Paul Trijbits: Difference between revisions
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Before joining the [[UK Film Council]], Paul Trijbits produced a number of feature films including [[Richard Stanley (film director)|Richard Stanley]]'s ''Hardware'' and [[Danny Cannon]]'s [[The Young Americans (film)|''The Young Americans'']]. Trijbits was a founder member and former co-chair of the New Producers Alliance (NPA).<ref>{{cite web|title=Bloody Sunday|url=http://filmhuisgouda.nl/bloodysunday.pdf|work={{ill|Filmhuis Gouda|nl}}|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724152050/http://www.filmhuisgouda.nl/bloodysunday.pdf|archivedate=24 July 2011|df=dmy-all}}</ref> He is currently CEO of FilmWave, the company he founded in 2012 with Christian Grass. |
Before joining the [[UK Film Council]], Paul Trijbits produced a number of feature films including [[Richard Stanley (film director)|Richard Stanley]]'s ''Hardware'' and [[Danny Cannon]]'s [[The Young Americans (film)|''The Young Americans'']]. Trijbits was a founder member and former co-chair of the New Producers Alliance (NPA).<ref>{{cite web|title=Bloody Sunday|url=http://filmhuisgouda.nl/bloodysunday.pdf|work={{ill|Filmhuis Gouda|nl}}|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724152050/http://www.filmhuisgouda.nl/bloodysunday.pdf|archivedate=24 July 2011|df=dmy-all}}</ref> He is currently CEO of FilmWave, the company he founded in 2012 with Christian Grass. |
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===UK FilmCouncil (2000–2006)=== |
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In 2000, Paul Trijbits was appointed Head of the New Cinema Fund at the [[UK Film Council]]. During his six-year tenure,<ref>{{cite web|title=Paul Trijbits – Executive Producer|url=http://www.londonswf.com/2010/speakers/paul-trijbits|work=[[London Screenwriters' Festival]] 2010}}</ref> key initiatives such as the Berlinale Talent Campus were launched and he supported films such as [[Bloody Sunday (TV film)|''Bloody Sunday'']] ''(Golden Bear, Berlin 2002), |
In 2000, Paul Trijbits was appointed Head of the New Cinema Fund at the [[UK Film Council]]. During his six-year tenure,<ref>{{cite web|title=Paul Trijbits – Executive Producer|url=http://www.londonswf.com/2010/speakers/paul-trijbits|work=[[London Screenwriters' Festival]] 2010}}</ref> key initiatives such as the Berlinale Talent Campus were launched and he supported films such as [[Bloody Sunday (TV film)|''Bloody Sunday'']] ''(Golden Bear, Berlin 2002), [[The Magdalene Sisters]] (Golden Lion, Venice 2002).'' In 2006, New Cinema Fund supported [[Ken Loach]]'s ''The [[The Wind That Shakes the Barley (film)|Wind that Shakes the Barley]]'' and [[Andrea Arnold]]'s ''[[Red Road (film)|Red Road]] won the Palme D'Or and the Prix du Jury in Cannes, respectively.'' |
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===Ruby Films (2007–2012)=== |
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In 2007, Trijbits joined [[Alison Owen]]'s production company Ruby Films.<ref name="focusfeatures">{{cite web|title=Paul Trijbits Bio|url=http://focusfeatures.com/jane_eyre/castncrew?member=paul_trijbits|work=Jane Eyre – A Focus Features Film}}</ref> Credits include [[Cary Fukunaga]]'s [[Jane Eyre (2011 film)|''Jane Eyre'']], starring [[Mia Wasikowska]], [[Michael Fassbender]] & [[Judi Dench]]; [[Stephen Frears]]' [[Tamara Drewe (film)|''Tamara Drewe'']], starring [[Gemma Arterton]]; and [[Disney]]'s ''[[Saving Mr. Banks]]'', starring [[Emma Thompson]] & [[Tom Hanks]]. He also executive produced [[Andrea Arnold]]'s [[Fish Tank (film)|''Fish Tank'']] (Prix de Jury, Cannes Film Festival 2006), [[Oliver Hirschbiegel]]'s ''[[Five Minutes of Heaven]]'' (Best Director & Screenplay Sundance Film Festival 2009); [[International Emmy Awards#International_Emmys|International Emmy]] award winning TV series [[Small Island (television drama)|''Small Island'']] based on [[Andrea Levy]]'s much praised novel, starring [[Naomie Harris]], [[David Oyelowo]], [[Benedict Cumberbatch]] & [[Ruth Wilson (actress)|Ruth Wilson]]; [[Stephen Poliakoff]]'s Golden Globe winner ''[[Dancing on the Edge (TV series)|Dancing On The Edge]]'', starring [[Helena Bonham Carter]], which had its gala premiere at the [[61st Berlin International Film Festival]]. |
In 2007, Trijbits joined [[Alison Owen]]'s production company Ruby Films.<ref name="focusfeatures">{{cite web|title=Paul Trijbits Bio|url=http://focusfeatures.com/jane_eyre/castncrew?member=paul_trijbits|work=Jane Eyre – A Focus Features Film}}</ref> Credits include [[Cary Fukunaga]]'s [[Jane Eyre (2011 film)|''Jane Eyre'']], starring [[Mia Wasikowska]], [[Michael Fassbender]] & [[Judi Dench]]; [[Stephen Frears]]' [[Tamara Drewe (film)|''Tamara Drewe'']], starring [[Gemma Arterton]]; and [[Disney]]'s ''[[Saving Mr. Banks]]'', starring [[Emma Thompson]] & [[Tom Hanks]]. He also executive produced [[Andrea Arnold]]'s [[Fish Tank (film)|''Fish Tank'']] (Prix de Jury, Cannes Film Festival 2006), [[Oliver Hirschbiegel]]'s ''[[Five Minutes of Heaven]]'' (Best Director & Screenplay Sundance Film Festival 2009); [[International Emmy Awards#International_Emmys|International Emmy]] award winning TV series [[Small Island (television drama)|''Small Island'']] based on [[Andrea Levy]]'s much praised novel, starring [[Naomie Harris]], [[David Oyelowo]], [[Benedict Cumberbatch]] & [[Ruth Wilson (actress)|Ruth Wilson]]; [[Stephen Poliakoff]]'s Golden Globe winner ''[[Dancing on the Edge (TV series)|Dancing On The Edge]]'', starring [[Helena Bonham Carter]], which had its gala premiere at the [[61st Berlin International Film Festival]]. |
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===FilmWave (2012–present)=== |
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With [[Anthony Bregman]]'s Likely Story, Trijbits co-produced ''[[Sing Street]]'', directed by [[John Carney (director)|John Carney]] (''[[Once (film)|Once]]'' & ''[[Begin Again (film)|Begin Again]]''), and ''[[Every Day (2018 film)|Every Day]]'' based on [[David Levithan]]'s YA novel for MGM. He also produced ''[[Alone in Berlin (film)|Alone in Berlin]],'' with Emma Thompson & Brendan Gleeson and Martin Koolhoven's ''[[Brimstone (2016 film)|Brimstone]]'' starring [[Guy Pearce]] & [[Dakota Fanning]]. He executive produced [[J.K. Rowling]]'s ''[[ The Casual Vacancy (miniseries)|The Casual Vacancy]] f''or the [[BBC]] and [[HBO]] and in 2020 he launched the Netflix Original Series ''[[The Letter for the King (TV series)|The Letter for the King]]'', based on his favourite book when growing up in Holland. |
With [[Anthony Bregman]]'s Likely Story, Trijbits co-produced ''[[Sing Street]]'', directed by [[John Carney (director)|John Carney]] (''[[Once (film)|Once]]'' & ''[[Begin Again (film)|Begin Again]]''), and ''[[Every Day (2018 film)|Every Day]]'' based on [[David Levithan]]'s YA novel for MGM. He also produced ''[[Alone in Berlin (film)|Alone in Berlin]],'' with Emma Thompson & Brendan Gleeson and Martin Koolhoven's ''[[Brimstone (2016 film)|Brimstone]]'' starring [[Guy Pearce]] & [[Dakota Fanning]]. He executive produced [[J.K. Rowling]]'s ''[[ The Casual Vacancy (miniseries)|The Casual Vacancy]] f''or the [[BBC]] and [[HBO]] and in 2020 he launched the Netflix Original Series ''[[The Letter for the King (TV series)|The Letter for the King]]'', based on his favourite book when growing up in Holland. |
Revision as of 02:58, 9 August 2023
Paul Trijbits is a Dutch-born film and television producer living in London, with his wife Patricia and children Jakob and Lea.
Career
Before joining the UK Film Council, Paul Trijbits produced a number of feature films including Richard Stanley's Hardware and Danny Cannon's The Young Americans. Trijbits was a founder member and former co-chair of the New Producers Alliance (NPA).[1] He is currently CEO of FilmWave, the company he founded in 2012 with Christian Grass.
UK FilmCouncil (2000–2006)
In 2000, Paul Trijbits was appointed Head of the New Cinema Fund at the UK Film Council. During his six-year tenure,[2] key initiatives such as the Berlinale Talent Campus were launched and he supported films such as Bloody Sunday (Golden Bear, Berlin 2002), The Magdalene Sisters (Golden Lion, Venice 2002). In 2006, New Cinema Fund supported Ken Loach's The Wind that Shakes the Barley and Andrea Arnold's Red Road won the Palme D'Or and the Prix du Jury in Cannes, respectively.
Ruby Films (2007–2012)
In 2007, Trijbits joined Alison Owen's production company Ruby Films.[3] Credits include Cary Fukunaga's Jane Eyre, starring Mia Wasikowska, Michael Fassbender & Judi Dench; Stephen Frears' Tamara Drewe, starring Gemma Arterton; and Disney's Saving Mr. Banks, starring Emma Thompson & Tom Hanks. He also executive produced Andrea Arnold's Fish Tank (Prix de Jury, Cannes Film Festival 2006), Oliver Hirschbiegel's Five Minutes of Heaven (Best Director & Screenplay Sundance Film Festival 2009); International Emmy award winning TV series Small Island based on Andrea Levy's much praised novel, starring Naomie Harris, David Oyelowo, Benedict Cumberbatch & Ruth Wilson; Stephen Poliakoff's Golden Globe winner Dancing On The Edge, starring Helena Bonham Carter, which had its gala premiere at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival.
FilmWave (2012–present)
With Anthony Bregman's Likely Story, Trijbits co-produced Sing Street, directed by John Carney (Once & Begin Again), and Every Day based on David Levithan's YA novel for MGM. He also produced Alone in Berlin, with Emma Thompson & Brendan Gleeson and Martin Koolhoven's Brimstone starring Guy Pearce & Dakota Fanning. He executive produced J.K. Rowling's The Casual Vacancy for the BBC and HBO and in 2020 he launched the Netflix Original Series The Letter for the King, based on his favourite book when growing up in Holland.
Filmography
Feature films
Year | Film | Role |
---|---|---|
1990 | Hardware | Producer |
1993 | Dust Devil | Executive producer |
1993 | The Young Americans | Producer |
1995 | Boston Kickout | Executive producer |
1997 | Roseanna's Grave | Producer |
2000 | Paranoid | Producer |
2001 | My Brother Tom | Executive producer |
2002 | Bloody Sunday | Executive producer |
2002 | This Is Not a Love Song | Executive producer |
2002 | Tomorrow La Scala! | Executive producer |
2002 | The Magdalene Sisters | Executive producer |
2002 | Noi Albinoi | Executive producer |
2003 | Bodysong (documentary) | Executive producer |
2003 | Intermission | Executive producer |
2003 | Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine (documentary) | Executive producer |
2003 | Touching the Void (documentary) | Executive producer |
2004 | In My Father's Den | Executive producer |
2004 | Yes | Executive producer |
2004 | Bullet Boy | Executive producer |
2005 | Shooting Dogs | Executive producer |
2005 | Pierrepoint | Executive producer |
2006 | The Wind That Shakes the Barley | Executive producer |
2006 | Red Road | Executive producer |
2006 | London to Brighton | Executive producer |
2006 | This Is England | Executive producer |
2007 | Brick Lane | Executive producer |
2007 | Nightwatching | Executive producer |
2008 | Five Minutes of Heaven | Executive producer |
2009 | Fish Tank | Executive producer |
2010 | Chatroom | Producer |
2010 | Tamara Drewe | Producer |
2010 | Toast | Executive producer |
2011 | Jane Eyre | Producer |
2012 | Lay the Favorite | Producer |
2013 | Saving Mr. Banks | Executive producer |
2016 | Alone in Berlin | Producer |
2016 | Sing Street | Co-Producer |
2016 | Brimstone | Co-Producer |
2018 | Every Day | Producer |
Short films
Year | Film | Role |
---|---|---|
1988 | Fear of Drowning | Producer |
1990 | Voice of the Moon (documentary) | Producer |
2002 | Ape | Executive producer |
2010 | Alice | Executive producer |
Television
Year | Programme | Role |
---|---|---|
2001 | Is Harry on the Boat? (TV movie) | Executive producer |
2003 | This Little Life (TV movie) | Co-Executive producer |
2008 | Bad Mother's Handbook (TV movie) | Executive producer |
2014 | The Casual Vacancy (TV series) | Executive producer |
2020 | The Letter for the King (TV series) | Executive producer |
References
- ^ "Bloody Sunday" (PDF). Filmhuis Gouda . Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2011.
- ^ "Paul Trijbits – Executive Producer". London Screenwriters' Festival 2010.
- ^ "Paul Trijbits Bio". Jane Eyre – A Focus Features Film.
External links
- Paul Trijbits at IMDb
- Paul Trijbits at the British Film Institute
- Ruby Film and Television