Kathryn Bigelow is the first woman ever to win an Academy Award as best director. She claimed the Oscar for her 2009 Iraq War movie
The Hurt Locker. Bigelow was an avant-garde painter in New York City in the 1970s when she began working with film; eventually she went to Columbia University's film school. Her first feature was
The Loveless (1982, with
Willem Dafoe), but her first splashy commercial features were
Blue Steel (1989, with
Jamie Lee Curtis as a rookie cop) and
Point Break (1991, with
Keanu Reeves as an undercover FBI slacker chasing renegade surfer bank robbers led by
Patrick Swayze). Bigelow became known as a calm and even feminine presence who liked to direct violent masculine action flicks.
James Cameron, her husband from 1989-91, produced her 1995 science fiction thriller
Strange Days, and her 2002 submarine movie
K-19: The Widowmaker was well received. Bigelow reached a new level of fame with
The Hurt Locker, a gritty and claustrophobic study of bomb detonation experts putting their lives on the line in Iraq. The film earned nine Academy Award nominations; Bigelow won for best director, and the film won the Oscar as best picture of the year.
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