Richard Schenkman
- Producer
- Director
- Writer
Richard Schenkman writes, directs and produces feature films, commercials, documentaries and more. His first film was
The Pompatus of Love (1995),
which he wrote with Jon Cryer and
Adam Oliensis. A festival favorite, it
enjoyed a successful theatrical release in 1995. He then directed the
action/drama October 22 (1998) for Nu
Image/Millennium Films, and followed that with
Went to Coney Island on a Mission from God... Be Back by Five (1998),
his second collaboration with Cryer. It won numerous awards on the
festival circuit, was theatrically released and successfully acquired
by Blockbuster Video as an exclusive rental title. (In 2018 it was finally released on Blu-Ray). Later he and Cryer
set up the sitcom pilot "Us and Them" at 20th Century Fox TV, and a
romantic comedy dance musical at VH1. Schenkman wrote
VH1's pilot for
an original animated Elvis series, and crafted commercials and promos,
most notably two award winning Mill Valley Film Festival trailers. He-
also directed episodes of 'Dick Wolf''s
Arrest & Trial (2000) and
wrote dialogue for EA's
007 Racing (2000)
Playstation game.
Next he wrote and directed VH1's original movie A Diva's Christmas Carol (2000), which was a holiday ratings blockbuster and continues to air annually. When his daughter was born, he decided to take a multi-year break from filmmaking to concentrate on raising her. He did, however, teach a Master Class for the Rhode Island International Film Festival, on whose advisory board he serves, and guest-lectured at both USC and Cal Arts. He also created "Drama Queen", an NBC sitcom for Vanessa Williams, and completed several new spec screenplays with Jon Cryer. One of these, "Cosmodrome", is being developed as a television series for Warner Brothers.
Two feature films he directed were released in 2007: And Then Came Love (2007), a romantic-comedy starring Vanessa Williams and Eartha Kitt, and the cult phenomenon Jerome Bixby's The Man from Earth (2007), based on the final screenplay by the legendary science-fiction author, which has won many awards and is still ranked on IMDB as one of the top science fiction films of all time. He also served as a guest faculty member of the L.A. Film School, teaching comedy directing, taught commercial production at Columbia College in Hollywood, and wrote several popular IOS platform games for TinyCo.
Starting in 2012, made three films back-to-back for beloved B-movie factory The Asylum, the most notable being the historical/horror mashup Abraham Lincoln vs. Zombies (2012). 2017 saw him on the set of a new comedy, Misfits, as well as the release of the long awaited "Man from Earth" sequel, The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017).
In 2010 he published his first novel for children, "The Girl From Atlantis" and has completed a second, "The Empress's New Shoes."
Prior to his feature-film career, Schenkman spent more than a decade in the corporate media world. He was one of the original staffers at MTV: Music Television, creating distinctive and award-winning promos, network IDs, show wraps, news segments, marketing videos and documentary programs. After five years there, he established his own successful production company, produced and directed music videos, fashion videos, commercials and on-air promos for many clients including Swatch Watch, MTV, Honda Scooters, Pepsi Cola, Showtime, Lifetime, and perhaps most notably his Clio-winning national commercials for the children's cable TV network, Nickelodeon. During this period he also worked as a segment producer/director on Don Ohlmeyer's NBC news magazine Fast Copy (1985), produced and directed the multi-camera SPIN New Music Concert and created openings and segments for such other series and specials as "Fashion America", Showtime's "Funniest Person in America", "The MTV Video Music Awards" and "The Rolling Stone Reader's Poll Awards".
In 1990 he was brought to Los Angeles by Playboy Enterprises to revamp the total on-air look of its cable network, from ten-second IDs to hour-long series. He ultimately served as VP of Production, overseeing dozens of projects. Additionally, he personally created over 30 hours of original programming for cable, home video and international syndication, including "The Club", an original comedy series he co-wrote, produced and directed, as well as many other short- and long-form comedic and dramatic programs, several documentaries, two pilots and "Late Night", an extremely successful magazine-format lifestyle series that was rated #1 in Italy and Germany.
Next he wrote and directed VH1's original movie A Diva's Christmas Carol (2000), which was a holiday ratings blockbuster and continues to air annually. When his daughter was born, he decided to take a multi-year break from filmmaking to concentrate on raising her. He did, however, teach a Master Class for the Rhode Island International Film Festival, on whose advisory board he serves, and guest-lectured at both USC and Cal Arts. He also created "Drama Queen", an NBC sitcom for Vanessa Williams, and completed several new spec screenplays with Jon Cryer. One of these, "Cosmodrome", is being developed as a television series for Warner Brothers.
Two feature films he directed were released in 2007: And Then Came Love (2007), a romantic-comedy starring Vanessa Williams and Eartha Kitt, and the cult phenomenon Jerome Bixby's The Man from Earth (2007), based on the final screenplay by the legendary science-fiction author, which has won many awards and is still ranked on IMDB as one of the top science fiction films of all time. He also served as a guest faculty member of the L.A. Film School, teaching comedy directing, taught commercial production at Columbia College in Hollywood, and wrote several popular IOS platform games for TinyCo.
Starting in 2012, made three films back-to-back for beloved B-movie factory The Asylum, the most notable being the historical/horror mashup Abraham Lincoln vs. Zombies (2012). 2017 saw him on the set of a new comedy, Misfits, as well as the release of the long awaited "Man from Earth" sequel, The Man from Earth: Holocene (2017).
In 2010 he published his first novel for children, "The Girl From Atlantis" and has completed a second, "The Empress's New Shoes."
Prior to his feature-film career, Schenkman spent more than a decade in the corporate media world. He was one of the original staffers at MTV: Music Television, creating distinctive and award-winning promos, network IDs, show wraps, news segments, marketing videos and documentary programs. After five years there, he established his own successful production company, produced and directed music videos, fashion videos, commercials and on-air promos for many clients including Swatch Watch, MTV, Honda Scooters, Pepsi Cola, Showtime, Lifetime, and perhaps most notably his Clio-winning national commercials for the children's cable TV network, Nickelodeon. During this period he also worked as a segment producer/director on Don Ohlmeyer's NBC news magazine Fast Copy (1985), produced and directed the multi-camera SPIN New Music Concert and created openings and segments for such other series and specials as "Fashion America", Showtime's "Funniest Person in America", "The MTV Video Music Awards" and "The Rolling Stone Reader's Poll Awards".
In 1990 he was brought to Los Angeles by Playboy Enterprises to revamp the total on-air look of its cable network, from ten-second IDs to hour-long series. He ultimately served as VP of Production, overseeing dozens of projects. Additionally, he personally created over 30 hours of original programming for cable, home video and international syndication, including "The Club", an original comedy series he co-wrote, produced and directed, as well as many other short- and long-form comedic and dramatic programs, several documentaries, two pilots and "Late Night", an extremely successful magazine-format lifestyle series that was rated #1 in Italy and Germany.