| James
Ronald Whitney
James Ronald Whitney
writer • director • producer • editor • composer
" Just,
Melvin"
" Telling
Nicholas"
" TheWorkingGirl.com"
" GAMES
PEOPLE PLAY: New York"
" GAMES
PEOPLE PLAY: Hollywood"
" GAMES
PEOPLE
PLAY: The Bible Belt"
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Now living in New York City,
Emmy Award winning director, James Ronald Whitney (JamesRonaldWhitney.com)
was born in Las Vegas. In his formative years, James (also
known as Ron) was a competitive wrestler, golfer, racquetball
player and gymnast; an instructor of martial arts and dance;
and an avid skydiver who raised three monkeys as he backpacked
through more than 80 countries. During Whitney's travels,
he learned to speak Indonesian, German, Esperanto, and bits
of other languages, and he is presently creating his own
universal language, alphabet and numerical system.
At a young age, Whitney
began his first career as a professional dancer which later
included shows
such as the popular "Fame," the campy "Dance
Fever" and "Star Search," and the unforgettable "Chippendales," where
he danced for a number of years during the '80s. At 17, Whitney
was awarded an appointment to the U.S. Coast Guard Academy,
where, as a cadet, he joined both the cheerleading squad
and the gymnastics team. He left the Academy for Arizona
State University with a full scholarship in economics, where
he joined that cheerleading squad and became president of
a fraternity. He also opened a dance studio, and competed
on numerous game shows, where, as an undefeated CBS game
show contestant, he earned tens of thousands of dollars,
while writing two game show treatments—one of them
is the subject of his last film, "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY:
New York."
At 21, Whitney married the
tightrope walker from "Cirque Du Soleil." They met while she was
starring in "CATS," and they eventually became
dance partners. James then opened the largest store in Hollywood
called "Oscar's Wilde," where, as his customers
shopped, he and his wife walked the tightrope over the patrons'
heads, and performed routines on a trapeze he had mounted
20 feet in the air. Eight years later, they divorced.
Throughout the 90's, Whitney
served as Vice President at several Wall Street firms including
John
Hancock, and The Royal Bank of Canada. As a financial expert,
he has been featured in The New York Times’ Business
Day, and has been featured and on the cover of (to name a
few) Wall Street rags including Research Magazine, Registered
Representative and On Wall Street. Additionally, he has served
on the Goldman Sachs Fund’s Blue Chip Council, Munder
Fund’s Millenium Advisory Council, and Oppenheimer
Fund’s Executive Council, where he has received countless
Awards. During this time, in that Whitney is also an accomplished
musician (saxophone, percussion, cello, piano) he wrote and
scored two musicals, "Yesterday's Tear" and "Hoods," wrote
and orchestrated dozens of songs, and scored two of his films, "Just,
Melvin" and "TheWorkingGirl.com." Additionally,
he wrote the theme song to his film, "Telling Nicholas," and
the lyrics for his last two movies, "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY:
New York" and "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY: Hollywood."
"Just, Melvin" (JustMelvin.com)
was Whitney's directorial debut, premiering at the Sundance
Film Festival 2000. His film won the "Best Documentary
Award" at numerous film festivals across the country
and was nominated for the 'Independent Spirit Award' in 2001.
After playing theatrically in New York City and Los Angeles,
HBO purchased the US broadcast rights for "Just, Melvin." April,
2001, the world broadcast premiere of Whitney's first film
aired following HBO's "The Sopranos," and his movie
was broadcast into the living rooms of nearly 10 million
homes. "Just, Melvin" continues to air on HBO,
and it continues to debut on television and in theaters around
the world from Australia, Sweden and Israel to Canada, Holland
and England, where it was one of only ten films chosen by
the British Film Institute to tour the United Kingdom after
premiering at the National Theatre in London. Whitney qualified
for Academy Award consideration in 2001, and Emmy Award consideration
in 2002.
James now lives in Tribeca,
a neighborhood in Manhattan, only a few blocks from where
the Twin Towers
once stood. When the World Trade Center was attacked, he
filmed in horror as he watched more than two dozen people
jump from the Twin Towers to their deaths, and as both of
the towers collapsed. After running from the debris cloud
that forced Whitney from his home, he filmed the events that
followed the Attack on America for the next 10 days, focusing
on one story in particular--the mother of a 7-year-old boy
named Nicholas was in Tower Two when it collapsed, and her
family was certain that she was simply lost and would eventually
find her way home. It took Nicholas' dad 10 days to tell
his son that his mother is dead. In May, 2002, only days
after The Museum of Television and Radio held a Special Screening
for Whitney's film that had already been featured on "Oprah," a
film that TIME Magazine described as "Wrenching, cathartic
and even funny...but not easy to watch!," the world
premiere of "Telling Nicholas" (TellingNicholas.com)
debuted following "Six Feet Under" on HBO. Additionally,
like "Just, Melvin," HBO continues to broadcast "Telling
Nicholas," and the movie has played theatrically in
San Francisco, New York City, and Los Angeles where it was
part of the Academy Award's Special Presentation Series.
In 2002, Whitney once again qualified for Academy Award consideration,
and in 2003, he won the Emmy Award.
James is currently completing
production on another film, "TheWorkingGirl.com," about
his friend, Sharon, who is the mother of 5-year-old Jake.
Struggling and single, in order to make ends meet, Sharon
decided to enter the cyber-sex industry. The movie and its
Web site, TheWorkingGirl.com, chronicle Whitney's journey
through this world of cyber-sex in an attempt to help his
friend make her business venture a success, while simultaneously
addressing the issue of moms doing porn. Of the film, Rex
Reed remarked "These are not your grandmother's working
girls. Sad, funny, provocative, informative, energetic, and
in your face! This remarkable film is all of this and more.
The only thing it isn't... is boring. You won't find this
stuff in the pages of Cosmo."
Whitney's latest film (part
two of a planned feature-film trilogy) "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY: Hollywood" is
currently in post-production. In 2003, Whitney completed
part one of this series called, "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY New
York," (GamesPeoplePlayNewYork.com) which premiered
in Las Vegas last June to sold out audiences at the CineVegas
International Film Festival 2003. Whitney then had a special
screening on the 20th Century FOX studio lot in July, where
it ultimately got picked up for distribution. March ‘04
marked the theatrical premiere of "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY:
New York." That weekend, indieWIRE reported that, "Whitney's
risqué feature seduced it's way to #1...grabbing the
throne from Mel Gibson's 'PASSION OF THE CHRIST,' which had
reigned for two weekends." In fact, during the theatrical
run of "GAMES," which played in America's top10
movie markets, the reality movie became #1 at the box office
for a second time after Ebert & Roeper featured it on
their television show giving it a THUMBS UP! Roger Ebert
called the film "Compulsively watchable!" and Rex
Reed remarked that "...GAMES PEOPLE PLAY is from a very
original director--grounded in the fast-track pulse of now,
but so fresh, moving, outrageous and smart it's unlike anything
you've seen before, with enough shocks and constant surprises
to knock you right out of your shoes!"
As a filmmaker, Whitney
has been featured on every major network, including (to
name a few) "Oprah," "The
Howard Stern Show, NBC’s "Celebrity Justice," "VH1," "Starz/Encore," "HBO," "CNN's
Anderson Cooper," "Inside Edition," "CNN's
Showbiz," "MSNBC," "NY1," "Fox & Friends," "The
Jenny Jones Show," "CNNfn," and ABC's "The
View." And on April 7, 2001, Roger Ebert featured "Just,
Melvin" on "Ebert & Roeper And The Movies," calling
the film "One of the angriest, most painful documentaries
I have ever seen--and it's one of the best... you have never
seen anything like it... THUMBS UP!" Additionally he
has been featured in (to name a few) Newsweek, Entertainment
Weekly, Premiere Magazine, New York Magazine, Variety, Hollywood
Reporter, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Time
Out Magazine, The Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle,
New York Post, Details Magazine, Newsday, Village Voice,
TV Guide, Daily News, and TIME Magazine.
After winning the Emmy,
Whitney was selected by the National Television Academy
to join their Blue Ribbon
Panel of judges for the 2004 Emmy Awards. He is currently
in pre-production with the third film in his "GAMES" trilogy, "GAMES
PEOPLE PLAY: The Bible Belt.”
Six months after the first
film in the GAMES PEOPLE PLAY trilogy hit theaters nationally,
VH1 contracted
Whitney to turn GAMES PEOPLE PLAY into a one-hour, weekly,
series. The first installment of that series goes into production
in March of 2005—a series many are calling the most
twisted game that will ever be broadcast on national television
www.JamesRonaldWhitney.com
FILMOGRAPHY
James Ronald Whitney
"JUST, MELVIN" [USA
2000]
• Sundance Film Festival 2000: "Official Premiere"
• Independent Spirit Awards 2001: "Official Nominee"
• IFP/WEST [Special Screening, Los Angeles, 2001]
• Vancouver International Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• Santa Barbara International Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary
Award"
• South Beach Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• Newport Beach Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• South by Southwest Film Festival 2000: "Runner-Up Best Documentary
Award"
• The National Film Board of Canada 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• Art of Courage Award Winner 2001
• International Premieres: England, Canada, Australia, Sweden, Holland,
Israel, Etc.
• HBO: "National Broadcast Premiere" [April, 2001]
• Qualified for both Emmy Award and Academy Award consideration
"TELLING NICHOLAS" [USA
2001]
• New York City [Theatrical Premiere, November, 2001]
• Tribeca Film Festival [May, 2002]
• Double-Take Documentary Film Festival [April, 2002]
• Museum of Television & Radio [Special Screening, May, 2002]
• HBO "Official National Broadcast Premiere" [May, 2002]
• San Francisco [Theatrical Premiere, August, 2002]
• Los Angeles [Theatrical Premiere, October, 2003]
• Academy Award Series Special Presentation [October, 2003]
• EMMY AWARD Winner [2003]
"THE WORKING GIRL.com" [USA
scheduled for completion in 2004]
"GAMES PEOPLE PLAY:
Hollywood" [USA currently in post-production]
"GAMES PEOPLE
PLAY: New York" [USA 2003]
• CineVegas International Film Festival 2003: "Official Premiere" [June,
2003]
• 20th Century FOX Studio Special Presentation [July, 2003]
• New York City Theatrical Premiere [Opened March 12, 2004]
• Los Angeles Theatrical Premiere [Opened March 19, 2004]
• Philadelphia Theatrical Premiere [Opened March 26, 2004]
• San Francisco Theatrical Premiere [Opened April 2, 2004]
• Washinton DC Theatrical Premier [Opened April 9, 2004]
• Chicago Theatrical Premiere [Opened April 16, 2004]
• Detroit Theatrical Premier [Opened April 23, 2004]
• Boston Theatrical Premier [Opened May 7, 2004]
• Atlanta Theatrical Premier [Opened May 14, 2004]
• Dallas Theatrical Premier [Opened May 14, 2004]
• Missouri Theatrical Premier [Opened June 11, 2004]
• Pittsburgh Theatrical Premier [Opened June 12, 2004]
FILM AWARDS
• Independent Spirit Awards 2001: "Official Nominee"
• Vancouver International Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• Santa Barbara International Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary
Award"
• South Beach Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• Newport Beach Film Festival 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• South by Southwest Film Festival 2000: "Runner-Up Best Documentary
Award"
• Prism Award Winner 2002
• Art of Courage Award Winner 2001
• Freddie Award Winner 2002
• The National Film Board of Canada 2000: "Best Documentary Award"
• 2003 EMMY AWARD WINNER
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