Of Iranian descent, he was born in Boulder, Colorado, and grew up in
Madison, Wisconsin. He graduated from Madison West High School and was
a city boys high school tennis champion. Nowrasteh attended New Mexico
State University on an athletic scholarship and later transferred to
the University of Southern California to attend the School of Cinematic
Arts. He is married to wife Elizabeth G. Nowrasteh commonly referred to
as "Betsy." Nowrasteh's oldest son, Alex Nowrasteh, is an immigration
policy analyst working at the Cato Institute. Nowrasteh's younger son,
Mark Nowrasteh, studied in the UCLA Playwriting program. Mark's first
play The Emperor & The Apostle will have its theatrical debut in
Austin, Texas in Fall, 2013. Mark has also been hired by Rise
Entertainment to write his first screenplay for a motion picture, for
delivery in early 2014.
Nowrasteh began his career writing on the CBS television series, The
Equalizer. He went on to work on other series (Falconcrest, D.E.A.),
and wrote the pilot for the USA Network show La Femme Nikita (1996). He
also worked on independent films such as the American/Brazilian
production The Interview (1997, writer/co-producer), which played at
Sundance and on the Showtime network; and Norma Jean, Jack and Me
(1998), a film that was not theatrically released but played the
festival circuit and aired on HDNet. In 2001 he wrote and directed the
highly-rated, award-winning Showtime presentation The Day Reagan Was
Shot, which starred Richard Dreyfuss as Alexander Haig and was
executive produced by Oliver Stone. The following year he wrote 10,000
Black Men Named George, the story of the Pullman strike of the 1930s,
for Showtime.
For both of the above films Nowrasteh received the Pen USA West
Literary Award for Best Teleplay-the only writer in the history of the
Pen awards to win two years in a row in the same category. The Day
Reagan Was Shot also received the Eddie Award and the Golden Satellite
Award for Best Motion Picture for Television, 2001, as well as a SAG
nomination for Best Actor (Richard Dreyfuss). Nowrasteh also wrote the
"Manifest Destiny" episode of the highly regarded (16 Emmy nominations)
Steven Spielberg and TNT miniseries presentation, Into the West.
Following that Nowrasteh wrote and produced the controversial ABC
miniseries The Path to 9/11. He then went on to co-write (with his
wife, Betsy Giffen Nowrasteh), and direct the film The Stoning of
Soraya M., released in 2009 by Lionsgate Films.
Nowrasteh was attacked by Conservatives for an alleged "liberal bias"
in his Showtime film, The Day Reagan Was Shot. Former Reagan National
Security Advisor, Richard Allen, led the charge with a piece in the
Wall Street Journal (December 14, 2001), accusing Nowrasteh and
Executive Producer Oliver Stone of "yet another dubious Oliver Stone
production" and referring to it as "The Day They Shot the Truth." Mr.
Allen based his piece on tapes he had kept from that day, releasing
only six minutes to support his position. Nowrasteh responded in the
Los Angeles Times (December 24, 2001) and a letter to the editor in the
Wall Street Journal (January 2, 2002), "the clear solution is to have
Allen release the entire unedited tape and allow anyone to make the
comparisons and draw whatever conclusions seem warranted." Nowrasteh
concluded his Los Angeles Times piece by writing, "The Day Reagan Was
Shot provides the first-ever dramatization of a constitutional crisis
and government cover up (both amply supported by facts) and the threat
they pose to a nation when a president becomes incapacitated. This is
important and relevant and raises issues that should be discussed
openly."
Nowrasteh was attacked by Liberals for an alleged "conservative bias"
in his controversial ABC docudrama The Path to 9/11, which he wrote and
co-produced. Nowrasteh describes himself as more libertarian than
conservative or liberal.
The Stoning of Soraya M. was condemned and banned by the Iranian
government but thousands of copies were bootlegged into the country and
it became an underground hit in Iran - forcing the government to put a
temporary moratorium on stoning as a punishment, most notably in the
Sakineh Ashtiani case.
The Stoning of Soraya M. had its world premiere at the 2009 Toronto
International Film Festival, where it won Runner-up for the Audience
Choice Award. It also won Second Runner-up for the Cadillac People's
Choice Award, as well as the Audience Award for Best Feature at the
2009 Los Angeles Film Festival. The film also won the Heartland Truly
Moving Picture Award, and the 2009 Ghent Film Festival's Canvas
Audience Award. At the 2009 Satellite Awards, it was named one of the
year's Top Ten Films and nominated for Best Drama Film, while its star
Shohreh Agdashloo won Best Actress in a Drama. In 2010, the film was
hailed as one of Movieguide's Ten Best 2009 Movies for Mature Audiences
and was the co-winner, with Invictus (film), of Movieguide's Faith and
Freedom Award for Promoting Positive American Values for 2009. It also
shared, with "Women in Shroud," the Cinema for Peace Award for Justice
in conjunction with the Berlin Film Festival and won Outstanding
Foreign Motion Picture at the NAACP Image Awards.
Nowrasteh is developing a film adaptation of The Last Campaign,
Thurston Clarke's account of Robert F. Kennedy's 1968 presidential
campaign.
Nowrasteh is working on an adaptation of Anne Rice's novel Christ the
Lord: Out of Egypt that he will adapt (with wife Betsy) and direct. The
project grew out of a rave review Ms. Rice wrote of the film, The
Stoning of Soraya M., on her Facebook page. Through her agent her novel
was sent to the Nowrasteh's and they agreed to pursue it, setting the
project up with 1492 Pictures and CJ Entertainment.
His most notable other project is a film about Andrew Jackson entitled
The Battle of New Orleans. He is partnered with producer/manager Alan
Siegel and Gerard Butler has expressed interest in portraying Jackson
who led a ragtag army in defeating the British at New Orleans on
January 8, 1815.