Early experience From 1971 to 1988, Kaufman was a line producer and an assistant director for movies like
The Surrogate in 1984,
Children of a lesser God in 1986, and
Gothika starring
Halle Berry, later in 2003. His first big success was in 1990, when he had the idea for
A Star for Two, a romance movie. He was still the assistant of
Elliott Gould, and on his way from New Hampshire to Boston, repatriating a Porsche for the shooting of a movie, he halted in front of a nursing home in order to help an old woman cross the street. As he tried to know more about this woman, the concept of
A Star for Two started to sprout in his mind. On the other side of the Manche, Christian Bel, an ex-stuntman converted to screen writing was taking a particular interest to the movies accorded to the golden age. When he decided to answer to the tender made from Kaufman, the movie finally took off. The concept for
A Star For Two was simple: a couple meets again after a forty-year separation. She (Lauren Bacall) manages a nursing home in France, and he (Anthony Quinn) is a gerontologist in the United States. The movie was shot in France, in Montreal and in New-York, and was a success before it was even shot.
Associations During his career, Kaufman worked with several renowned movie producers, directors, actors and writers. In the 1990s, for instance, he collaborated with award-winning writer Duff Brenna to adapt his novel
The Book of Mamie into a movie.
The Book of Mamie won the
AWP Best Novel award in 1988 (judged by Toby Olson). Kaufman called Brenna's screenplay one of the finest he had ever read.
Photography and Painting Kaufman's art photography series tell the story of his philanthropic journeys around the world and road cruises around North America. H . == Filmography ==