John Randal Kleiser[1] (born July 20, 1946) is an American film and television director, producer, screenwriter and actor, best known for directing the 1978 musical romantic-comedy film Grease.
Biography
John Randal Kleiser was born in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, the son of Harriet Kelly (née Means) and Dr. John Raymond Kleiser. He has two younger brothers.[1] Kleiser attended Radnor High School on the Philadelphia Main Line.[2][3]
As a freshman at the University of Southern California, he appeared in George Lucas' student film Freiheit. (Kleiser also lived in the house that Lucas was renting at the time.)[4] Kleiser graduated in 1968.[5] His award-winning Master's thesis film, the 1973 short Peege about a grandson's bond with his ailing grandmother,[6] launched his career and was selected for preservation by the United States Library of CongressNational Film Registry in 2007.[7] He also directed an animated short that year called Foot Fetish (which was later aired on Saturday Night Live a decade later).[8]
Kleiser directed several television movies in the mid-1970s, including Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway (1975), The Boy in the Plastic Bubble (1976), which starred John Travolta, and the Emmy Award-winning The Gathering (1977). Kleiser was tapped to direct his first feature film, the 1978 film Grease, in large part because of Travolta's recommendation based on their work together on The Boy in the Plastic Bubble.[9]