Sam Mendes

Born in Berkshire to a Trinidadian Catholic father and an English Jewish mother, Mendes grew up in North London. He read English at Peterhouse at Cambridge University, and began directing plays there before joining Donmar Warehouse, which became a centre of 1990s London theatre culture. In theatre, he is known for his dark re-inventions of the stage musicals ''Cabaret'' (1993), ''Oliver!'' (1994), ''Company'' (1995), and ''Gypsy'' (2003).
He directed an original West End stage musical for the first time with ''Charlie and the Chocolate Factory'' (2013). For his work on the London stage, Mendes has received three Laurence Olivier Awards for ''Company'', ''Twelfth Night'' and ''The Ferryman'' and for his work on Broadway he has earned two Tony Awards for Best Direction of a Play for his work on ''The Ferryman'' in 2019, and ''The Lehman Trilogy'' in 2022.
In film, he made his directorial debut with the drama ''American Beauty'' (1999), which earned him the Academy Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Director. He has since directed the films ''Road to Perdition'' (2002), ''Jarhead'' (2005), ''Revolutionary Road'' (2008), and the James Bond films ''Skyfall'' (2012) and ''Spectre'' (2015). For the war film ''1917'' (2019), he received the BAFTA Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Director, as well as his second Academy Award nominations for Best Director, Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay.
Mendes is currently planning a set of four individual but interconnected films based on the lives of each of the members of the Beatles. Provided by Wikipedia
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