Kevin Sullivan (producer)

Kevin Roderick Sullivan (born c. 1955) is a Canadian writer, director and producer of film and television programs. He is best known for detailed period movies such as the Anne of Green Gables series of films, his movie adaptation of Timothy Findley's novel The Piano Man's Daughter, feature films and TV-movies such as Under the Piano, Butterbox Babies, Sleeping Dogs Lie and the CBS mini-series Seasons of Love, as well as long-running television series such as Road to Avonlea and Wind at My Back.

Kevin Sullivan
Born
Kevin Roderick Sullivan

c. 1955 (age 68–69)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma materUniversity of Toronto (1979, B.S.)
OccupationPresident of Sullivan Entertainment Inc
Years active1979–present
SpouseTrudy Grant

Early life

edit

Sullivan began his film-making career at the early age of 24. His father, Glenn A. Sullivan, was a successful attorney and his uncle, Senator Joseph A. Sullivan, was a prominent doctor with a seat in the Canadian senate from 1957 to 1985. Kevin Sullivan did not follow in either of their footsteps.[1] His first foray into film-making was with a half-hour Hans Christian Andersen Christmas special, titled The Fir Tree (1979), of which he edited and also had a small acting role.[2] From there Sullivan wrote, produced and directed Krieghoff (1979), a widely acclaimed docu-drama in French and English on the life of the prominent German artist and illustrator of 19th century Quebec.[citation needed]

Sullivan graduated from the University of Toronto in 1979 with a Bachelor of Science in biology. That year, he founded Sullivan Films (later Sullivan Entertainment) with Trudy Grant[3][4] (to whom he is now married) and they created a successful international production and distribution company that has been operating for over thirty years.[citation needed]

Career

edit

In 1980 Sullivan wrote, produced, and directed Megan Carey (1980), a film about a young Irish immigrant indentured on a farm in 19th century Canada. His first feature film was The Wild Pony (1982), which he co-wrote, co-produced and directed, it became a turning point for Sullivan, having been the first feature-length movie to be made exclusively for pay-TV in Canada.[5]

In 1984 he purchased the rights to Anne of Green Gables, completing the screenplay for the four-hour miniseries in 1985 with co-writer Joe Wiesenfeld. Anne of Green Gables and its sequel were the highest rated dramatic productions to air in Canadian TV history.[6] Cinematic feature versions played in theatres in Japan for five years straight.[1] Anne of Green Gables has been studied in US film schools as a model of TV Drama with a wide appeal to a wide variety of viewers. Part of Anne of Green Gables' immense attraction was its rich look, featuring painstakingly recreated sets and detailed costumes that imbued it with a magical reality. That look, or a variation on its theme, has become the hallmark of every Sullivan production since.[7]

The success of Anne of Green Gables, starring Megan Follows, Richard Farnsworth and Colleen Dewhurst led to three sequels: Anne of Green Gables – The Sequel (1987 aka Anne of Avonlea – US release) starring Follows, Dewhurst and Wendy Hiller, Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story (1998) and most recently Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning (2009), starring Barbara Hershey and Shirley MacLaine. Sullivan penned all three sequel screenplays as well as the novel for Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning. An educational, animated series Anne of Green Gables: The Animated Series produced for PBS Kids and Road to Avonlea produced for CBC and Disney, were each successful spin offs from the Anne of Green Gables franchise.[8]

Set in early 1900s Prince Edward Island, Road to Avonlea was the most popular and most lucrative drama series in Canadian TV history.[9] Co-produced with a strong influence by Disney, Road to Avonlea was filmed on a 300-acre farm and in Sullivan's studio and back-lot in Toronto.[10] In recent years, Road to Avonlea fans from around the world have organized Avonlea Conventions (Avcon) in Toronto to meet with stars of the show, tour filming locations and celebrate their love of the show.[11]

With Wind at My Back, the 67 episode depression-era series produced as a follow-up to Road to Avonlea, Sullivan created an entire 1930s town on his company's 1.5 acre studio backlot, one of the largest in Canada, located at Sullivan Entertainment's 60,000 square foot studio and sound-stages in Toronto, which the company continues to operate. He has accumulated thousands of items of period costumes, sets and props ranging from the 1860s to the 1960s.[12]

Inspired by a lifelong interest in Baroque Architecture and the beauty of Mozart's hometown of Salzburg, in 2006 (the "Mozart-Jahre") Sullivan decided to create a contemporary, English-language feature film of the composer's classic opera The Magic Flute, entitled Magic Flute Diaries.[13] The film was a full-scale CGI production created like a variation of Sin City and 300 with elaborate studio green-screen production design. Special choreography sequences and backdrops were shot on location in palaces, monasteries and gardens in Austria and Germany.[14]

Sullivan produced a companion documentary to Magic Flute Diaries titled Mozart Decoded, which takes a historical look at Mozart's involvement with the Freemasons and his genius as a composer.[15] Sullivan productions have reportedly been viewed in more than 140 countries.[12]

Sullivan Entertainment's 1999 efforts to transition to a publicly traded company triggered a dispute with Lucy Maud Montgomery's heirs.[16] Its prospectus informed potential investors that its shows based on Montgomery's work had been profitable, generating $35.7 million CAD in 1997 alone. However Montgomery's heirs had been told two shows based on works Sullivan believed it had acquired dramatic rights to, had failed to turn a profit, so they sued. Sullivan counter-sued, for damage to his reputation, successfully providing evidence that the heirs of Montgomery had no reversionary copyright claims to the dramatic rights to the original novel they had sold him. The matter was eventually settled between the parties. Sullivan is a licensee of the Anne of Green Gables trademarks.[17][circular reference]

Sullivan is currently writing and producing an adaptation of Timothy Findley's Famous Last Words about the plot to kidnap the Duke and Duchess of Windsor in Lisbon in 1936, known as Operation Willi. He is also developing a film adaptation of "The Ballad of Blind Tom", based on the book by Deirdre O'Connell about the life of musical prodigy Blind Tom Wiggins.[18]

Books

edit

As a writer and art-enthusiast, Sullivan is the author of Beyond Green Gables, a behind-the-scenes look at the production design and inspiration for his films. Sullivan's Publishing Division, Davenport Press, has released over 50 books. These titles are available as hard books and ebooks. They include novels Anne of Green Gables ~ A New Beginning, a children's book series based on Anne of Green Gables: The Animated Series, and an assortment of specialty coffee table books.[19]

Other endeavors

edit

Sullivan Entertainment owns and operates a four-acre studio/backlot facility in Toronto which holds and rents an assortment of props, set pieces and costumes that were used in Sullivan productions.[citation needed]

Sullivan is also an art collector. This interest compelled him to produce the documentary Out of the Shadows. Narrated by Donald Sutherland, the documentary shows how new types of x-rays and digital imaging are allowing scientists to see beneath layers of paint to reveal and authenticate paintings by masters such as Rembrandt, Goya, Caravaggio and Van Gogh. Out of the Shadows closely follows the scientific journey of a group of material physicists and art historians during the attribution of Rembrandt's painting Old Man with a Beard at the Brookhaven National Synchrotron in Long Island, New York. The film premiered at The Metropolitan Museum in New York in June 2012.[20]

Awards and recognition

edit

Having produced over 500 hours of movies and television in his thirty-year career he has also won hundreds of international awards, including three Emmy Awards,[21] a Peabody Award for outstanding contribution to television, Gemini, Cable-Ace & Prix Jeunesse Awards.[citation needed]

List of awards

edit
  • George Foster Peabody Award
  • 3 Emmy Awards
  • 6 Emmy Award Nominations
  • 5 Gemini Awards
  • 8 Gemini Award Nominations
  • 3 CableACE Awards
  • 2 CableACE Nominations
  • Prix Jeunesse
  • TV Guide Parent's Choice Award
  • American TV Critics Award
  • 3 Golden Apple Awards from the National Educational Media Competition
  • 1 Ollie Award
  • European Jury Prize at the Umbriafiction TV Festival
  • Gold World Medal – New York Film Festival
  • Golden Gate Award
  • Gold Medal – New York International Film and Television Festival
  • ACT Award
  • Best Children's Production – Television Movie Awards[21]

Selected filmography

edit

Director

edit

Executive producer

edit

Screenwriter

edit

Kevin Sullivan's Anne Series

edit
  1. Anne of Green Gables – 1985
  2. Anne of Green Gables: The Sequel – 1987
  3. Anne of Green Gables: The Continuing Story – 2000
  4. Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning – 2008

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Sanati, Maryam (1 January 1999). "Biography of Kevin Sullivan". Toronto Life.
  2. ^ "The Fir Tree (1979) - Full cast and crew". IMDb. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  3. ^ "Sullivan Entertainment: Through the Years". www.anneofgreengables.com. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
  4. ^ "Academy Award-Winning Actress Shirley MacLaine joins the cast of CTV's Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning". CTV News. 23 October 2007. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009.
  5. ^ Allward, Suzanne (7 May 1983). "Megan Carey". TV Guide.
  6. ^ "CBC Archives".
  7. ^ Atherton, Tony (3 April 1999). "Anne of Green Gables". The Ottawa Citizen.
  8. ^ Brioux, Bill (December 2008). "Anne of Green Gables franchise/spinoffs". Starweek.
  9. ^ Newcomb, Horace (December 1996). Encyclopedia of Television. Routledge. ISBN 978-1579583941.
  10. ^ Knelman, Martin (March 1996). "Road to Avonlea". The Financial Post Magazine.
  11. ^ Marchand, Philip (31 July 2007). "Avcon". Toronto Star.
  12. ^ a b Atherton, Tony (6 January 1996). "Kevin Sullivan profile". The Ottawa Citizen.
  13. ^ "Magic Flute Diaries (2008)". IMDb. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  14. ^ Taylor, Kate (4 July 2006). "Mozart, by way of Sin City". Globe and Mail.
  15. ^ "Film delves into life of Mozart". Canada.com. 20 December 2008. Archived from the original on 16 May 2014. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
  16. ^ Gayle Macdonald (25 October 2003). "The red-haired girl goes to court". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 30 April 2020. It estimated earnings of $6.4-million for that fiscal year on revenue of $35.7-million. Those numbers stuck in the craw of Macdonald and Lucy Maud's granddaughter Kate Macdonald Butler, who had been informed in 1997 by Sullivan Entertainment that none of the programs had reported a net profit.
  17. ^ Anne of Green Gables (1985 film)#Lawsuits
  18. ^ Smith, R.J. (1 February 2009). "'The Ballad of Blind Tom, Slave Pianist: America's Lost Musical Genius'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 14 June 2023.
  19. ^ "Sullivan bibliography". Archived from the original on 8 April 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  20. ^ Dobrzynski, Judith H. (25 January 2012). "Old Man with a Beard". AJ Blog Central.
  21. ^ a b "Kevin Sullivan". IMDb. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  22. ^ John J. O'Connor (2 June 1989). "TV Weekend; A Coming-of-Age Film and Martin Short". New York Times.
edit