Sucsy segued from studying international relations to film production via the advertising industry, where he worked for the award-winning agency Cliff Freeman & Partners on the first-ever Staples t.v. ads. Sucsy then pursued work as a production assistant, an art department coordinator, a production secretary, and an assistant director on feature films, commercials, and music videos in Washington DC, New York City, and Los Angeles. He later went on to earn a Masters of Fine Arts in film from Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles. Sucsy then began directing commercials and was soon dubbed by Shoot! Magazine "as one of the industry's crop of new directors to watch." He was subsequently nominated for the Young Director of the Year Award given in conjunction with the 2002
Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.
Grey Gardens In 2003, Sucsy was inspired to write and direct a narrative feature film about the famous true story of
Jackie O's eccentric relatives
"Big Edie" Bouvier Beale and
"Little Edie" Bouvier Beale called
Grey Gardens after viewing the well-known
documentary of the same name. The day after he first watched the documentary, Sucsy embarked on what was to become a six-year process to get
Grey Gardens made. He used primary sources including Little Edie's personal correspondence, private journals, and poetry as well as interviews with family members and friends as the basis of his original script which traced the Beales' tragic descent from riches to rags over some forty years. With
Drew Barrymore and
Jessica Lange attached to star as the reclusive mother-daughter duo, the project made its way to
HBO who, in 2006, announced that
Grey Gardens was moving into production with Sucsy as its director. Principal photography on
Grey Gardens began in October 2007, and it debuted on HBO in April 2009 to great acclaim from critics and audiences. The film received multiple awards: 6 Primetime Emmy Awards including Best Made for Television Movie, the Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Made for Television, and both the Broadcast Film Critics and the Television Critics Association Awards for Best Television Movie. Sucsy was additionally nominated for the Directors Guild of America Award for Directorial Achievement in Movies for Television/Mini-Series as well as the Writers Guild of America Award for Original Long Form Teleplay.
The Vow Sucsy's follow-up to
Grey Gardens was
The Vow, a romantic drama set in Chicago, starring
Rachel McAdams and
Channing Tatum.
The Vow was released by Sony Screen Gems and Columbia Pictures on February 10, 2012. It was a critical and commercial success, becoming the eighth highest-grossing romantic drama film since 1980. In an interview with
The Advocate's Jeremy Kinser, Sucsy said for his follow-up to
Grey Gardens "I wanted to make something for a mainstream audience." He was also pleased with the opportunity to work with Lange a second time. "There are multiple layers to everything she does," he told The Advocate. "I'm not kidding when I say I'd look over and the grips and prop guys who are obviously watching — but not on the same level that I need to watch — their eyes are bugging out and their mouths are agape. We rewrote scenes and deepened scenes for her because you don't want to waste that kind of talent."
Every Day Sucsy followed up
The Vow with a
film adaptation of the novel
Every Day. The movie was released on February 23, 2018.
Every Day is a 2018 American
romantic fantasy drama film directed by Sucsy and written by
Jesse Andrews, based on the 2012 novel of the same name by
David Levithan. The film stars
Angourie Rice as 16-year-old Rhiannon, who falls in love with a traveling soul who wakes each morning in a different body;
Justice Smith,
Debby Ryan and
Maria Bello also star. Film critic Peter Bradshaw created a new Special Braddie Award for
Every Day calling it "the quirky film overlooked by the complacent MSM gatekeeper-establishment which might be a future cult classic."
Upcoming projects On December 11, 2018
Deadline Hollywood announced that Sucsy would write and direct a film adaptation of
Playing to the Gods based on the novel by Peter Rader. On February 26, 2021
Deadline Hollywood announced that
New Republic Pictures would co-finance and produce an original holiday musical,
A Lot Like Christmas, co-written by Sucsy and composer Elliott Wheeler (
Elvis,
The Get Down). Sucsy would also direct and produce. ==Personal life==