William Riead went to both high school and college in Illinois,
graduating from Western Illinois University with a degree in
communications. While in college he worked for a CBS affiliate,
KHQA-TV, in Quincy, Illinois, as a news cameraman, then later as a
radio reporter at sister-station WTAD. In 1968, he joined NBC affiliate
WGEM-TV as a television reporter, co-anchoring a weekend news program
called the Bill Riead/Jim Young Saturday Night Report. In 1969, he
returned to KHQA-TV as a full-time anchor and worked there for the
remainder of his college years. In 1972, he joined CBS News in New York
and was assigned to the network's chief European bureau in London,
where he was appointed the network's Foreign News Editor. He was later
assigned to the Democratic and Republican National Conventions in
Miami, Florida, where he was recruited by TVN, predecessor to today's
CNN, to be their West Coast correspondent. He accepted the position,
and while assigned to the White House press corp witnessed the
assassination attempt on then President Gerald Ford in Sacramento,
California (by former Manson follower Lynnette "Squeaky" Fromme).
Standing less than 8 feet from the President, it was his film crew that
shot the footage that was later seen on national television. Three days
later he was with the president again when another assassination
attempt was made on Mr. Ford's life, this time by Sarah Moore.
In 1975, wanting to gear his career more in the direction of
production, he left network news and formed his own company,
CinemaWest, in Los Angeles, and began producing corporate videos for
major corporations throughout the U.S. and Europe. One, with Regis
Philbin as the host, resulted in Philbin recommending him to Columbia
Pictures, which made him the offer to write and direct promotional film
product for their studio. He accepted, and produced the making of
"Casey's Shadow" with Walter Matthau. This followed with his producing
similar product on films such as "Midnight Express", Close Encounters
of the Third Kind, The Front, Absence of Malice, The China Syndrome,
The Goodbye Girl, Gorky Park, First Blood, Lone Wolf McQuade, Easy
Money, Summer Lovers, The Woman in Red, The Bounty, Mrs. Soffel, Never
Cry Wolf and Something Wicked This Way
Comes among 47 others he produced over a twelve year period for not
just Columbia but also MGM/Warner Bros., Disney, Orion Pictures and
Avco-Embassy. In 1981, he went to Ahmadhabad, India to direct Land of
Hunger, Land of Hope at which he segued into producing informational
specials for television. On Borrowed Time, a film he wrote and directed
and aired on the Discovery Channel, featuring Walter Matthau and Brooke
Shields, went on to win numerous awards including a CableACE Award
nomination for Discovery.
He next produced One For The Road, the second in the series of
informational specials, which was released through Pyramid Media. He
then produced Dying For A Smoke, the third in the series, which film
became a top award-winner for Pyramid, taking First Place at the HeSCA
International Film Festival as well as the Gold Award at Worldfest
Charleston. It went on to win the distinguished Silver Plaque Award at
Intercom, the Golden Eagle Award at the Council of International
Non-Theatrical Events in Washington, D.C., the Silver Certificate at
the John Muir Film Festival, the M.I.P. Award at the World Health
Organization, the Magna Cum Laude Award at the Province of Parma and
Honorable Mention at the Columbus International Film Festival. He next
wrote, produced and directed a feature film titled Scorpion which was
released in theaters nationally through Crown International Pictures
and home video through RCA/Columbia (domestic) and Warner Home Video
(foreign). He then wrote and directed "The Letters", a feature film
about letters Mother Teresa wrote to a longtime spiritual director
which revealed she suffered a feeling of isolation and abandonment
during the last forty years of her life working with the poor. The
acclaimed British actress Juliet Stevenson plays Mother Teresa in the
film, and the twice Academy Award-nominated European actor Max von
Sydow plays her spiritual director. The popular European actor Rutger
Hauer plays the Vatican postulator for Mother Teresa's cause for
sainthood. The film was shot on location in England and India, the
story based on facts written and directed by William Riead.