Alan Taylor (director)
Alan Taylor is an American television director, film director, screenwriter, and television producer. He is best known for his work on television series such as The Sopranos, Sex and the City, Mad Men, and Game of Thrones. He also directed films such as Palookaville, Thor: The Dark World, Terminator Genisys, and The Many Saints of Newark.
In 2007, Taylor won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for The Sopranos episode "Kennedy and Heidi". In 2008 and 2018, he was also nominated in the same category for the Mad Men episode "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" and the Game of Thrones episode "Beyond the Wall", respectively.
Early life
Taylor's father, James J. Taylor, was a private in the U.S. army translating for Voice of America, stationed in Yokohama, who subsequently held numerous jobs before becoming a videographer in Washington, D.C. Taylor's mother, Mimi Cazort, was curator emerita for the National Gallery of Canada. His sister is the indie rock musician Anna Domino.He spent part of his life in Manor Park, Ottawa, Canada, and attended Manor Park Public School and Lisgar Collegiate Institute high school. As part of the Communications Club at Lisgar, he acted in its production of The Mouse That Roared. He went on to major in history at the University of Toronto and then at New York City's Columbia University before transferring to New York University in his late 20s to study film under instructors including director Martin Scorsese.
Career
Taylor has directed for numerous programs on both network television and premium cable, most often on HBO.Taylor's early work on television include work on The Sopranos, Sex and the City, and The West Wing. Taylor joined the crew of the HBO western drama Deadwood as a director for the first season in 2004. Taylor directed the pilot episodes of Mad Men and Bored to Death as well as subsequent episodes of each. He joined the HBO series Game of Thrones, directing seven episodes including critically acclaimed season 1 episode "Baelor." He worked on a television adaptation of the Strugatsky brothers' 1971 science fiction novel Roadside Picnic for the WGN America network. Besides his television work, Taylor's early films include Palookaville, The Emperor's New Clothes, and Kill the Poor.
In the 2010s, Taylor began working on large budget blockbuster films. He was hired to direct Thor: The Dark World a superhero film and sequel to 2011's Thor. He was approached by Marvel producer Kevin Feige following director Patty Jenkins exit from the project and hoped he would inject a darker tone into the project after seeing Taylor's work on Game of Thrones. Taylor's next film was Terminator Genisys, a film that Taylor hoped to fix following his reading of the script, citing his love of the first two Terminator films. After directing nine episodes for the HBO series The Sopranos, Taylor was approached by show creator David Chase to return to direct the 2021 prequel film The Many Saints of Newark.
In August 2022, it was announced that Taylor was hired to direct multiple episodes of the second season of House of the Dragon. He notably directed the fictional Battle of Rook's Rest in "The Red Dragon and the Gold".
Personal life
Taylor currently lives in Tyler Hill, Pennsylvania. He has three children with award-winning makeup artist Nicki Ledermann.Directing filmography
Film| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
| 1990 | That Burning Question | Short film | ||
| 1995 | Palookaville | |||
| 2001 | The Emperor's New Clothes | |||
| 2003 | Kill the Poor | |||
| 2013 | Thor: The Dark World | |||
| 2015 | Terminator Genisys | |||
| 2021 | The Many Saints of Newark |
Television
- That Burning Question TV special
- Homicide: Life on the Street TV series
- *episode 1.07 "A Dog and Pony Show"
- *episode 4.03 "Autofocus"
- *episode 4.20 "The Wedding"
- *episode 5.08 "The True Test"
- *episode 6.01 "Blood Ties, Part 1"
- *episode 6.16 "Mercy"
- *episode 7.22 "Forgive Us Our Trespasses"
- Oz TV series
- *episode 1.06 "To Your Health"
- *episode 2.06 "Strange Bedfellows"
- Trinity TV series
- *episode 1.08 "Breaking In, Breaking Out, Breaking Up, Breaking Down"
- Sex and the City TV series
- *episode 2.09 "Old Dogs, New Dicks"
- *episode 2.14 "The Fuck Buddy"
- *episode 4.15 "Change of a Dress"
- *episode 4.16 "Ring a Ding-Ding"
- *episode 6.07 "The Post-it Always Sticks Twice"
- *episode 6.08 "The Catch"
- Now and Again TV series
- *episode 1.03 "Over Easy"
- The Sopranos TV series
- *episode 1.06 "Pax Soprana"
- *episode 4.10 "The Strong, Silent Type"
- *episode 5.02 "Rat Pack"
- *episode 6.04 "The Fleshy Part of the Thigh"
- *episode 6.09 "The Ride"
- *episode 6.12 "Kaisha"
- *episode 6.14 "Stage 5"
- *episode 6.18 "Kennedy and Heidi"
- *episode 6.20 "The Blue Comet"
- The West Wing TV series
- *episode 1.08 "Enemies"
- *episode 1.16 "20 Hours in L.A."
- Six Feet Under TV series
- *episode 2.08 "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year"
- Keen Eddie
- * episode 1.11 "Sticky Fingers"
- Carnivàle TV series
- *episode 2.07 "Damascus, NE"
- Deadwood TV series
- *episode 1.04 "Here Was a Man"
- *episode 2.04 "Requiem for a Gleet"
- Lost TV series
- *episode 2.04 "Everybody Hates Hugo"
- Rome TV series
- *episode 1.10 "Triumph"
- *episode 1.12 "Kalends of February"
- Big Love TV series
- *episode 1.05 "Affair"
- Mad Men TV series
- *episode 1.01 "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes"
- *episode 1.02 "Ladies Room"
- *episode 1.12 "Nixon vs. Kennedy"
- *episode 2.12 "The Mountain King"
- Boardwalk Empire TV series
- *episode 1.05 "Nights in Ballygran"
- Game of Thrones TV series
- *episode 1.09 "Baelor"
- *episode 1.10 "Fire and Blood"
- *episode 2.01 "The North Remembers"
- *episode 2.02 "The Night Lands"
- *episode 2.08 "The Prince of Winterfell"
- *episode 2.10 "Valar Morghulis"
- *episode 7.06 "Beyond the Wall"
- Electric Dreams TV series
- *episode 1.09 "Safe and Sound"
- Interview with the Vampire TV series
- *episode 1.01 "In Throes of Increasing Wonder..."
- *episode 1.02 "...After the Phantoms of Your Former Self"The Crowded Room TV Miniseries
- *episode 07 "The Crowded Room"
- House of the Dragon TV series
- *episode 2.01 "A Son for a Son"
- *episode 2.04 "The Red Dragon and the Gold"