Dana Brunetti
Dana Brunetti (born June 11, 1973) is an American media executive, film producer and entrepreneur.
Dana Brunetti
Brunetti has been nominated for two Academy Awards for producing The Social Network and Captain Phillips and five Emmy Awards for producing the Netflix series House of Cards.
Early life[edit]
Brunetti grew up in Covington, Virginia,[1] and attended secondary school at Alleghany High School.[2] As a child, Brunetti delivered morning and evening editions of his local newspaper.[1][3]
He joined the U.S. Coast Guard in 1992 and served until 1995. During his enlistment, Brunetti moved to New York. He met actor Kevin Spacey through a chance introduction from a mutual friend while Brunetti was working at a start up digital wireless network company.[2]
Career[edit]
Early career[edit]
Shortly after meeting each other in 1997, Spacey hired Brunetti as his executive assistant.[1][4] Brunetti worked with Spacey through several feature films, such as American Beauty (1999) and The Shipping News (2001).[4]
In 2001, Brunetti transformed Spacey's Trigger Street Productions website, TriggerStreet.com, originally a static homepage for Trigger Street Productions, into a platform for aspiring filmmakers. The site was a place for users to submit screenplays and short films for feedback from other members.[5] TriggerStreet.com was relaunched in 2002 as an early social media site, hosting member profiles, providing member ratings of submitted work and interactive forums.[6] TriggerStreet steadily gained users resulting in it being named one of the top 50 best websites of 2004 by Time magazine.[7] The site became known as TriggerStreet Labs and expanded to include short story submissions, it closed down in 2015.
Soon after the launch of the new TriggerStreet.com, Brunetti started working as a motion picture producer.
Producer[edit]
In 2002, Brunetti co-produced the documentaries Uncle Frank and America Rebuilds: A Year At Ground Zero through TriggerStreet. The controversial unreleased documentary Hackers Wanted was also part of the early film slate of the company.
In 2004, Spacey promoted Brunetti to President of TriggerStreet productions.[8]
Brunetti's first feature film producing credit was as co-producer for Beyond the Sea (2004). His first full feature credit was Mini's First Time. He later produced the film The Sasquatch Dumpling Gang (2006). He also produced the Emmy-nominated Bernard and Doris.[9]
Brunetti, a Star Wars fan himself, eagerly produced the Star Wars comedy Fanboys. The film was distributed by The Weinstein Company, and originally slated for release on August 17, 2007. However, after delays for re-shoots and disagreements over the film's final cut, the release for Fanboys was delayed until February 9, 2009. Brunetti discussed the film's struggles with the Weinstein Company in interviews on KCRW's The Business podcast[10] and in The New York Times.[11]
Brunetti's first major success was for 21 (2008), a film based on Ben Mezrich's New York Times best selling book Bringing Down The House. Produced on a budget of $35 million, the film went on to a worldwide gross of nearly $158 million.[12]
Brunetti later produced Shrink and Casino Jack.
In early 2009, Brunetti teamed with Mezrich on an adaption of the book The Accidental Billionaires, which was turned into the critically acclaimed film, The Social Network. The screenplay adaptation was written by Aaron Sorkin, directed by David Fincher and told the story of Mark Zuckerberg and the founding of Facebook.com.
In writing the book on the founding of Facebook, Mezrich was in touch with some of the founding members but not all. He was having trouble contacting Eduardo Saverin. To facilitate that meeting, Brunetti had a screening in Boston of the movie based Mezrich's first book and invited Saverin to that screening. At the party following the screening, the three of them spent time discussing Mezrich's work. A later screening of the film in Las Vegas resulted in Saverin and his friends meeting with Brunetti and Mezrich again. Brunetti made sure to have Kevin Spacey attend the premiere and after party as well to ensure that their Facebook-related project would have all the momentum it needed.
The 14-page proposal by Mezrich resulted in a movie being sold to Sony that became The Social Network.
In 2011, The Social Network was nominated for eight Oscars, including Best Picture, Music (Original Score), Actor in a Leading Role, Cinematography, Directing, Film Editing, Sound Mixing and Writing (Adapted Screenplay).[13] Brunetti talked about The Social Network on KCRW's The Business podcast.[14]
In 2016, Brunetti admitted to finding "dates" for Saverin in his attempts to gain the latter's cooperation on the movie.[1]
Brunetti produced Captain Phillips, which starred Tom Hanks and was directed by Paul Greengrass, which earned him his second career Academy Award nomination. In 2015, Brunetti and Michael DeLuca reunited to produce the Fifty Shades of Grey film adaptation for Focus Features.[15][16] In 2016, Brunetti publicly criticized the Producers Guild of America for initially not awarding him a producers mark (p.g.a. mark) for the sequel to Fifty Shades of Grey, Fifty Shades Darker.[17] Brunetti eventually received the mark after he won a decision on appeal. He dubbed it a victory.[18] He was also credited on the third film, Fifty Shades Freed.
Relativity Media[edit]
In January 2016 it was announced that Relativity Media, which was just emerging from Chapter 11 bankruptcy,[19] had acquired Trigger Street Productions and that Kevin Spacey would become chairman of Relativity Studios whilst Brunetti would become the studio's president.[20] Brunetti said in a statement. "Being a disruptor at heart, I look forward to the opportunities that being inside a studio system will present."[21]
When the paperwork for the studio was filed for the court it emerged that Spacey had opted out of assuming the chairmanship of the studios,[22] and by the end of 2016 Brunetti had also left Relativity whilst both remained Executive Producers on House of Cards and Manhunt: Unabomber.[23]
Cavalry Media[edit]
In 2018 Brunetti and former Relativity Media Executive Keegan Rosenberger, co-founded Los Angeles–based media company Cavalry Media. Cavalry's core focus is the acquisition, development and production of premium feature films and scripted television series for global audiences.[24] In 2023 Brunetti resigned from his position at Cavalry to return to solo producing.
Personal life[edit]
Brunetti's mother left his father, Ron Brunetti, a U.S. Postal Service mail carrier, when Brunetti was a baby.[1] He has a stepmother, Joanne, a sister, Carla, a credit union employee in Pennsylvania; and three brothers: Brian, a helicopter pilot for Presidential Airways based in Afghanistan; Erik, a Los Angeles–based artist and designer who created the FUCT line of street wear clothing; and Alex, who works for an ophthalmologist in Kentucky.[8]
When Brunetti turned 18 he spent two weeks in hospital and almost lost an eye water skiing when the ski rope snapped. Around the same time he discovered in a family counseling session that his biological mother had left his father for another woman.[1]
He went onto have a long-term relationship with costume designer Johanna Argan[36] from prior to 2005[37] which ended amicably in 2013.[1][38] The couple have a daughter, born on October 10, 2012.[39] In 2014, he dated actress Kristin Chenoweth.[40]
Brunetti is currently engaged to former model and intellectual property lawyer, Alexandra Pakzad, daughter of the late fashion designer Bijan Pakzad.[41]