Deadline has learned that English film director and producer and 4-time Oscar nominee Peter Yates — who helmed such celebrated and dissimilar films as Bullitt, The Friends Of Eddie Coyle, Breaking Away, Suspect, and The Dresser — has passed away in London after a long illness. He was 82. A graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, he was a stage actor before working as an assistant director for Tony Richardson. Yates’ feature directorial debut was the early 1960s low-budget Summer Holiday (1963) with Cliff Richard And The Shadows. He soon graduated to the 1967 crime thriller Robbery, a fictionalized version of Britain’s The Great Train Robbery. It was a short jump to his first American film, Bullitt (1968), starring Steve McQueen in one of the definitive cop movies of all time thanks to that car chase through the streets of San Francisco. Other films he directed included John and Mary (1969), Murphy’s War (1971), The Hot Rock (1972), For Pete’s Sake (1974), The Deep (1977), Eyewitness (1981), The Dresser (1983), Krull (1983), Eleni (1985), Suspect (1987), The House on Carroll Street (1988), An Innocent Man (1989), Year of the Comet (1992), Roommates (1995), and Curtain Call (1999). He earned two Oscar nominations (director and producer) for Breaking Away, and another two (director and producer) for The Dresser.
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Sad news. Breaking Away is one of the all time great films… RIP indeed.
I was saddened to hear about the recent passing of Peter Yates. I had the pleasure of working with him on ” The Run of the Country ” in Co. Cavan, Ireland. A real pleasure to work with and a real gentleman.
rip. a gifted director. i think both “the hot rock” and “the friends of eddie coyle” are brilliant, original films.
Ditto. Breaking Away is a wonderful film, one of the best pieces of Americana, directed by a Brit no less, it needs to be rediscovered, and the Bullitt chase still holds up very well. May he rest in peace.
Agreed, Breaking Away is a great American film. I hope its rediscovered, not remade like Bad News Bears or a million others.
Just last Wednesday I was in a five below store. I purchased Bullitt on dvd. I start to watch the movie. Opening credits say directed by Peter Yates. I pause the movie. I go to the internet. Let’s see if this director is still alive. When I look him up I discover he just died and it is just hitting the news. And now I’m leaving this comment here.
Peter Yates was a fine director. He took the screenwriter’s words and breathe admirable life into the final product. Some of his movies — “The Friends of Eddie Coyle” leaps to mind — are the types of solid and original action/drama you don’t see enough of these days.
Add in movies such as “Bullitt” and “Breaking Away” and that makes for an awesome resume of films and body of work Mr. Yates leaves behind.
My sincerest condolences to Mr. Yates’ friends and family. He was one talented dude — a master.
Breaking Away is one of the first movies my wife and I watched together (on HBO, at the time), and Bullitt is a film that my father and I frequently watch when we’re in the same town. I’ve got such gratitude for someone who’s added so much to my life.
A terrific professional and an iconic director.He made films that people of my generation remember as their first exposure to the cinema and we loved it. Re-watched SUMMER HOLIDAY just the other day. Corny, silly and maybe the guiltiest of pleasures. But if you can make that sort of film enjoyable to watch it’s no wonder he went on to direct such iconic masterpieces that will go onto influence others in a positive way.
RIP.
I had the pleasure of working with Peter on two films: An Innocent Man and Roommates. Peter was a director’s director and an actor’s director. He was as adept at comedy as drama (a rarity these days) and had one rule he always kept: “Never shoot a movie in a city that doesn’t have a Zagat Guide.” He was a kind man and a real gentleman. He’ll be missed. My condolences to his family.
“Breaking Away” is indeed one of the great movies ever, but I never really thought about who directed it until a few weeks ago when I rented “The Friends of Eddie Coyle.” When I watched that and realized that Ben Affleck copied most of it for “The Town” did I begin to investigate this overlooked multifaceted director. I wish I had known more about him earlier. I hope he gets an Academy nod and a Criterion box set.
RIP. The Friends Of Eddie Coyle is a great movie.
I’ve long thought that, along with Michael Ritchie, Yates was one of the most underrated directors of the last thirty years. I saw the Friends of Eddie Coyle at a Robert Mitchum double-feature at the New Beverly about ten years ago and was blown away — such a great mood piece, such a great performance by Mitchum who could so often be a brick, such a great feel for Boston, and the fact that a British director did it…
But that’s the case with Breaking Away, too. Such a feel for the world and place of not just Bloomington, but being one of the Cutters, the others, the townies in a college town.
Bullitt isn’t a fantastic film story-wise, but his choice in how he filmed and edited that chase scene — but to then not put any score under it, so that the only sound one hears are the cars accelerating and breaking — it’s a brilliant directorial choice, and is thus a much more suspenseful and intense chase scene than anything in a Michael Bay or Fast and Furious movie.
Suspect was a really good thriller, Hot Rock was a good-time adaptation of Westlake, and The House on Carroll Street remains the movie dealing with HUAC and McCarthyism of any film I can remember, and doing so in a subtle way.
It’s a shame that he didn’t get to direct more in the last decade. RIP.
Also worth noting is that Peter Yates directed some of the best episodes of one of the greatest TV series of all time, “Secret Agent” (aka “Danger Man”). He was a truly great talent.
I had the privilege of working with Peter on “The Hot Rock” and “Suspect.” He was a thorough professional & a charming man. In addition to his artistic talent, he understood the responsibility of keeping on schedule and on budget. He was a delight to work with and I wish there were more like him. I extend my condolences to his family.
From being an assistant director on TV’s DANGER MAN and the iconic GUNS OF NAVARONE to becoming the director of the iconic BULLITT…
PETER YATES was himself an icon of British/American cinema.
He never got the attention and praise he so rightly deserved, but as with so many in this business -his work will live on.
Peter got the choice assignment of directing BULLITT, his first American film and his ticket to the big time… when Steve McQueen himself requested Yates after having seen the car chase he had done a year earlier in the British movie ROBBERY. He liked the way Yates made the chase both real and exciting. And then Yates could do a picture totally different like THE DRESSER -and make that just as memorable. Peter Yates left us with plenty of wonderful memories!
Breaking Away and Murphy’s War: Two films I’ll never forget.
The lives that Peter positively touched are legion. He was a gentleman, family man, artist, and friend. Find another director with a body of work with greater diversity, each time of groundbreaking invention. We remember today the charm and heart of Breaking Away, the hilarity and high jinx of The Hot Rock and For Pete’s Sake, the tender poem to a breaking heart of The Dresser, and the thrill of that V-8 in Bullitt. Peter, you’ll never be forgotten; you will live on through your personal testament, your loving family; your work will live as long as people love and cherish movies.
Once upon a time, here in Connecticut, we looked out to see our new neighbors. Peter and Virginia, with their two beautiful, children, were a gift of liveliness, fun, kindness, hilarity and hospitality in our lives. Enjoying Peter, charming father and friend, then marveling at his vast abilities as a film director, working with the finest in film, intrigues and delights us. Thank you, Peter. Your gift was unique.
With love and sympathy to Virginia, Miranda and Toby, from all our family,
So sorry to hear of Peters passing, I had recently tried to contact him regarding information on his first ever film he directed Summer Holiday, he must have been quite sick then. What an unassuming man he was. Loved Bullitt, rest in peace Peter, condolences to his Kiwi wife Virginia and their children and grandchildren
Breaking Away is my all time favorite film. It touched me. The story was so real to me, that in watching the film… I became Dave. That type of engrossing and engaging film is hardly made anymore, because it takes the talents of brilliant men like Peter Yates to make these masterpieces of screenwriting come to life.The world has lost a great visual story-teller. My condolences to his family.
Of my ten desert island films I can thank Peter Yates for two of them: Breaking Away and The Dresser. In particular, Breaking Away is one of the best ambassadors for America I can think of. It should be shown to all those sad hate-filled Arabs.
I can’t claim to have known Peter well, but I worked for him and Virginia and can concur with your contributors judgement of him as a kind and gentle man. I have also madly enjoyed many other films he made. I won’t list them for fear of boring you !