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JAY
RUSSELL
(Director/Executive producer) has distinguished himself as a filmmaker
and documentarian since 1985, when he earned his M.F.A., with honors
in screenwriting and directing, from Columbia University. Having
won filmmaking grants from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences and the Louis B. Mayer Foundation, Russell was invited
to attend the Sundance Institute Film Workshop to develop his project
"End of the Line." Written and directed by Russell, the
critically acclaimed film starred Wilford Brimley, Mary Steenburgen
and Kevin Bacon, and was released by Orion Classics. He also wrote
the screenplay for "The Black Cat," a segment of George
Romero and Dario Argentos "Two Evil Eyes."
Russell
directed the first music video for children, "Minnies
Street," produced by Walt Disney Records. He subsequently produced
and directed the Discovery Channel series "Amazing America"
as well as other documentary series and specials for NBC, CBS, Fox,
the Learning Channel, USA Network and others.
In
1995 he was asked to write, produce and direct two hours of a five-hour
miniseries for PBS on famous American highways, entitled "Great
Drives." His installments, "Highway 61 Revisited"
with Rock n Roll Hall of Famer Levon Helm and "Highway
93: The Killer Road" hosted by Graham Greene, premiered nationally
to exceptional reviews in 1996.
A native
of Little Rock, Arkansas, Russell at 19 directed a series of commercials
for the Arkansas Parks and Tourism Division under his boss, Gov.
Bill Clinton.
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