Dan Futterman
Daniel Paul Futterman (born June 8, 1967) is an American actor, screenwriter, and television producer.[1] After early stage work and a transition to film and television acting in the 1990s, he gained prominence for roles including Val Goldman, the son of a gay couple, in the comedy The Birdcage (1996) and Vincent Gray in the CBS legal drama Judging Amy (1999–2005).[2] Futterman received critical acclaim and an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay for Capote (2005), a biographical drama about author Truman Capote's research for In Cold Blood.[2] He later shifted focus to writing and producing, co-creating the Prime Video series American Rust (2021–2022), adapted from Philipp Meyer's novel, and contributing to shows such as In Treatment and Rectify.[3] A graduate of Columbia University, Futterman has balanced creative output across mediums while maintaining a relatively low public profile.[2]Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Dan Futterman was born on June 8, 1967, in Silver Spring, Maryland, to Stanley Futterman, a lawyer, and Linda (née Roth) Futterman, a psychoanalyst.[2][4] He grew up in an affluent household in Westchester County, New York, as one of three brothers in a family of Jewish heritage with roots in Eastern Europe, including Russia, Austria, Hungary, and Ukraine.[5][6] The family adhered to Conservative Judaism, and Futterman participated in traditional rites such as his bar mitzvah.[7] His older brother pursued a career as an attorney in New York, while his younger brother worked as a journalist in Bergen County, New Jersey.[5] Describing his upbringing in a 2007 interview, Futterman noted the intellectual environment of his home, which emphasized writing and similar pursuits among his siblings.[7] His parents, both graduates of Columbia University—his mother from Barnard College in 1962 and his father in 1961—offered consistent encouragement for his artistic interests despite their professional backgrounds in law and psychoanalysis.[2] This supportive dynamic contrasted with the more challenging circumstances often depicted in his later roles, reflecting a stable and privileged early life.[5]Academic pursuits and influences
Futterman attended Mamaroneck High School in New York, graduating in 1985, where he developed early interests in writing and theater. In a creative writing class led by teacher Duke Schirmer, he composed his first short stories, marking an initial foray into literary pursuits. His involvement in school theater productions, including classes shared with future collaborator Bennett Miller, further shaped his artistic inclinations, though these were extracurricular extensions of his academic environment.[8][9] At Columbia University, Futterman pursued a Bachelor of Arts in English literature, graduating in 1989. He engaged with the university's Core Curriculum, which profoundly influenced his intellectual development by emphasizing foundational texts in literature, philosophy, and science. Favorite courses included Edward Tayler's Shakespeare lectures and David Helfand's "Physics Without Mathematics," the latter briefly tempting him toward a physics major before he avoided the required calculus. Theater-related academics included classes with instructor Aaron Frankel and participation in the Columbia Players, where he explored experimental theater approaches. During this period, Futterman experimented with writing, producing what he later described as "horrendous poetry," which foreshadowed his later screenwriting career.[2][5] Post-graduation, Futterman contemplated a graduate degree in English at Columbia but opted for acting, reflecting a tension between rigorous academic training and practical artistic ambitions encouraged by his parents, who prioritized a liberal arts education over immediate vocational pursuits like those at NYU's theater program. A summer acting program at King's College London supplemented his formal studies, exposing him to professional theater techniques. These experiences collectively steered his transition from academic literature to narrative-driven professions in film and television.[2][10][5]Personal life
Marriage and professional partnerships
Futterman married television writer and producer Anya Epstein on September 23, 2000, after meeting her in 1998 when he guest-starred in an episode of Homicide: Life on the Street, a series for which she served as a writer and producer.[11][12] The couple has two children and resides in Park Slope, Brooklyn.[11][12] Epstein and Futterman have maintained a professional partnership alongside their marriage, collaborating on multiple projects as co-writers and showrunners.[13] Their joint work includes serving as showrunners for the 2014 Fox miniseries Gracepoint, an American adaptation of the British series Broadchurch.[13] They also co-wrote scripts for the third season of HBO's In Treatment (2010), with Futterman crediting Epstein's skills in their shared writing process.[3] Earlier collaborations encompass an original romantic comedy screenplay titled Finn at the Blue Line, set in the world of professional hockey, developed prior to production on Futterman's Capote script.[14][15]Family and privacy
Futterman married television writer and producer Anya Epstein on September 23, 2000.[11] [4] The couple has collaborated professionally on projects including the HBO series In Treatment and the Fox miniseries Gracepoint.[2] They have two daughters, Sylvie and Eve.[4] The younger daughter was born shortly before principal photography commenced on Futterman's film A Mighty Heart in 2006, requiring him to balance extensive location shooting in Pakistan and India with family responsibilities back home.[2] Futterman has consistently shielded his family from public scrutiny, emphasizing domestic priorities over Hollywood publicity during key career moments, such as skipping promotional events in favor of family time during the 2006 Academy Awards season for his Capote nomination.[2] He rarely discloses personal anecdotes involving his children in media appearances, reflecting a deliberate choice to compartmentalize his private life amid professional demands.[2] This approach aligns with his broader preference for the introspective solitude of writing over the exposure of acting.[2]Acting career
Initial roles and breakthrough
Futterman's acting career began on stage in 1991 with his debut in the off-Broadway production Club Soda at the WPA Theatre in New York City, a month-long run that marked his entry into professional theater.[16] That same year, he secured his first film role in The Fisher King, directed by Terry Gilliam and released on September 27, 1991, where he portrayed a minor character as a punk youth who threatens Jeff Bridges' homeless character.[17] These early appearances were small but provided initial exposure in both theater and cinema, building on his training at Columbia University and local stage work. In 1993, Futterman took on a more prominent stage role, succeeding Joe Mantello as Louis Ironson in the Broadway production of Tony Kushner's Angels in America: Perestroika, which ran from November 23, 1993, to December 4, 1994, at the Walter Kerr Theatre.[18] The character, a neurotic Jewish intellectual grappling with guilt and abandonment amid the AIDS crisis, allowed Futterman to demonstrate dramatic range in a Pulitzer Prize-winning play that addressed themes of politics, sexuality, and mortality in 1980s America.[19] This succession role, following the original cast's run, honed his skills in ensemble-driven, emotionally intense performances and elevated his profile within New York theater circles. Futterman's breakthrough came in 1996 with the role of Val Goldman in Mike Nichols' comedy The Birdcage, released on March 8, 1996, where he played the straight-identifying son of a gay Miami nightclub owner portrayed by Robin Williams.[20] The film, a remake of the French La Cage aux Folles, grossed over $185 million worldwide against a $30 million budget and showcased Futterman's ability to convey awkward sincerity amid farce, earning praise for his chemistry with co-stars including Nathan Lane and Gene Hackman.[21] This performance marked his transition to leading supporting roles in major studio films, distinguishing him from earlier bit parts and establishing him as a versatile young actor capable of blending humor with subtle emotional depth.[16]Key performances and transitions
Futterman's breakthrough in film came with the role of Val Goldman, the conservative son of a gay cabaret owner, in Mike Nichols' The Birdcage (1996), opposite Robin Williams and Nathan Lane, marking his transition from stage to mainstream cinema after Broadway appearances in Angels in America (1993) and A Fair Country (1996).[20][1] Subsequent film roles included the con artist Max in the British comedy Shooting Fish (1997) and the lead Charlie, a grieving gay man navigating urban alienation, in the independent drama Urbania (2000), showcasing his range in supporting and character-driven parts.[1] On television, he portrayed Maxine Boudreau's love interest and colleague Evan Maxwell in a recurring capacity on Judging Amy across multiple seasons from 1999 to 2005, providing steady exposure amid sporadic film work like the abusive husband Joe in Enough (2002).[20][16][1] A pivotal dramatic turn arrived in A Mighty Heart (2007), directed by Michael Winterbottom, where Futterman embodied Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, depicting the journalist's captivity and beheading by terrorists in Pakistan, a role drawn from Mariane Pearl's memoir.[1][22] By mid-2007, following nearly two decades of acting pursuits that yielded inconsistent leading opportunities, Futterman announced he was effectively retiring from on-screen work to prioritize screenwriting, citing greater creative satisfaction after his Academy Award-nominated Capote script (2005); subsequent appearances, such as investigative reporter Leo Wolinsky in Kill the Messenger (2014), were limited.[14][22][16]Writing career
Feature film screenplays
Futterman's screenwriting debut came with the 2005 biographical drama Capote, for which he penned the adapted screenplay based on Gerald Clarke's biography of the same name.[23] Directed by Bennett Miller, the film chronicles Truman Capote's investigation into the Clutter family murders in Kansas, leading to his book In Cold Blood. Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman in the title role, Capote premiered at the Telluride Film Festival on September 3, 2005, and was released theatrically on September 30, 2005, by Sony Pictures Classics.[24] Futterman's script earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay in 2006, though it lost to Brokeback Mountain; the film itself garnered five Oscar nods, including wins for Hoffman in Best Actor. In collaboration with E. Max Frye, Futterman co-wrote the screenplay for Foxcatcher (2014), another biographical drama directed by Miller. The film depicts the real-life story of millionaire John du Pont's sponsorship of Olympic wrestler Mark Schultz and the subsequent murder of Schultz's brother Dave, drawing from journalistic accounts and court records.[24] Featuring Steve Carell as du Pont, Channing Tatum as Mark Schultz, and Mark Ruffalo as Dave Schultz, it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 19, 2014, and received a wide U.S. release on November 14, 2014, via Sony Pictures Classics. The screenplay secured an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay in 2015, shared between Futterman and Frye, amid the film's five total nominations, including Carell for Best Actor.[24] Futterman contributed to revisions over several years after Frye's initial draft, focusing on character motivations and historical fidelity.[24]Television scripts and series development
Futterman co-showran the third season of HBO's In Treatment, which aired in 2010, collaborating with his wife Anya Epstein to write all 43 episodes centered on therapist Paul Weston's interactions with four new patients and his own supervision sessions.[25] The season explored psychological depth through serialized therapy dialogues, drawing from the Israeli series BeTipul while adapting to an American context with actors including Gabriel Byrne, Debra Winger, and Dane DeHaan.[25] In 2014, Futterman served as showrunner for Fox's ten-episode miniseries Gracepoint, an adaptation of the UK series Broadchurch, where he co-wrote multiple episodes with Epstein, including the second installment that advanced the investigation into a boy's murder in a coastal town.[13][26] The series, starring David Tennant and Nikole Kidman, deviated from the original by extending to ten episodes and altering key plot elements, such as introducing supernatural hints absent in the source material. Futterman created American Rust, a crime drama series on Amazon Prime Video adapted from Philipp Meyer's 2009 novel, which premiered its first season of nine episodes on September 12, 2021, following a steelworker's son implicated in murder amid Rust Belt decay.[27] He wrote key episodes and executive produced, with the series renewed for a second season titled Broken Justice that aired starting March 25, 2024, under his co-showrunning with Adam Rapp, emphasizing faster pacing and expanded character arcs like those of Grace Poe and Detective Del Harris, played by Maura Tierney and Jeff Daniels.[28][29] Futterman also created and showran Hulu's ten-episode miniseries The Looming Tower in 2018, chronicling the pre-9/11 intelligence failures between the FBI and CIA based on Lawrence Wright's book, with scripts he developed alongside Wright and Alex Gibney to highlight bureaucratic rivalries through figures like John O'Neill and Ali Soufan.[30] Earlier, in 2009, Futterman and Epstein entered development on "T", a half-hour HBO drama series about a trans man navigating transition and family dynamics, for which they were attached to write and executive produce following their In Treatment deal, though it did not proceed to production.[31]Producing career
Executive production credits
Futterman entered executive production with the 2005 biographical drama Capote, directed by Bennett Miller, where he served alongside Philip Seymour Hoffman as one of the film's executive producers while also authoring the screenplay adapted from Gerald Clarke's biography.[32] The project, released by Sony Pictures Classics on September 30, 2005, earned critical acclaim and five Academy Award nominations, including for Best Picture.[33] In television, Futterman acted as executive producer for the third season of HBO's In Treatment in 2010, collaborating with his wife and writing partner Anya Epstein to oversee production of the psychological drama series, which featured guest stars including Amy Ryan, Debra Winger, and Dane DeHaan.[34] He managed day-to-day operations and contributed to scripting seven episodes.[35] The season aired from October 25 to December 6, 2010, focusing on therapist Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne) navigating complex patient dynamics.[16] Futterman executive produced the 2014 Fox limited series Gracepoint, an American adaptation of the British series Broadchurch, serving as showrunner for all 10 episodes that premiered on October 2, 2014.[36] Starring David Tennant and Nikole Kidman, the series investigated a small-town murder, diverging from the original by altering the narrative resolution and extending the episode count.[13] He emphasized authentic American accents and setting adaptations in interviews, produced by Shine America.[37] For Hulu's 2018 miniseries The Looming Tower, Futterman co-created and executive produced the 10-episode drama based on Lawrence Wright's Pulitzer Prize-winning book, chronicling pre-9/11 intelligence failures, with episodes airing from February 28 to April 18, 2018.[38] Drawing from Wright's reporting, the series starred Jeff Daniels and Alec Baldwin, earning three Emmy nominations.[39] Futterman contributed to writing and production oversight with producers Alex Gibney and Craig Zisk.[3] Futterman created and executive produced Showtime's American Rust (later Amazon Prime Video for season 2 as Broken Justice), serving as showrunner for the 2021–2024 crime drama adapted from Philipp Meyer's novel, with 19 episodes across two seasons starring Jeff Daniels and Maura Tierney.[1] Season 1 premiered September 12, 2021, exploring economic decay in a Pennsylvania steel town, while season 2 addressed justice system flaws.[40] Filming occurred in Pittsburgh, reflecting the Rust Belt setting.[28]Showrunning and creative oversight
Futterman served as co-showrunner on the Fox limited series Gracepoint, which premiered on October 2, 2014, alongside his wife and writing partner Anya Epstein.[13] The series adapted the British program Broadchurch, relocating its coastal English setting to the fictional California town of Gracepoint while altering key plot elements, such as the killer's identity and character motivations, to distinguish the remake.[37] Under Futterman's oversight, the production emphasized fidelity to the original's emotional core and pacing, with decisions like expanding investigative procedural aspects to suit American network television demands.[37] [13] In 2018, Futterman took lead showrunning duties on Hulu's The Looming Tower, a 10-episode miniseries adapted from Lawrence Wright's 2006 Pulitzer Prize-winning book of the same name.[41] As creator and executive producer, he directed the narrative's focus on the pre-9/11 intelligence failures between the FBI and CIA, drawing from over 600 interviews in Wright's source material to structure non-linear storytelling that highlighted bureaucratic rivalries and missed warnings.[42] Futterman's creative choices included centering Muslim-American FBI agent Ali Soufan as a protagonist to counter stereotypical portrayals, while ensuring dramatic tension arose from verified historical events rather than invention.[43] Futterman created and showran Showtime's American Rust, which debuted on September 12, 2021, adapting Philipp Meyer's 2009 novel about economic decline in a Rust Belt steel town.[40] His oversight involved selecting Western Pennsylvania locations for authenticity, including filming in Braddock and Pittsburgh, to evoke the novel's Buell setting.[40] While using the book as a foundation for character arcs like police chief Del Harris's moral compromises, Futterman introduced original subplots and expanded ensemble dynamics to build serialized tension across episodes.[40] After cancellation post-season one, the series revived on Amazon Prime Video for a second season in March 2024, with Futterman co-showrunning alongside Adam Rapp, who shifted narrative emphasis toward faster-paced legal and familial conflicts.[44]Recognition and impact
Awards and nominations
Futterman's screenwriting garnered significant acclaim, particularly for Capote (2005), for which he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 78th ceremony on March 5, 2006. He also won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay and the Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay for the same work.[2] [45] For Foxcatcher (2014), co-written with E. Max Frye, Futterman shared an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay at the 87th ceremony on February 22, 2015, as well as a Writers Guild of America nomination for Best Original Screenplay. [24] In acting, Futterman contributed to the ensemble cast recognized with a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture for The Birdcage (1996) in 1997.[46]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Screen Actors Guild Award | Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture | The Birdcage (ensemble) | Won[47] |
| 2006 | Academy Award | Best Adapted Screenplay | Capote | Nominated |
| 2006 | Independent Spirit Award | Best Screenplay | Capote | Won[45] |
| 2006 | Boston Society of Film Critics Award | Best Screenplay | Capote | Won[2] |
| 2015 | Academy Award | Best Original Screenplay (shared with E. Max Frye) | Foxcatcher | Nominated |
| 2015 | Writers Guild of America Award | Best Original Screenplay (shared with E. Max Frye) | Foxcatcher | Nominated[24] |