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DreamWorks SKG

Movie Studios
DreamWorks SKG

1000 Flower St.
Glendale, CA 91201
Phone 818-695-5000
Website www.dreamworks.com

The most exciting new studio in Hollywood doesn't yet have a studio lot to call its own.
DreamWorks SKG was born in October of 1994, the brainchild of a creative trio of industry giants: director Steven Spielberg, former Disney wunderkind Jeffrey Katzenberg, and record industry wiz David Geffen.
Spielberg, of course, is the most successful director in history, responsible for such blockbusters as "E.T.," "Jurassic Park," and "Schindler's List."
As Disney film chief, Katzenberg greenlighted many of the studio's biggest animated hits, including "The Lion King," "The Little Mermaid," "Aladdin," and "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?."
Geffen Records is one of the nation's largest recording labels.
The team started the new venture with over $2 billion in capital.

The first movie issued by the young studio, "The Peacemaker" (with George Clooney & Nicole Kidman) was not a big hit. But they quickly followed up with "Mouse Hunt" (with Nathan Lane), "Amistad" (with Morgan Freeman & Anthony Hopkins), "Small Soldiers" (with the voice of Tommy Lee Jones), "Paulie" (with Gena Rowlands, Cheech Marin, and Buddy Hackett), and "Deep Impact" (with Robert Duvall and Morgan Freeman).
But they didn't have their first blockbuster hit until they released "Saving Private Ryan" (with Tom Hanks) in 1998, critically acclaimed as the most realistic war movie ever made.
Subsequent films have included the Oscar-winning Best Picture of 1999, "American Beauty" (with Kevin Spacey), "Galaxy Quest" (with Tim Allen), "Forces of Nature" with Sandra Bullock & Ben Affleck, " "The Haunting" (with Liam Neeson), "What Lies Beneath" (with Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer), Robert Redford's "The Legend of Bagger Vance," with Matt Damon & Will Smith and the blockbuster "Gladiator" (starring Russell Crowe.)
More recent releases have included "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events" (with Jim Carrey), "Collateral" (with Tom Cruise), "Seabiscuit" (with Tobey Maguire), "House of Sand & Fog," "Win A Date with Tad Hamilton," "The Ring," "Catch Me If You Can" (with Leonardo DiCaprio), "The Time Machine," "Minority Report" (with Tom Cruise), "Road to Perdition" (with Tom Hanks), "A.I.: Artificial Intelligence," "Cast Away" and "Almost Famous."
Meanwhile, their animation department turned out their first major animated film, "Prince of Egypt," featuring the voices of Val Kilmer, Sandra Bullock, Danny Glover, Steve Martin, Michelle Pfeiffer, Mel Brooks, Patrick Stewart, Ralph Fiennes, Jeff Goldblum, and Martin Short.
Another (computer) animated effort, "Antz," included the voices of Woody Allen, Meryl Streep, Sylvester Stallone, Sharon Stone, Gene Hackman, Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin, Jennifer Lopez, John Mahoney and Christopher Walken. And they've since turned out another full-length animated epic: "Road to El Dorado," as well as the claymation hit "Chicken Run" (voiced by Mel Gibson.)
But the animation department really hit it big in 2001, when they released the spectacularly popular "Shrek", followed by its huge sequel "Shrek 2". Since then, they've also given us "Shark Tale".
On TV, DreamWorks has turned out such weekly shows as "Spin City" (originally starring Michael J. Fox), "Freaks & Geeks" and the less successful "High Incident" and "Ink." More recent TV series include "Las Vegas" and "Father of the Pride".
The company also runs DreamWorks Records and Dreamworks Games.
Yet they still don't have an actual studio.
DreamWorks was planning to build a state-of-the-art studio in the Playa Vista area on the west side of Los Angeles, on the site of the old Hughes Aircraft factory, near Marina Del Rey. It sounded spectacular on paper. The proposed studio would have resembled a 47-acre college campus built around an 8-acre lake, and featuring at least 8 (and perhaps as many as 18) film & TV sound stages (including some in the very hanger where Hughes built his famous Spruce Goose) One would have been the world's largest sound stage (at 42,500 feet.) All in all, they were talking about they're talking about building 1 1/2 million square feet of studio space, highlighted by cutting-edge technology.
The much larger Playa Vista masterplan (currently referred to as the "Entertainment, Media & Technology campus") called for an entire community to eventually be built at the 1,087-acre site - a "cultural center for the Westside," as Spielberg put it - including residential neighborhoods with 13,000 new homes, parks, retail stores, museums, churches, and schools.
However, progress on the project had been held up for years by environmental protesters who were concerned about preserving the area's wetlands. They finally inked the deal in November of 1998, buying the 47 acres outright for $20 million. Construction was supposed to start in 2000, and at least some of the facilities should have been open by mid-2001.
But on July 1, 1999, DreamWorks announced that they were pulling out of the project, citing financial reasons. Whether they will build their studio somewhere else is yet to be decided.
(The new DreamWorks studio would have been the first new studio built in the Los Angeles area in 70 years - since Warner Bros built their Burbank studio. But they were beaten to the punch by the new Manhattan Beach Studios, a project which opened in mid-1998 about ten miles to the south of the DreamWorks site.)
In the meanwhile, DreamWorks is working out of offices and soundstages at Universal Studios (where Spielberg's Amblin offices were located), as well as a skyscraper next to Universal.
Oddly enough, DreamWorks already has a working studio for its animation department! It's a rather spectacular looking building, located right next to Disney's Imagineering headquarters, at 1400 Flower Street, in Glendale.

In December of 2005, DreamWorks was purchased by Paramount Studios for $1.6 billion, effectively ending DreamWorks' 11-year run as an independent studio. DreamWorks was never able to produce enough films to cover the high cost of being their own distributors.

The move will allow Paramount to increase the number of films it releases each year. Spielberg will stay on as a director & producer and Geffen will be chairman. The two agreed to produce up to six movies this year. In addition, Paramount has the right to distribute DreamWork's future animated features. To pay for the purchase, Paramount plans to sell DreamWorks' library of movie titles for as much as $1 billion.
Deals
NBC Universal Television Studio
Sponsors
Aardman Animations (Production Company)
Jason Hoffs Productions (Production Company)
ImageMovers (Production Company)
The Jinks/Cohen Company (Production Company)
Kurtzman/Orci (Production Company)
The Montecito Picture Company (Production Company)
Red Hour Films (Production Company)
Scamp Films (Production Company)
The Zanuck Company (Production Company)

Produces
Animation
Features
New Media
TV Series

Credits
Dreamer - Red-Eye - The Island - Madagascar - Shark Tale - Collateral - The Terminal - Anchorman - Almost Famous - American Beauty - A.I. - A Beautiful Mind - Catch Me If You Can - Cast Away - Euro Trip - Gladiator - Minority Report - Old School - The Ring 1&2 - Road to Perdition - Saving Private Ryan - Seabiscuit - Shrek 1&2 - Win a Date with Tad Hamilton - Surviving Christmas

Comments
New York office: 650 Madison Ave., 22nd Fl., New York, NY 10022, phone: 212-588-6229, fax: 212-588-6233; Universal City office: 100 Universal Plaza, Bldg. 5121, Universal City, CA 91608, phone: 818-733-6227, fax: 818-733-6228

Staff
David Geffen Co-Principal
Jeffrey Katzenberg Co-Principal
Steven Spielberg Co-Principal
Helene Hahn Consultant
Justin Falvey Co-Head, TV
Darryl Frank Co-Head, TV
Ann Daly Head, Feature Animation
Adam Goodman Head, Theatrical Production
David Beaubaire Theatrical Production
Michael Grillo Theatrical/Head, Physical Production
Marc Haimes Theatrical Production
Jeremy Kramer Theatrical Production
Andrea McCall Theatrical Production/Head, Story Department
Steven Molen Theatrical, Physical Production
Grey Rembert Theatrical Production
Mark Sourian Theatrical Production
Jonathan Berry Creative Executive, TV
Lisa Hamilton Feature Development, Literary (Universal City)
Sara Roby Feature Development, Literary (NY)
Marty Cohen Post Production
Ronni Coulter Head, Theatrical Business Affairs
Robert Stulberg Head, Theatrical Legal Affairs
Jack Bleck Theatrical & TV Business Affairs
Tim Connors Theatrical & TV Business Affairs
Brian Edwards General Counsel
Alison Lima Animation Business/Legal Affairs
Rich Shuter TV Business Affairs
A.J. Brandenstein Legal Affairs
Deborah Chiaramonte Legal Affairs
Lindsey Laughlin Legal Affairs

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