Film credits include: Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Graduate (Academy Award for Best Direction), Catch 22, Carnal Knowledge, Silkwood, Working Girl, Postcards From the Edge, Regarding Henry, The Birdcage, Primary Colors and Closer. He also directed two award-winning projects for HBO; Wit and the acclaimed mini-series Angels in America.
Mr. Nichols has received the George Abbott Award, the National Medal of Arts, the Kennedy Center Honor, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Directors Guild of America. He has also been honored by the Museum of Television and Radio and the Lincoln Center Film Society.
In the inaugural edition of THE HUFFINGTON POST, Director Mike Nichols wrote what follows:
"In directing a play or a movie-- whether a farce or a tragedy -- the problem to solve is really the same. There are the same questions. First of all why are we doing this? What`s our point? What are we telling? The audience says silently - so, now, why have you called us together? And you have to have an answer. The first thing I think you have to do is make clear that they are in good hands, they mustn't worry, we know what we are doing. The next question the audience asks is: why are you telling me this? And you have to have a good answer for that one. One answer is: because it's funny. Laughs are a good reason -- as we know daily from Jon Stewart. If that is not the answer in the theatre there is another: because it is your life.
I wonder lately whether our politicians don't have roughly the same requirements of them. When you think, for instance, of Barack Obama's speech at the Democratic Convention it met these requirements and continued with an eloquence based on both reality and metaphor, something we have not been hearing much.
"The play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king."
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