Graham Yost
Graham Yost | |
|---|---|
| File:Graham Yost 2011 (cropped).jpg Yost with his Peabody Award in 2011 | |
| Born | September 5, 1959 |
| Alma mater | Trinity College, Toronto |
| Occupations | Screenwriter, television producer, television director, actor. |
| Years active | 1989–present |
Graham John Yost (born September 5, 1959) is a Canadian film and television screenwriter. His best-known works are the films Speed, Broken Arrow, and Hard Rain and the TV series Justified and Silo.
Early life, family and education
[edit | edit source]Yost was born in Etobicoke in the Toronto metropolitan area.[1] He is the son of Canadian television personality Elwy Yost,[2] the longtime host of the public broadcaster TVOntario's Saturday Night at the Movies.
He graduated from the University of Toronto Schools and Trinity College at the University of Toronto.
Career
[edit | edit source]Yost wrote for the TV sitcom Herman's Head and the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers. In 2002, he created the television drama series Boomtown. He created the short-lived NBC drama Raines (2007). Yost teamed with Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg, along with two of his fellow Boomtown writers Michelle Ashford and Larry Andries, to write and direct episodes of the HBO miniseries The Pacific.
Yost is the creator and executive producer of the FX series Justified which premiered in 2010. He was an executive producer on the FX show The Americans which ran from 2013 to 2018. In 2014, Yost was attached to an adaptation of the Alex Kershaw book Avenue of Spies for WGN America.[3] In 2016, he took over as head writer and executive producer of the Amazon Studios series Sneaky Pete.

In May 2021, Apple TV+ announced that Yost would serve as showrunner and executive producer for the science fiction series Silo based on the dystopian book series of the same name by Hugh Howey.[4]
Awards and nominations
[edit | edit source]Yost won two Emmy Awards for his involvement in the miniseries From the Earth to the Moon and The Pacific, which was also nominated for a Golden Globe Award.[5] He also won a Golden Globe for his work on the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, for which he was one of the writers.[6]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Graham Yost is married to Connie F. Yost.[7]
Filmography
[edit | edit source]Film writer
- Speed (1994)
- Broken Arrow (1996)
- Firestorm (1998) (rewrite)[8][9]
- Hard Rain (1998)
- Mission to Mars (2000)
- Planet of the Apes (2001) (uncredited)[8]
- The Last Castle (2001)
- The Grizzlies (2018)
TV series
| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Creator | Producer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1989–1991 | Hey Dude | No | Yes | No | No | 13 episodes |
| 1991 | Herman's Head | No | Yes | No | No | Episode "The Last Boy Scout" |
| 1992–1993 | The Powers That Be | No | Yes | No | No | 4 episodes |
| 1998 | From the Earth to the Moon | Yes | Yes | No | Supervising | Wrote 2 episodes; Directed episode "Spider" |
| L.A. Doctors | Yes | No | No | No | Episode "Whither Thou Goest" | |
| 2001 | Band of Brothers | No | Yes | No | No | 2 episodes |
| 2002–2003 | Boomtown | Yes | Yes | Yes | Executive | Wrote 6 episodes |
| 2004 | Summerland | No | Yes | No | No | Episode "Skipping School" |
| 2007 | Raines | No | Yes | Yes | Executive | Wrote episode "Pilot" |
| 2010 | The Pacific | Yes | Yes | No | Executive | Wrote and directed episode "Gloucester/Pavuvu/Banika" |
| 2010–2015 | Justified | No | Yes | Yes | Executive | Wrote 12 episodes |
| 2011 | Falling Skies | No | Yes | No | Executive | Wrote episode "The Armory" |
| 2013–2018 | The Americans | No | No | No | Executive | |
| 2015–2018 | Sneaky Pete | No | Yes | No | Executive | Wrote 7 episodes |
| 2022–present | Slow Horses | No | No | No | Executive | |
| 2023–present | Silo | No | Yes | Yes | Executive | Wrote 3 episodes |
| 2023 | Justified: City Primeval | No | No | No | Executive | |
| 2024 | Masters of the Air | No | No | No | Co-Executive |
TV movies
| Year | Title | Writer | Executive Producer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Young Arthur | Yes | Yes |
| 2006 | Sixty Minute Man | Yes | Yes |
| 2014 | Wild Blue | No | Yes |
References
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Graham Yost at IMDb
- Graham Yost at filmreference.com
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- 1959 births
- Living people
- Canadian male screenwriters
- People from Etobicoke
- Screenwriters from Toronto
- Trinity College (Canada) alumni
- University of Toronto alumni
- Canadian male television writers
- Canadian television writers
- Canadian television producers
- Showrunners
- 20th-century Canadian screenwriters
- 21st-century Canadian screenwriters
- 20th-century Canadian male writers
- 21st-century Canadian male writers