Bill Guttentag
Lecturer in Organizational Behavior
Email: [email protected]
Personal Homepage: https://faculty-gsb.stanford.edu/guttentag
Academic Areas: Organizational Behavior
Bill Guttentag has been teaching at the Stanford Graduate School of Business since 2001. He teaches a class on the film and television business to second-year MBA Students.
Bio
Bill Guttentag is a two-time Oscar-winning feature film and documentary writer-producer-director. Live!, a dramatic feature he wrote and directed starring Eva Mendes and Andre Braugher was produced by Chuck Roven/Mosaic Media Group. The film was distributed domestically by The Weinstein Company and its international distribution included Lionsgate (2008). He also wrote and directed Nanking, a theatrical documentary which premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and features Woody Harrelson, Mariel Hemingway, and Jürgen Prochnow. Nanking was distributed domestically by THINKFilm and internationally by Fortissimo Films.
Knife Fight (IFC/Myriad Pictures), a film he wrote and directed, starring Rob Lowe, Jamie Chung, Julie Bowen, Carrie-Ann Moss, Eric McCormack, and Jennifer Morrison premiered at the 2012 Tribeca Film festival and will be released at the beginning of 2013.
In 2003 Bill Guttentag won an Oscar for the documentary Twin Towers (Universal). He has also has received a second Oscar, three additional Oscar nominations, a Peabody Award, three Emmy Awards, two additional Emmy nominations, two Writers Guild Award nominations, a Producers Guild Award nomination, and a Robert Kennedy Journalism Award.
His films have been selected for the Sundance Film Festival three times, and have played and won awards at numerous American and international film festivals. They have also received a number of special screenings internationally and in the US, including at the White House.
Nanking won awards at a number of US and international film festivals (including Sundance and Hong Kong), had a national theatrical release, and later aired on Cinemax. Guttentag was nominated for a WGA award for the film, which was short-listed for an Academy Award, and won a Peabody Award and Emmy Award. Nanking’s international release included China, where it became the highest grossing theatrical documentary in Chinese history.
Soundtrack for a Revolution (Wild Bunch) had its international premiere at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival. The film was released theatrically by Area 23a, later aired on PBS. Guttentag was nominated for WGA and Producer’s Guild awards for the film, which also won awards at several international film festivals, and was short-listed for an Academy Award.
Bill Guttentag created and executive produced the NBC series Crime & Punishment , which ran for three seasons (2002-2004). The series was part of the Law & Order family of shows, and was created with Dick Wolf, who was also an executive producer. Over the series’ run, nearly every show was in the Nielsen top 20.
His first novel, Boulevard, was published by Pegasus Books/W.W. Norton in 2010 and the paperback version was published in May 2011. The French edition of the novel will be published by Éditions Gallimard next year. He recently co-wrote the non-fiction book, Masters of Disaster – The Ten Commandments of Damage Control with his Knife Fight partner Chris Lehane. The book will be published by Palgrave/Macmillan in December 2012.
Guttentag has directed films for HBO, ABC, CBS, Turner, and others. His films include The Cocaine War, an ABC News/Peter Jennings Reporting special on the drug war in South America and You Don't Have to Die, a film he made for HBO, for which he also won an Oscar.
Since 2001 he has been teaching a class on the film and television business at the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University.
Academic Degrees
BA, Univ. of Pennsylvania, 1979.; American Film Institute, Fellow, 1980; John S. Knight Fellow, Stanford, 1999
Professional Experience
At Stanford since 2001.
Executive Producer, Director: Crime & Punishment (NBC 2002-2004); Twin Towers (Universal, 2003); 1998-99; Assassinated: The Last Days of Kennedy and King, Turner Original Programming/CNN, 1998; Memphis PD: War on the Streets, HBO, 1995; The Cocaine War: Lost in Bolivia, ABC News, 1992; as well as a number of other documentary films made for HBO, ABC, CBS, and others.
Selected Publications
- Cameras in Camera: Wall Street Journal (Op-ed piece), 2003
Selected Cases
Awards and Honors
- Academy Award, Twin Towers, Documentary, 2003
- Emmy, 1998, National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
- Robert Kennedy Journalism Award, 1998
- Emmy, 1996, National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
- Academy Award, You Don't Have To Die, Documentary, 1988
Courses Taught
- GSBGEN 572: The Art of Damage Control
- OB 388: Leadership in the Entertainment Industry
Affiliations
- Member: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
In The Media
- Guttentag Wins Oscar
- Political Plotlines in Liberal Doses, New York Times
- 'Nanking' Documentary Honors Foreign Heroes, San Francisco Chronicle
- Giving Testimony on the Horror That Was Nanking, New York Times (Review)
- Nanking, New Yorker
- Twin Towers, New York Times (Editorial)
- Just the Reality, Your Honor, and Nothing but the Reality, New York Times
- Prime Time Crime, Newsweek
- Cameras in Camera, Wall Street Journal (Op-ed piece)
- Documentarian Makes His Case for Reality TV, San Francisco Chronicle