Howard Eric Brookner was born April 30, 1954, in New York City and grew up in
Great Neck, Long Island. He studied at
Phillips Exeter, earned his B.A. from
Columbia University in political science, and his M.A. in art history and film at
New York University, where for his senior thesis he began what would go on to be the highly acclaimed feature documentary on
William S. Burroughs. His film crew consisted of his NYU classmates
Tom DiCillo (camera) and
Jim Jarmusch (sound). Begun in 1978,
Burroughs was aired on
BBC Arena and premiered at the 1983
New York Film Festival.
Janet Maslin of the New York Times wrote: "The quality of discovery about 'Burroughs' was very much the director's doing, and Mr. Brookner demonstrates an unusual degree of liveliness and curiosity in exploring his subject." Brookner followed up
Burroughs with a feature documentary on
Robert Wilson, documenting Wilson's failed Civil Wars project, offering a closeness to the avant-garde theatre director similar to that in
Burroughs.
Robert Wilson and the Civil Wars was released on public television in 1986. In 1987, Brookner began production on the
American Playhouse/
Columbia Studios feature he had written and was directing,
Bloodhounds of Broadway starring
Madonna,
Matt Dillon,
Jennifer Grey,
Rutger Hauer, and others. Secretly, Brookner was battling AIDS, which became exacerbated when he decided to go off his AZT medication to have the strength to finish shooting.
The New York Times wrote it "was a race against the clock" as Brookner was gravely ill while fighting the studio for final cut and holding readings for his next film
Scary Kisses (with new acting talent that included
Sean Penn and
Tilda Swinton). He died before
Bloodhounds of Broadway was released and was buried on his thirty-fourth birthday, 1989. Surrounded by friends and family, he left this quote taped to his refrigerator door: "There's so much beauty in the world. That's what got me into trouble in the first place." ==Filmography==