Jeremy ButterworthΒ (born March 4, 1969) is a British playwright, screenwriter, and film director. He has gained recognition for his unique voice in contemporary theatre, often blending myth,Β folklore, andΒ realism themes. He has received aΒ Tony AwardΒ and twoΒ Laurence Olivier Awards.Β
Butterworth started his career with his play, a comedic dark crime drama, MojoΒ (1995), which earned theΒ Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Comedy. He found acclaim with his playΒ Jerusalem, which has been described as "the greatestΒ British playΒ of the 21st century".Β He wrote the playΒ The FerrymanΒ (2017) about a formerΒ IRAΒ volunteer set inΒ The Troubles, which won theΒ Laurence Olivier Award for Best New PlayΒ and theΒ Tony Award for Best Play. His latest play, The Hills of CaliforniaΒ (2024), debuted in London and made its Broadway transfer in the same year.Β
He made his directorial film debut withΒ Mojo (1997), based on hisΒ play of the same name. He has since written the screenplays for films such as theΒ erotic thrillerΒ Birthday GirlΒ (2001), the political dramaΒ Fair GameΒ (2010), the science fiction action filmΒ Edge of TomorrowΒ (2014), theΒ James BrownΒ biopicΒ Get On UpΒ (2014), theΒ Whitey BulgerΒ crime dramaΒ Black MassΒ (2015), and sports dramaΒ Ford v FerrariΒ (2019). He has also co-written screenplays forΒ the James BondΒ film SpectreΒ (2015) and theΒ Indiana JonesΒ franchiseΒ filmΒ Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny(2023).
Description above from the Wikipedia article Jez Butterworth, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.