Matt Cimber
- Director
- Producer
- Writer
Writer, director and producer Matt Cimber was born as Matteo Ottaviano
in 1936 and began his career in the early 60s directing off-Broadway
plays including works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tennessee Williams and
the US premieres of the Jean Cocteau trilogy. During his theater years,
Cimber rewrote Burning Bright with
John Steinbeck which introduced
Sandy Dennis who went on to win an
Academy Award for
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
. Cimber then directed the Broadway revival of Bus Stop, where
he met future wife Jayne Mansfield. Matt
made his cinematic directorial debut with the offbeat
Single Room Furnished (1966),
which was also Mansfield's last movie. He followed this movie with the
film
The Sensually Liberated Female (1970)
which was based on a best-selling book The Sensuous Female by J.
As the screenwriter / director of this film, Cimber made a satire which
required the title be changed for release because the publisher
rescinded the rights. Cimber did three immensely enjoyable
blaxploitation pictures in the mid 70s:
The Black 6 (1973),
Lady Cocoa (1975) and the terrifically
trashy
The Candy Tangerine Man (1975)
which was also Samuel L. Jackson 's
favorite film. Matt made a rare foray into the horror genre with the
disturbing psychological shocker
The Witch Who Came from the Sea (1976).
His next work was based on a Mario Puzo
story, a World War II drama
A Time to Die (1982) starring
Rex Harrison. Later that year Matt
teamed up with Pia Zadora for two films: the
underrated Butterfly (1981) and the fun
Fake-Out (1982).
Butterfly (1981) was the master
filmmaker Orson Welles last film for which
he received one of the
film's three Golden Globe
nominations. The following year Matt joined forces with actress
Laurene Landon
for the delightful action/adventure romps
Hundra (1983) and
Yellow Hair and the Fortress of Gold (1984).
Quentin Tarantino is quoted as saying
Matt Cimber films were among his favorite. In the late 80s, Cimber
created and directed the successful TV series
GLOW: Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling (1986)
. The show was lasted for four seasons on 103 stations in the US. More
recent years of Cimber's work were dedicated to a documentary genre. He
wrote and directed "An American Icon: Coca-Cola, the Early Years"
(1997) and "The History of United Nations" (1996). He
created and wrote the eight-minute intro for visitors to the United
Nations for which he received a special commendation from the UN. After
a twenty years absence in motion picture production, Matt Cimber made a
comeback with the independent drama
Miriam (2006).