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Jack Fisk (born December 19, 1945) is an American production designer and director. As a production designer, he is known for his collaborations with Terrence Malick , designing all of his first eight films including Badlands (1973), Days of Heaven (1978), The Thin Red Line (1998), and The Tree of Life (2011).
Raggedy Man is a 1981 American drama film based on William D. Wittliff and Sara Clark's 1979 novel, and directed by Jack Fisk. [1] It follows a divorced mother and telephone switchboard operator (Sissy Spacek) living with her two sons in a small town during World War II.
Starring Jack Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Jeanne Bates, Judith Anna Roberts, Laurel Near, and Jack Fisk, it tells the story of a man (Nance) who is left to care for his grossly deformed child in a desolate industrial landscape. Eraserhead was produced with the assistance of the American Film Institute (AFI) during Lynch's time studying there.
Spacek married production designer and art director Jack Fisk in 1974, after they met on the set of Badlands. [9] They have two daughters: Schuyler Fisk, who was born on July 8, 1982, and Madison Fisk, who was born on September 21, 1988. [43] Schuyler has followed in her mother's footsteps as both an actress and a singer.
Jack Fisk, the legendary production designer, has been down a lot of roads in his life. Fisk, 78, has for half a century been building some of the most indelible homes and structures of movies.
Pages in category "Films directed by Jack Fisk" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D.
Fisk was born on July 8, 1982, in Los Angeles to actress Sissy Spacek and production designer Jack Fisk. She has a younger sister named Madison. [1] Fisk began acting in school plays as a child and progressed to acting in film roles. Her first part was playing a bumblebee in a community theatre production of Charlotte's Web.
It was directed by Jack Fisk. The movie is based on the 1962 biography of the same title by Hearst journalist Adela Rogers St. Johns. The book and the movie tell the story of her father, Los Angeles defense attorney Earl Rogers, upon whom Earl Stanley Gardner based the character Perry Mason. (The author is depicted under her middle name, "Nora.")