Andrew Napier was born and raised in Wisconsin and attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Andrew Napier
Born
Wisconsin, United States
NationalityAmerican
OccupationFilm producer

In 2009, after working on Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds in Berlin, Germany, he moved to Los Angeles. Andrew was a producer of the 2013 Academy Award®- winning short film Curfew,[1] and later edited its feature adaptation Before I Disappear (SXSW 2014 Audience Award Winner).[2]

His screenplay for Dogtooth, a remake of the Academy Award®-nominated Greek foreign film, is in development at Mandalay Pictures. Andrew directed the feature documentary Mad As Hell (Hot Docs 2014 Conscious Media Award Winner), which follows Cenk Uygur, whose online news show The Young Turks has amassed over two billion views on YouTube. He also directed the narrative short Grandma's Not A Toaster (Tribeca 2013) and the documentary Mary and Bill (Wisconsin Film Festival 2011 Best Documentary, and nominated at the International Film Festival of Wales[3]). Andrew produced and edited The Past is a Grotesque Animal (2014), a documentary about the band "of Montreal," released by Oscilloscope Laboratories, and "Bounce: How the Ball Taught the World to Play." Napier co-produced the romantic comedy Lust For Love (2014), starring Fran Kranz and Dichen Lachman. He served as an executive producer for the documentary The Culture High, and the dark comedies The Lord of Catan starring Amy Acker, and "Limbo" starring H. Jon Benjamin.

References

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  1. ^ "The 85th Academy Awards | 2013". Retrieved 2016-06-26.
  2. ^ Christensen, Shawn (2014-11-28), Before I Disappear, retrieved 2016-06-26
  3. ^ "The Film Festival Guild | IFFW 2011". Film Festival Guild. Retrieved 2023-03-22.
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