Julie Hébert
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Julie Hébert (sometimes credited as Julie Hebert) is an American writer/director of theater,
film A film also called a movie, motion picture, moving picture, picture, photoplay or (slang) flick is a work of visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, feelings, beauty, or atmosphere ...
and television.


Biography

Julie Hébert grew up in a small town on the Louisiana coast and many of her plays are set there. After college she moved to San Francisco. She started by directing and writing plays for the Magic Theater, the Eureka, the Bay Area Playwrights Festival and soon moved on to national theater companies including Steppenwolf, La Mama, Circle Rep, the Women's Project, LATC, and San Diego Rep. Hébert's plays have been honored with two PEN Awards for Drama. Her play Tree opened at San Francisco Playhouse in January 2015. She adapted the novel ''Female Perversions'' into a screenplay with Susan Stretfield. Stretfield went on to direct the film, ''
Female Perversions ''Female Perversions'' is a 1996 erotic drama film directed by Susan Streitfeld (in her feature directorial debut), based on the 1991 book ''Female Perversions: The Temptations of Emma Bovary'' by American psychoanalyst Louise J. Kaplan. It st ...
'' (1996). In 2000 she wrote a television film entitled '' All-American Girl: The Mary Kay Letourneau Story''. In television, Hébert worked and trained with John Wells for five years, starting with '' Third Watch'' in 2001. She wrote two second-season episodes entitled "Know Thyself" and "Man Enough". Her first television writing effort, "Know Thyself" was honored with a Prism Award. Later that year she began her career as an episodic director when she co-directed the third-season premiere, a documentary about 9/11, "In Their Own Words" alongside John Wells, for which they won a George Foster Peabody Award. In 2002 she helmed her first episode independently, "Superheroes: Part Two", which aired later in the third season. In 2003 she was hired as an executive story editor for ''Third Watch''. She wrote three episodes for the third season – "He Said, She Said", "The Long Guns" and "The Unforgiven". While working on ''Third Watch'' she adapted her original play ''Ruby's Bucket of Blood'' into a TV film for Showtime, starting Angela Bassett. In 2002, Hebert became involved with '' ER'', another Wells production series, as a co-producer for the ninth season. She co-wrote "A Hopeless Wound" with supervising producer
Joe Sachs Joe Mister Sachs is an American television writer and producer. He has worked extensively on '' ER'' in both capacities. Career Sachs first became involved with ''ER'' as a technical advisor midway through the first season. He had a guest starr ...
. She returned after the mid-season break as a producer and wrote a further ninth-season episode "A Little Help from My Friends". She was also hired to direct a ninth-season episode entitled "The Advocate". Hébert remained with the series as a director and helmed two episodes for the tenth season, "Shifts Happen" in 2003 and "Midnight" in 2004. She then wrote and directed the eleventh-season episode "Twas the Night". In 2004, she became involved with the fifth season of '' The West Wing'' (also a Wells production series) as a director. She helmed two fifth-season episodes, "Slow News Day" and "No Exit". She returned in fall 2004 to direct the sixth-season episode " The Hubbert Peak". In 2005, she was hired as a writer and consulting producer for '' Numb3rs''. She scripted two episodes for the second season, "In Plain Sight" in 2005 and "All's Fair" in 2006. She was promoted to co-executive producer for the third season. She scripted a further three episodes for the third season; "Waste Not" in 2006; "Nine Wives" in 2006; and "The Art of Reckoning" in 2007. She also made her directing debut for the series with "Nine Wives". She remained a co-executive producer, writer and director for the fourth season and wrote the episode "Primacy" in 2007 and wrote and directed the episode "Power" in 2008. She returned in the same capacity for the fifth season and wrote and directed "Thirty Six-Hours" in 2008, directed "Trouble in Chinatown", and scripted "Animal Rites" in 2009. In 2010, Hébert worked in New York, writing two episodes for the CBS series ''Blue Bloods'' ("Re-Do" and "What You See"), and directing an episode of ''The Good Wife'' called "Nine Hours". In 2011 she became involved with the series ''Rizzoli & Isles'' as a co-executive producer, writing the episode entitled "Brown-Eyed Girl". Her next venture was the critically acclaimed series ''Boss'', where she worked as a co-executive producer, writing two episodes, "Redemption" and "Clinch". In 2013 and 2014, Hébert directed three episodes of ''Nashville'', "I Saw the Light", "You're No Angel Yourself" and "Your Wild Life's Gonna Get You Down ". She was also involved with the new ABC series ''American Crime'' as a co-executive producer, writer and director. Last season, she wrote Episode 108 and wrote and directed select episodes in Season Two. Currently, she serves as co-executive producer on the fourth season of the Amazon series "The Man In The High Castle."


References


External links


Official website
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Hebert, Julie Living people American television directors American television producers American women television producers American television writers American women television directors American women television writers Place of birth missing (living people) Year of birth missing (living people) 21st-century American women