<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/our-faculty/barry-blaustein.aspx" dsn="faculty"><email>blaustei@chapman.edu</email><image-overwrite><img src="/our-faculty/files/small-photos/faculty/blaustein_b.jpg" alt="Barry Blaustein"/></image-overwrite><name-overwrite>Barry Blaustein</name-overwrite><rank-overwrite/><departments-overwrite/><expertise-overwrite/><office-hours-overwrite/><office-location-overwrite><span>Becket Building 206</span></office-location-overwrite><scholarly-works-links-overwrite/><degrees-overwrite/><bio-overwrite><p>Barry W. Blaustein is the director and producer of the critically acclaimed documentary <em>Beyond the Mat </em>(1999). Proclaimed by the <em>Los Angeles Times</em> as one of the best films of the year, <em>Beyond the Mat</em> was also one of 12 finalists for Academy Award consideration in the Best Documentary category, won numerous film festivals throughout the world and garnered a DGA Award nomination for Blaustein. He also directed the documentary <em>Guys ’N Divas: Battle of the High School Musicals </em>(2009), which followed three high schools competing to be invited to the International Thespian Festival.  </p>
<p>In the non-documentary arena, Blaustein directed the feature film <em>Peep World </em>(2010), starring Michael C.  Hall, Sarah Silverman, Rainn Wilson, Taraji P. Henson, Kate Mara, Ben Schwartz and Lesley Ann Warren, and <em>The Ringer </em>(2005), starring Johnny Knoxville and Katherine Heigl.</p>
<p>Along with his writing partner David Sheffield, Blaustein’s feature writing credits include <em>Coming to America</em> (1988), <em>Boomerang</em> (1992), <em>The Nutty Professor </em>(1996)<em>, Nutty Professor: The Klumps</em> (2000) and <em>Coming2America</em> (2021). As head writers and supervising producers on <em>Saturday Night Live</em>, Blaustein and Sheffield also wrote and developed many of Eddie Murphy’s more famous characters including Buckwheat, Velvet Jones, Gumby and Mr. Robinson.  They also co-wrote and produced CBS' <em>What’s Alan Watching</em>?, which won the Television Critics Association Award for Outstanding Achievement in Specials award in 1989.  </p></bio-overwrite><scholarly-works-overwrite/><cv/><media-contact>pr@chapman.edu</media-contact><lecture-requests>blaustei@chapman.edu</lecture-requests><phone>(714) 289-3572</phone><website/></item>