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Naked Photos of Todd Solondz are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

 

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Actresses who appeared with Todd Solondz on screen:

Selma Blair
Jennifer Jason-Leigh
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Franka Potente
Lara Flynn Boyle
Ellen Barkin
Heather Matarazzo
Molly Shannon
Mary Lynn Rajskub
Jane Adams
Camryn Manheim
Julie Hagerty
Christina Vidal
Cynthia Stevenson
Angela Goethals
Jennifer Elise Cox


Todd Solondz
Birthday: October 15, 1959

Birth Place: Newark, New Jersey, USA
Height: 5' 7"

Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Todd Solondz. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@actorsofhollywood.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

 

Biography

With Welcome to the Dollhouse (1995) and Happiness (1998), director Todd Solondz established himself as one of the most eloquent interpreters of suburban hell and general human dysfunction. Himself a product of the suburbs he portrays in his films, Solondz was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1960. Saddled with years of suburban experience and a decidedly unconventional appearance (one of his trademarks is the thick black glasses that distort his face), Solondz decided to funnel his energies into filmmaking and duly enrolled at New York University's film school.On the strength of a few film shorts he made while at NYU (including "How I Became a Leading Artistic Figure in New York City's East Village Cultural Landscape" for Saturday Night Live), Solondz was offered three-picture deals by two major Hollywood studios. Unfortunately, his first film, Fear, Anxiety and Depression (1989) failed miserably. Following this disappointment, Solondz dropped out of filmmaking for a while, opting to teach English to Russian immigrants. An arrangement with a lawyer friend who secured him funding for a low-budget effort brought Solondz back into filmmaking, and the result was Welcome to the Dollhouse. The bleak, unforgiving, and perversely hilarious tale of pubescent outcast Dawn "Wienerdog" Wiener (played expertly by Heather Matarazzo) was first shown at the Toronto Film Festival (after being rejected from several other prominent festivals), and then at the Sundance Film Festival, where it was awarded the festival's Grand Prize in 1996. Upon its general (arthouse) release, Dollhouse was greeted with a positive reception, although more than one critic had trouble with the film's punishing content.Welcome to the Dollhouse's critical controversies were overshadowed by Solondz's next effort, 1998's Happiness. A very, very black comedy that served up a heaping dose of suburban dysfunction, Happiness, in the words of producer Christine Vachon, was a "nonjudgmental film about a pedophile." One of its central plotlines—about a father who has an unnatural attraction to his young son's friends—caused sizable unhappiness among various critics and cultural watchdogs. However, the film also won considerable acclaim, premiering at the 1998 Cannes Festival to a positive reception and going on to establish Solondz further as one of the most original and provocative directors of his era.After all the fuss over Happiness, few doubted that Solandz's eagerly anticipated follow up woud be any less controversial - though just how controversial it actually turned out to be came as quite a surprise to many. Originally concieved as three tales of dysfunction as only Solandz could envision, controversy reared its ugly head early on when star James Van Der Beek's segment was cut for reasons that varied wildly depending on what source they came from. By the time the film did hit screens in 2002, it was divided into two segments - titled "Fiction" and "Non-Fiction." The first segment starring Selma Blair as a college student who has an sexual encounter with her African-American writing professor, the sordid scene nearly earned the film the dreaded "NC-17" before Solandz opted not to shy away, but actually draw attention to the MPAA's unique brand of censorship. By placing a large orange box over the offending scene instead o simply trimming it so that unsuspecting audiences might not have even noticed it was cut, Solandz polarized audiences into two camps. While some thought the director was courting controversy for no other reason than to sell tickets, others saw the act of self censorship as a cry to question the be-all-end-all authorty of the MPAA to dictate which films are acceptable for mass release and which aren't. It would come as no surprise that some touted Solandz as a cinematic genius while others saw the effort as little more than a poorly executed attempt at being controversial. Initial reports on Solandz's next picture - entitled Palindromes and scheduled for release in 2004 - made the film sound like something of an expansion the the dysfunctional family themes of the "Non-Fiction" segment of Storytelling.

Movie Credits
Palindromes (2004)
[ Richard Riehle ]
Storytelling (2001)
[ Paul Giamatti ][ John Goodman ][ Xander Berkeley ][ Leo Fitzpatrick ][ Elton John ]
Happiness (1998)
[ Philip Seymour Hoffman ][ Jon Lovitz ][ Dylan Baker ][ Jared Harris ][ Ben Gazzara ]
Welcome to the Dollhouse (1995)
[ Eric Mabius ][ Brendan Sexton III ][ Ken Leung ]
Fear, Anxiety & Depression (1989)
[ Stanley Tucci ]
Schatt's Last Shot (1985)

Trivia

  • Solondz went to Yale University, graduating in 1981.
  • Todd Solondz received Master's in film and television at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts program.
  • Is a vegetarian.
  • He worked as a messenger for the Writers Guild.
  • He accepted a job as a teacher of English as a second language to newly arrived Russian immigrants, an experience he has described as deeply rewarding.
  • He spent his entire life savings on making Palindromes (2004) because no studios would back it.

Naked Photos of Todd Solondz are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

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