, "Top Ten Oscar Contender," "Certified Fresh" 70s Watergate thriller/dark comedy played at over 25 festivals on four continents, and then had a 7-month theatrical release in over 60 cities in the US, aired on 7 international airlines and played on Starz in the US, and on SkyCinema in the UK. The film stars Willa Fitzgerald, John Magaro, Vondie Curtis Hall, Catherine Curtin, Richard Kind, Sullivan Jones, Alanna Saunders, Claire Saunders and the voices of Ted Raimi, Jon Cryer and Bruce Campbell as Nixon.
A co-founder of the upstart Slamdance Film Festival, Dan Mirvish is
also an active director, screenwriter and producer. Labeled a "cheerful
subversive" by The New York Times, and "Hollywood's Bad Boy" by the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch, Mirvish has been named as one of Variety's Top 50
Creatives to Watch, as well as one of Film Festival Today's Top 25 Most
Influential People in Independent Film. He recently wrote the critically-acclaimed book "The Cheerful Subversive's Guide to Independent Filmmaking" for Focal Press/Routledge.
Dan directed the award-winning feature "Bernard and Huey," scripted by Oscar/Pulitzer-winner Jules Feiffer, and starring Oscar-winner Jim Rash and David Koechner which traveled to over 30 film festivals on 5 continents and had a North American theatrical release by Freestyle Releasing/Entertainment Studios. So far, it has sold to 49 countries, with international sales by Kew Media Group. The film got great reviews in The New York Times, Washington Post, Village Voice, and more. It has a very "fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
As a director, producer and co-screenwriter, Mirvish has made the
feature adaptation of the hit Off-Broadway play
Between Us (2012), starring
Julia Stiles,
Taye Diggs,
Melissa George and
David Harbour. Called a "sleeper hit" by The Hollywood Reporter and garnering a rare "A-" average on Criticwire, the film has played in 23 festivals in 7 countries, winning the Grand Jury Prize at the Bahamas International Film Festival, and the Best Actor Prize at the Woods Hole Film Festival. Other highlights include being the Closing Night Film at the 50th Annual Gijón Film Festival in Spain, North American Premiere at the Hamptons, plus festivals in Oldenburg (Germany), Whistler (Canada), Brisbane (Australia), and in the States: Slamdance, Woodstock, Napa Valley, Virginia, St. Louis, IndieMemphis, Atlanta, Sarasota, Dallas, Anchorage and more. Monterey Media distributed the film theatrically in over 50 cities in the United States, as well as on VOD, DVD, iTunes, Amazon, Netflix, etc. The film has been broadcast on both Starz and Showtime networks.
Mirvish made headlines around the world as the co-creator (with Eitan
Gorlin) of the faux McCain adviser Martin Eisenstadt who was the
self-admitted leak for the Sarah Palin Africa story. In the wake of the
publicity, Mirvish and Gorlin got a book deal from Farrar, Straus,
Giroux (Faber & Faber) and wrote the critically-acclaimed novel "I Am
Martin Eisenstadt: One Man's Wildly Inappropriate Adventures with the
Last Republicans" which was named one of the top three books of 2009 by
The Washington Monthly magazine. The Eisenstadt phenomenon was reported
in The New York Times, Washington Post, Associated Press, CNN, NPR,
BBC, and newspapers and magazines from Australia to Norway. Eisenstadt
was originally developed as a TV character, and featured in the fake
BBC documentary, "The Last Republican" and several other online videos.
Time Magazine named Martin Eisenstadt it's #8 Fleeting Celebrity of
2008 and said he was one of America's "elite Twitterati" along with
Ashton Kutcher, Newt Gingrich and Meghan McCain.
In the feature world, Mirvish directed, co-wrote and produced the
unique real estate musical
Open House (2004), which is being
distributed by The Weinstein Company. The Academy Awards literally
rewrote their rules in response to Mirvish's controversial Oscar
campaign to revive the dormant Original Musical category. Mirvish is
the rare filmmaker who's actually made money on an Oscar campaign in a
category that didn't exist, for a movie that no one had seen. The film,
which stars Oscar-nominee
Sally Kellerman,
Ann Magnuson,
Kellie Martin and
Anthony Rapp, has won universal critical
and audience acclaim at festivals such as the Hamptons, Austin and
Slamdance.
In order for the Academy to recognize the requisite number of films
eligible for the Original Musical category, Mirvish went so far as to
write, produce and shoot yet another feature musical,
Half Empty (2006). Shot in ten days in
Germany and France with an international cast, the film recently
premiered at the Santa Barbara Film Festival. Meanwhile,
Open House (2004) has turned into a
veritable franchise, spawning a podcast, video game and soon to be a
theatrical stage show.
Mentored by
Robert Altman, Mirvish
wrote, directed and produced his first feature
Omaha (1994) on
35mm for $38,0000. On the heels of Slamdance, the film went on to play
at over 30 other film festivals. Mirvish then self-distributed the film
to 32 cities in the U.S. - including an 11-week run at Laemmle's
Theaters in Los Angeles. Ironically, Robert Redford's Sundance Channel
acquired the TV rights to the film which started Slamdance. Later,
Mirvish found a unique way to distribute 350,000 units of the DVD by
getting them stuffed into every Pioneer DVD player sold in North
America.
In the TV world, Mirvish directed the controversial comedy,
A Message from the President of Iran (2006)
which was broadcast on Al Gore's CurrentTV, as well as streaming on the
Internet and on mobile phones around the world. His short pilots
Sheldon (2007) and "The Few & The Proud"
screened at the Montreal Just for Laughs Festival, and "Sheldon" also
screened in Aspen at the HBO Comedy Arts Festival, where Dan slipped
and broke his leg.
Mirvish has been a consultant for Steven Spielberg and Mark Burnett's
FOX-TV show, "On the Lot," as well as for Fremantle Media's "American
Idol," also on FOX.
In recent years, Mirvish directed a music video for Conor Oberst's
critically acclaimed band "Bright Eyes" off its Billboard Top 20 album,
"Digital Ash in a Digital Urn." Mirvish has also directed other
short-form material including music videos, network television promos,
and DVD-extra material, including over 2 hours of featurettes on the
Weinstein's
Open House (2004) DVD.
Mirvish remains actively involved with Slamdance, and as
"Co-Founder-at-Large," he's frequently the face of the festival as
master of ceremonies and mentor to the incoming crop of filmmakers each
year. Mirvish has also written feature material for Twentieth Century
Fox, NuImage, Phoenician Films and Primary Pictures.
Prior to getting an M.A. from USC's graduate film production program,
Mirvish was a Washington-based speech writer for U.S. Senator Tom
Harkin and a freelance journalist for such publications as The New York
Times and The Washington Monthly. He's continued freelancing for such
film magazines and books as Film Threat, Filmmaker, The Independent
Film & Video Monthly, British Savvy, and Chris Gore's Ultimate Film
Festival Survival Guide. Mirvish wrote the introduction to Bret Stern's
"How to Make a Film for Under $10,000 and Not Go to Jail" published by
HarperCollins.
Mirvish is a frequent juror, panelists and guest at various film
festivals, IFP events, and national radio & TV shows. He's taught a
UCLA extension class and was a contributing producer to Film Fest DVD
(for which he went to Chile and got tear gassed). He's been a freelance
graphic artist for NASA. Occasionally called upon to perform cameos,
Mirvish appears in the feature
My Big Fat Independent Movie (2005).
Dan is a member of the DGA.