měi guó zuòzhělièbiǎo
'ā nuò L. S. Stavrianos · ào Barack Hussein Obamatānɡ · shèng luó Tom Santopietro
· luó shā Morris Rossabi · lāi 'ěr · Heather Lehr Wagnerhǎi lún · kǎi Helen Keller
lǎo Clemens léi · ā bān Hallett Edward Abend 'ěr · lín dùn William Jefferson Clinton
· kǎi 'ēn Larry Kane 'ěr · 'ēn tǎn Carl Bernstein . běn Ruth Benedict
míng · wèi lín Minnie Vautrinkǎi lín · léi Kathleen Tracyshī · Shiva Balaghi
zhān · màn James Mannchá 'ěr ·R· Charles R. Morris Leamer L.
jiā · 'ěr Gary Wolf tuō · 'ěr dùn Christopher Hilton tiān jué Chester Holcombe
luó · bào 'ěr 弗罗德里克 Powellluó · 'ěr Ross Terrillwèi fěi Frederic Evans Wakeman, Jr.
zhān · mài léi · 'ēn James MacGregor Burns · Peter F. Drucker · hǎi dēng Deborah Hayden
běn · lāi Ben Bradlee chá ·A· yuē hàn xùn Richard A. Johnsonjié · wēi Jack Weatherford
· huá lāi shì Chris Wallacehǎi lún ·S· jiā sēn Helen S.Garsonhēng · Henry Ford
dān 'ěr · āi 'ěr Daniel Ellsbergài lún · xiào Alan Schomkāng · ān · Connie Ann Kirk
qiáo zhì · dùn George Smith Pattontānɡ yàn Tang Yanā 'ěr mǐn · · lāi màn Armin D. Lehmann
· luó 'ěr Tim Carroll · · kǎi luó 帕米拉克拉 Kekai Luoluó · lāi Robert Dallek
· Bernard Kerikluó · bīn Robert Edward Rubin · lāi wēn Monica Lewinsky
ài lún · niǔ Allen Neuharth fěi SU Feijié · wéi 'ěr Jack Welch
mài dāng Madonna Cicconedài wéi · luò fěi David Rockefellerluò lán · lún nóng Lorraine Glennon
kǎi lín · 'ěr Cathleen Carlfáng lóng Hendrik Willem van Loonzhāng chún Iris Chang
tuō suǒ wēi 'ěr Thomas Swowellxuē lóng Ronald Suleski kuàng
sāng sài wéi dān shè màn Dennis ShermanA tānɡ lún fèi 'ěr
lán dào · huá Randall Wallace
měi guó xiàn dài měi guó  (1949niánqīyuè28rì)

jūn shì shēng huó military lifejīng shì wèi liǎo yuán

yuèdòulán dào · huá Randall Wallacezài小说之家dezuòpǐn!!!
  měi guó zhù míng dǎo yǎn


  Randall Wallace (born July 28, 1949) is an American screenwriter, director, producer, and songwriter, who came to prominence by writing the screenplay for the 1995 film Braveheart. His work on the film earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay and a Writers Guild of America award for Best Screenplay Adapted Directly for the Screen. His other films, include The Man in the Iron Mask, Pearl Harbor, We Were Soldiers, and most recently, Secretariat.
  
  Early life
  
  Born in Jackson, Tennessee, Wallace began writing stories at the age of seven. Wallace graduated from E.C. Glass High School in Lynchburg, Virginia where he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He attended Duke University, where he studied Russian, religion, and literature. He put himself through a graduate year of seminary by teaching martial arts. Wallace holds a black belt in karate.
  [edit]Career
  
  After managing an animal show at Nashville’s Opryland, Wallace moved to Hollywood to pursue a career in singing and songwriting. He soon began writing short stories, novels and scripts for movies. Wallace was taken under the wing of leading television producer Stephen J. Cannell and spent several years writing for television in the late '80s and early '90s.
  He gained recognition and commercial success by penning the screenplay for Braveheart (1995), which was inspired by a trip to Scotland to better get to know his roots as a Scottish American. It was there he learned about the true legend of medieval Scottish patriot William Wallace. Braveheart became Wallace’s first produced screenplay when it drew the interest of director and star Mel Gibson, and ended up as the film success story of 1995, earning the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director and garnering Oscar and Golden Globe nominations as well as the Writers Guild Award for Best Screenplay for Wallace.
  Wallace made his directorial debut with his own screenplay in The Man in the Iron Mask, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, John Malkovich, Gabriel Byrne, Jeremy Irons and Gérard Depardieu. Shortly after, he wrote the screenplay for the Jerry Bruckheimer blockbuster, Pearl Harbor (2001), directed by Michael Bay and starring Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and Kate Beckinsale.
  This was followed by Wallace’s second film as director We Were Soldiers. Moved by its starkly honest account of a singular battle in the Vietnam War, Wallace re-teamed with Mel Gibson to star in the film. Wallace trained with career soldiers at U.S. Army Ranger School in order to understand the motivation of his characters.
  In 2010, Wallace directed Disney’s Secretariat, the true story of the racehorse that won the Triple Crown in 1973. The film chronicled the struggles and courage of owner Penny Chenery-Tweedy, portrayed by Academy Award-nominated actress Diane Lane. Wallace also wrote the end title song, It’s Who You Are, which was released with the Secretariat soundtrack.
  [edit]Other work
  Wallace is also the New York Times bestselling author of seven novels and the lyricist of the acclaimed hymn "Mansions of the Lord", performed as the closing music for President Ronald Reagan’s national funeral. In 2008, Wallace wrote several songs with singer/songwriter Richard Marx. One of those songs, "Flame In Your Fire", appears on Marx's album Emotional Remains. In interviews he has acknowledged a deep commitment to Christianity, which he credits as an influence on his approach to filmmaking.
  He appeared in the seventh season of HBO’s hit comedy series Entourage as himself.
  In addition to his work as a filmmaker, Wallace is the founder of Hollywood for Habitat for Humanity and the father of two sons. In 1999, he formed his own company, Wheelhouse Entertainment, which is focused on creating entertainment for worldwide audiences based on the classic values of love, courage and honor.
  [edit]Filmography
  
  Braveheart (1995) – writer
  The Man in the Iron Mask (1998) – writer, director and producer
  Pearl Harbor (2001) – writer and executive producer
  We Were Soldiers (2002) – writer, director and producer
  Fight or Die (2008) – executive producer, narrator
  Secretariat (2010) – director
    

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