Birthdate: March 4, 1967 (59 Years Old)
Birthplace: London, England, UK
Sam Taylor-Johnson (birthname: Samantha Louise Taylor-Johnson) began her career in the arts as a fine art photographer, and gradually transitioned to filmmaking—first, with award-winning short films and then with her feature directorial debut,
Nowhere Boy (2009), based on Julia Baird’s memoir of her brother John Lennon and starring Aaron Johnson, Anne-Marie Duff, Kristin Scott Thomas, and David Morrissey, premiering at the London Film Festival and then was released in the U.S. by The Weinstein Company.
Taylor-Johnson directed her second feature, the hotly anticipated though critically dismissed
Fifty Shades of Grey (2015), co-starring
Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan, with Jennifer Elle and Marcia Gay Harden, and earning a smashing $569.7 million for Universal Pictures/Focus Features against $40 million costs following a premiere at the Berlin Film Festival.
Taylor-Johnson was co-writer/co-producer (with star and husband
Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and director of the semi-fictional
A Million Little Pieces (2018), based on James Frey’s memoir, with Billy Bob Thornton, Odessa Young, Giovanni Ribisi, Juliette Lewis, and Charlie Hunnam, and released by Momentum Pictures and Entertainment One after premiering at the Toronto Film Festival.
Taylor-Johnson was director of the much-anticipated biopic on the late pop singer Amy Winehouse,
Back to Black (2024), starring
Marisa Abela (as Winehouse),
Jack O’Connell, Eddie Marjan, and Lesley Manville, with Focus Features and StudioCanal handling distribution.