Mary Schmidt Campbell, dean of the Tisch School of the Arts (TSOA) at New York University, has announced the appointment of Joe Pichirallo, veteran studio executive and film producer, as the new chair of the Undergraduate Film & Television program in TSOA’s Kanbar Institute of Film and Television beginning fall 2011.

Veteran Studio Executive and Film Producer Joe Pichirallo Named New Chair of Kanbar Institute’s Undergraduate Film & Television at NYU
Joe Pichirallo

Mary Schmidt Campbell, dean of the Tisch School of the Arts (TSOA) at New York University, has announced the appointment of Joe Pichirallo, veteran studio executive and film producer, as the new chair of the Undergraduate Film & Television program in TSOA’s Kanbar Institute of Film and Television beginning fall 2011.  Pichirallo succeeds Lamar Sanders, who stepped down as chair after six years.     

“I am very pleased to announce the addition to our faculty of Joe Pichirallo as Arts Professor and new chair of Undergraduate Film & Television in the Kanbar Institute,” said Dean Campbell.  “His extensive entertainment industry experience coupled with his many years of teaching young filmmakers is the perfect combination to lead the department into the future.  I want to welcome him to New York University and the Tisch School of the Arts”

Pichirallo is a veteran studio executive, film producer, and a former reporter for The Washington Post.  He began his film career with HBO Pictures and was one of the original executives hired by Fox to set up Searchlight Pictures, where he worked for nearly eight years rising to senior vice president.  Later, he was an executive vice president at Universal's Focus Features.

“I'm honored to join the world class film and television program that Dean Campbell and her faculty have built,” said Pichirallo.  “The opportunity to help the faculty guide the next generation of filmmakers is an irresistible challenge—especially at a time of rapid and fundamental changes in our industry.  I am especially looking forward to continuing the Tisch School's tradition of turning out standout storytellers. The chair's position is the perfect marriage of all the work I have done as a journalist, studio executive, producer, and film school instructor.”

Most recently, Pichirallo worked as a producer, including serving as the head of feature film production for The Gold Company, a management/production firm led by Eric Gold.  He also was head of the feature film unit at Overbrook Entertainment, Will Smith's company, where he produced The Secret Life of Bees with Queen Latifah, Alicia Keys, Dakota Fanning, and Jennifer Hudson, and directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood; as well as executive produced Lakeview Terrace, directed by Neil LaBute and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Kerry Washington, and Patrick Wilson.  While at Focus Features, he executive produced Hollywoodland, starring Adrien Brody, Ben Affleck, and Diane Lane, and directed by Allen Coulter; and Something New, with Sanaa Lathan, Simon Baker, and Alfre Woodard.

 At Searchlight, Pichirallo’s films included: Antwone Fisher, which was the directorial debut of Denzel Washington; One Hour Photo, starring Robin Williams, and directed by Mark Romanek; The Banger Sisters, with Goldie Hawn and Susan Sarandon; Quills, which was nominated for three Academy Awards and starred Geoffrey Rush, Kate Winslet, and Michael Caine, and directed by Philip Kaufman; The Slums of Beverly Hills, with Alan Arkin and Marisa Tomei, and directed by Tamara Jenkins; Girl Six, directed by Spike Lee;  and The Brothers McMullen, a grand jury prize winner at the Sundance Film Festival.

He has taught at the American Film Institute for the last 14 years and also at Chapman University's Dodge College of Film and Media Arts and UCLA's School of Theater, Film and Television.  Prior to his career in the entertainment business, he was on the staff of The Washington Post, where he covered national security, the criminal justice system, and politics.  He made the transition into the film business by spending a year as a screenwriting fellow in the AFI's graduate film program. He has an A.B. in journalism from the University of California, Berkeley, where he was editor-in-chief of the student newspaper, The Daily Californian.

 The Undergraduate Film & Television Division in the Maurice Kanbar Institute of Film and Television is recognized internationally as a premier training site for professionals in the art, craft, and technology of film, television, animation, and sound production.  The program offers intensive hands-on production experience coupled with a broad exposure to the liberal arts.  It nurtures individual talent and skills, and encourages students to become creative and thoughtful practitioners in the world of media.  Fewer than 300 of the more than 1,000 applicants who apply each year are admitted into the four-year undergraduate program leading to the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.

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