- Born
- Birth nameBrenda Feno
- Nickname
- Boss
- Height5′ 4″ (1.63 m)
- Born in an Army hospital in the state of Georgia, Jordan's father abandoned the family when she was only six weeks old. Her mother moved her brother and Jordan to southern California where, for the most part, she spent the rest of her life. She attended Hueneme High-school and, at 16, began waitressing as a carhop at a local A&W restaurant. She studied drama and wrote for her own pleasure, but her blue collar upbringing pushed thoughts of Show Business out of her head. She married a Navy man stationed at Point Mugu, California the before she graduated on the Honor Roll in June of 1974. Jordan and her husband had two children, Jason & Joshua - named for the lumberjack brothers from the television series, Here Come The Brides.
In 1981, Jordan went to college and as fate would have it, all the classes she was interested in were full. While browsing the catalog, she discovered a Film and Broadcasting class being offered and she jumped at the chance to take it. There she discovered her talents for directing and producing. While still in school, she began hiring out to businesses, up-and-coming rock bands, and radio stations, writing and directing films, music videos, commercials and industrial videos. She attended two years at San Jose City College before divorcing her husband and returning to Southern California in 1985.
She raised her sons on her own as a single mother and the family had very little as Jordan struggled to re-establish her career. Jordan's first book was published by Berkley Books in 1988 and she spent a year touring with her book. In December of 1990, Jordan wrote, directed and produced her first feature entitled, Clayton's Riders (1991) with the Christmas money her children gave her in lieu of getting presents. Five hundred dollars. Her sons joined her, working on set with the crew. They had already been bit by the acting bug ever since she used them during her school assignments.
Like their mother, both sons were highly creative and well-read, creating their own role-playing games along the lines of Dungeons & Dragons. They both graduated from Newbury Park High-school in 1994 and 1996, respectively, on the Honor Roll with awards in History. The family continued creating together until the boys joined the 101st Airborne Division of the U.S. Army to become Rangers.
Jordan continued writing scripts for Hollywood, eventually working with producers at Warner Bros., Universal, Cosgrove/Meurer and Republic Pictures. In 2002, her eldest son, Jason was killed in the line of duty. Her son Josh still serves in the Army and survived two tours in Iraq. He moved on to Drill Sergeant before changing to an assignment overseas.
After taking some time off and relocating to a small town in the desert, Jordan won the 2005 Key West IndieFest screen-writing contest; Finished as a top five winner in the 2005 Tahoe/Reno International Festival for best short script; Second round finalist in the 2005 Miramax Open Door Contest and began production on her fourth film entitled "Yucca Man" - a sci fi comedy spoof about the Army transplanting a soldier's brain into a cactus for covert ops in the desert. The movie pays homage to every monster and sci-fi movie since the fifties. After running out of money in post-production, Jordan has the script up for sale.
Jordan still remains single, referring to her 20+ year divorce as "a success."- IMDb Mini Biography By: Jordan Rivers - A California girl to the core, Jordan has spent only 3 years living elsewhere. Encouraged by all her school teachers to become a writer, Jordan didn't make it legal until her first book was published by Berkley Books in 1988. She now has several books on Amazon Kindle. She attended film and broadcasting classes in 1981 at San Jose City College because their film department was bigger and better than the one at San Jose State at the time.
Selected straight out of class, Jordan was asked to write, director and produce The Mothers' Milk Bank, a documentary designed to teach new mothers, doctors and hospitals the importance of breast milk for premature infants. Next she wrote commercial for Golden Corral Restaurants; S&M Cleaning Services and other. Her next project was a claymation animation entitled Potato Salad, which she shot in the basement of her home in San Jose.
Her first full-length movie was a western entitled Clayton's Riders in 1990. Jordan went on to ghost write many books and script doctor several television series and motion pictures, choosing money over credits so she could raise her two sons after her divorce in 1983.
After being anonymous for several years, Jordan is closing the funding on her two-part horror film Woodrow Craven which will be shot back to back this summer with Jordan writing, directing and producing. Her company will be producing a second, as-yet-untitled, movie this spring.
Jordan's favorite things are her Harley, her Ram truck, fishing, oil painting, clay sculpting and very tall - lumberjack/Viking-type - men with long hair and full beards. She lives in the Mojave desert with her naked cats and her Great Dane.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Jordan Rivers
- SpouseWm. P. Fisher(February 16, 1974 - October 15, 1985) (divorced, 2 children)
- In film school Jordan wrote, directed and produced a documentary, The Mother's Milk Bank, educating women on the significance of breast milk for the survival of premature babies.
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