Michael Benjamin
Bay
Born: February 17, 1965
Height: 6'3"/1.9 meters
High School: Crossroads High
Undergraduate education: Wesleyan University Class of '86'
Graduate education: Pasadena Art Center College of Design
MICHAEL BAY (Director/Producer) is one of the film industry’s most successful action directors. He most recently helmed the futuristic action thriller “The Island,” starring Ewan McGregor and Scarlett
Johansson, which opens nationwide on July 22, 2005. Bay made his feature film directorial debut in 1995 on the action comedy hit “Bad Boys,” which established both Will Smith and Martin Lawrence as action stars and launched Bay’s hugely successful alliance with
producer Jerry Bruckheimer. The following year, Bay scored an even more impressive hit with the big-budget actioner “The Rock,” starring Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage and Ed Harris. The film wowed critics and audiences alike and took in more than $335 million
worldwide, becoming one of the mega hits of 1996.
Continuing to build on his own success, Bay reunited
with Bruckheimer to make “Armageddon,” based on a
story Bay conceived with writer Jonathan Hensleigh.
Starring Bruce Willis, Ben Affleck, Billy Bob Thornton
and Liv Tyler, “Armageddon” earned more than $550
million at the worldwide box office, making it the
top-grossing film of 1998 globally, and making Bay one
of the youngest directors ever to reach the
billion-dollar mark.
Bay next took on one of the most memorable events in
history when he directed the epic “Pearl Harbor,”
which he also produced with Bruckheimer. A sweeping
saga of love and war, the film starred Ben Affleck,
Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale, Jon Voight and Alec
Baldwin. “Pearl Harbor” became a hit with young
audiences and World War II veterans alike, going on to
gross $450 million. Today it stands as one of the
top-selling DVDs of all time.
More recently, Bay helmed “Bad Boys II,” which emerged
as one of the biggest hits of the highly competitive
summer of 2003, going on to gross more than $270
million at the worldwide box office. Reteaming Will
Smith and Martin Lawrence, the film also marked Bay’s
fifth collaboration with Bruckheimer.
A Los Angeles native, Bay graduated from the
prestigious film program at Wesleyan University, and
then studied at Pasadena’s Art Center College of
Design. He began his career making music videos,
earning praise for directing Donny Osmond’s musical
comeback video. Soon after, he was recruited by
Propaganda Films, where he directed award-winning
videos for such artists as Aerosmith, Tina Turner,
Meat Loaf, and the DiVinyls.
Segueing to commercials, Bay won a coveted Clio Award
for his first television ad, for the American Red
Cross. He went on to direct some of the most widely
seen and best remembered commercials in history,
including spots for Nike, Budweiser, Levi’s, Bugle Boy, Coca-Cola, Isuzu, Miller, Mercedes, and the latest provocative Victoria’s Secret campaigns. Perhaps his most honored ads—and among the most imitated—are from the “Got Milk?” commercial campaign, which Bay created. He won a Grand Prix Clio for Commercial of the Year for the “Got Milk?/Aaron Burr” spot, which was dubbed one of the top ten commercials of all time by USA Today and the History Channel. Bay also garnered the Museum of Modern Art Award for Best Campaign of the Year. By the age of 26, Bay had won every major directing prize for commercials, including
many Gold and Silver Lions at Cannes, and a Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement for Commercials.
Bay recently established his Platinum Dunes production banner, designed to create lower-budgeted film fare to help new directors break into movies. The first feature under the Platinum Dunes shingle was a re-imagining of the cult-hit horror film “The Texas
Chainsaw Massacre,” which Bay produced. The next effort from Platinum Dunes, also produced by Bay, was a remake of the horror classic “The Amityville Horror,” released earlier this year. Next up is “The Hitcher,” and there are four other films on Platinum
Dunes’ upcoming slate.
Bay also recently helped found a commercial and music video production entity, The Institute for the Development of Enhanced Perceptual Awareness, which represents several directors. |