Richard Pearce
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Richard Pearce (born January 25, 1943 in San Diego, California) is an American film director and producer. He prepped at St. Paul's School and then earned a B.A., English from Yale University in the Class of 1965. While in college, he was a guitarist for, and a leader of, the Augmented Seven, a singing group that featured three guitarists. It was the only singing group at Yale at that time that was not strictly a cappella. He was also a member of Scroll and Key Society. Pearce is credited as the cinematographer of Hearts and Minds (1974), documentary film about the Vietnam War. He won the Golden Bear award at the 30th Berlin International Film Festival in 1980 for his film Heartland. Description above from the Wikipedia article Richard Pearce, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for
DirectingBirthday
January 25, 1943Gender
MaleKnown Movie Credits
25Place of birth
San Diego, California, USACrew credits
No Mercy
DirectorLeap of Faith
DirectorA Family Thing
DirectorCountry
DirectorHeartland
DirectorSouth Pacific
DirectorThe Long Walk Home
DirectorWitness Protection
DirectorThe Road to Memphis
DirectorSiege
DirectorSessions
DirectorThreshold
DirectorThe Final Days
DirectorInterviews with My Lai Veterans
Director of PhotographyHearts and Minds
Associate Producer, Camera OperatorThicker Than Blood
DirectorNeil Young & Crazy Horse - Rust Never Sleeps
Director of PhotographyFatal Contact: Bird Flu in America
DirectorWoodstock
Camera OperatorThe Gardener's Son
DirectorDead Man Out
Director