- Born
- Died
- Birth nameKevin Noel Clark
- Height1.88 m
- Kevin Jarre was born on August 6, 1954 in Detroit, Michigan, to actress Laura Devon and her second husband, Cleland B. Clark, a photographic illustrator who had combined ranching and fashion photography, and was a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association. After his parents divorced, he lived in Wyoming for a time with his father, whom he referred to as Hemingwayesque. He later went to Los Angeles to live with his mother.
Jarre had gotten small acting parts in the television series "Flipper", which starred Brian Kelly, to whom his mother was married to at that time. She subsequently would divorce Kelly, and later get married to French composer Maurice Jarre, who adopted Kevin.
Initially wanting to become an actor, Jarre was encouraged to try screenwriting. He began writing scripts, his big break came when he was hired to write the story for what would eventually become "Rambo: First Blood Part II" starring Sylvester Stallone. He then worked on "The Tracker", a period Western for HBO starring Kris Kristofferson and directed by John Guillermin. He then wrote the screenplay for the critically acclaimed historical war drama, "Glory" about the 54th Massachusetts regiment, which would go on to win three Oscars. Jarre would get both a Golden Globe nomination for Best Screenplay, and a WGA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
By 1990, two more scripts were written and acquired by producer Larry Gordon: "Judgment Night"(which was later rewritten and released in 1993) and "The Devil's Own"(which was also rewritten and later released in 1997). In early 1991, after his adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula was cancelled, Jarre began work on a script, "Tombstone": his retelling of the O.K. Corral gunfight and the events that followed, it was to have been his directorial debut, however, about a month into production, Jarre had been dismissed from the project and was replaced by George P. Cosmatos. With the exception of the scenes featuring Charlton Heston, and an insert of the food-laden wedding table in the opening scene, most of the footage that Jarre had filmed while he was director was either re-shot, or left on the cutting room floor.
Jarre continued to work, he spent the rest of his career as a uncredited script doctor, working on many films, such as the 1997 film "The Jackal", and earning a few producer credits.
In addition to being a writer and director, Jarre also had a few acting credits, he had appeared in the 1985 short film "A Hero of Our Time", directed by Michael Almereyda and was based on Mikhail Lermontov's novel of the same title, He also appeared in the 1988 thriller film "Gotham", directed by Lloyd Fonvielle, with whom Jarre would later collaborate with on the 1999 remake of "The Mummy". He also played a bit part in "Glory" as a quarrelsome soldier who picks a fight and later, as the 54th regiment heads for battle, yells, "Give 'em hell, 54th!"
He was a mentor and booster to many aspiring writers and directors, including his lovely cousin Abigail, for whom he appeared in her 2009 short film "She Found Them on the Train Tracks".
Jarre died in Santa Monica on April 3, 2011, at the age of 56.- IMDb Mini Biography By: F.J. Trescothik
- Parents
- RelativesJean-Michel Jarre(Half Sibling)Stéphanie Jarre(Half Sibling)
- Always wore his Perfecto motorcycle jacket.
- Began directing Tombstone (1993) from his own screenplay but was replaced by George P. Cosmatos. Jarre's scenes featuring Charlton Heston are still featured in the finished film.
- He had a profound interest in history since childhood. He was especially fascinated by the American Civil War, which led to his in-depth research of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment which inspired his screenplay for Vinh Quang (1989).
- Son of actress Laura Devon. She married actor Brian Kelly, and, later film composer Maurice Jarre. Jarre adopted Kevin.
- Died on April 3, 2011 of heart failure. By coincidence, his mother also died of heart failure a few years earlier.
- In early 1991, Jarre had written a screenplay adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula for Universal, while he was in Romania and Transylvania scouting locations, he was informed that the studio had shelved his Dracula project, when Francis Ford Coppola announced that he was making his own version for Columbia. However, in a September 1999 interview with dvdreview.com, actor Arnold Vosloo mentioned that Jarre was writing a new draft of the screenplay, and that Vosloo was interested in playing the title character.
- [on writing Rambo 2: Sát Nhân Trở Lại (1985): I wrote the first draft of "Rambo". And I just did it, I was living on dog food at the time and I, you know, I needed a gig and I wanted to finish a spec script I was writing. And you know, they called, Stallone called me in and they had this idea about what they should do in the sequel to "First Blood" and I said, "Well, how about if maybe he searches for POWs in Southeast Asia and back in Vietnam? He said "Great, let's do it.
- [on David Lean advising him to take up screenwriting and directing: When we were talking during "Ryan's Daughter", I asked if he thought I ought to go to film school. He said no, I could learn all that in six months. I asked what I ought to do and he said, "Read!", Then he gave me Boswell's "Life of Johnson" and Alan Moorehead's "The Blue Nile" and "The White Nile". Amazing.
- Trưa Hè Nóng Bỏng (1952), Gary Cooper, how many people have ever been faced with some kind of terrible decision, and you know, they think of Gary Cooper, and that kind of puts starch in their backs, which is not to say, which is that to overvalue movies, I mean they're just movies, and you have to make decisions on your own, but still there's something about it, you can think back and say "Yeah, I was Gary Cooper", or "God, I should've been Gary Cooper".
- I think people want what I always wanted, which was something, not just escape, because escape only goes so far you have to face reality, but there's something that illuminates reality in some way.
- I knew about the 54th, I'd been a Civil War freak myself ever since I got some toy soldiers when I was a kid. Lincoln Kirstein's interest was deeper. It related to his whole philosophy about surrendering yourself to something bigger, some larger cause. He'd always wanted to make a movie about the 54th.
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