Personal info
Known for
Writer
Gender
Male
Birthday
13 May
Location
Georgia, United States
Edit pageAlan Ball
Biography
Alan Erwin Ball (born May 13, 1957) is an American writer, director, and producer for television, film, and theater.
Ball wrote the screenplay for American Beauty, for which he earned an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.
He also created the series Six Feet Under and True Blood, works for which he earned an Emmy as well as awards from the Writers, Directors, and Producers Guilds of America.
He was an executive producer on the Cinemax television series Banshee. He also wrote and directed the film Uncle Frank.
Ball was born in Marietta, Georgia, to Frank and Mary Ball, respectively an aircraft inspector and a homemaker. His older sister, Mary Ann, was killed in a car accident when Ball was 13; he was in the passenger seat at the time.
He attended high school in Marietta before going to college at the University of Georgia and Florida State University. Ball graduated from Florida State in 1980 with a degree in theater arts.
After college, he began work as a playwright at the General Nonsense Theater Company in Sarasota, Florida.
Ball broke into television as a writer and story editor on the situation comedies Grace Under Fire and Cybill.
Ball has written three films, American Beauty (1999), Towelhead (2007), and Uncle Frank (2020), the latter of which he also produced and directed.
He is also the creator, writer, and executive producer of the HBO drama series Six Feet Under and True Blood. Ball was the showrunner for True Blood for its first five seasons.
In 2010 Ball began work on a television adaptation of the crime noir novel The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death by Charlie Huston, to be titled All Signs of Death.
In December 2010, after several months of pre-production, HBO canceled production on the project.
Ball was also one of the executive producers of the Cinemax series Banshee.
In July 2016, it was announced that Ball's family drama Here and Now had been ordered into a series by HBO.
Starring Tim Robbins and Holly Hunter, the show was canceled in April 2018 after one ten-episode season.