Jonathan Kaplan(I)
- Producer
- Director
- Actor
Jonathan Kaplan was born in Paris, France, to film composer
Sol Kaplan and actress
Frances Heflin (the sister of actor
Van Heflin and a regular on ABC's
soap opera
All My Children (1970). He
started his career as a child actor in the Broadway production of "The
Dark at the Top of the Stairs," directed by
Elia Kazan. He also performed as a child in
Elaine May's improvisational theatre,
and worked with Martin Ritt in "The
Molly Maguires" and 'Arthur Hiller (I)'
in "Plaza Suite." Kaplan earned his B.A. at the University of Chicago
and attended New York University's Film School, where he made a short
film entitled Stanley, Stanley (1965), which won the grand prize in the
National Student Film Festival. While at NYU Kaplan cut a film for PBS
and worked at the Fillmore East. He then received a call from
Roger Corman, who offered him a chance to
direct his first Hollywood film,
Night Call Nurses (1972).
Kaplan displayed sufficient resourcefulness on a severely restricted
budget to be given another Corman feature to direct,
The Student Teachers (1973).
He also directed The Slams (1973) for
Roger's producer brother, Gene Corman. His
next film, Truck Turner (1974)
starring Isaac Hayes, was one of the early
black exploitation films. Kaplan then directed
White Line Fever (1975) starring
Jan-Michael Vincent and
Kay Lenz, which went on to become one of
Columbia Pictures' successful films in 1975, and followed it with
Mr. Billion (1977) starring
Terence Hill. Kaplan's next film,
Over the Edge (1979) for which he
discovered Matt Dillon, encountered
distribution problems, and it was not until two years later, when the
film was shown in revival houses, that it received the critical
attention it deserved. Kaplan has also directed the television films
11th Victim (1979) starring
Bess Armstrong,
The Hustler of Muscle Beach (1980),
The Gentleman Bandit (1981)
and
Girls of the White Orchid (1983).
Heart Like a Wheel (1983),
starring Bonnie Bedelia and
Beau Bridges, opened to a warm
reception at the New York Film Festival. Since "Heart Like a Wheel,"
Kaplan has turned his talents toward directing music videos, including
Barbra Streisand's "Left in the Dark,"
Rod Stewart's "Infatuation" and
John Mellencamp's "Rain on the
Scarecrow," "Lonely Ole Night," "Smalltown" and "R.O.C.K. in the
U.S.A."