David Stephen Ward (born
25 October 1945) is an
American film director and award winning
screen writer.
Ward has degrees from
Pomona College (
BA), as well as both
USC and the
UCLA Film School (
MFA). He was employed at an educational film production company when he managed to sell his screenplay for
The Sting (1974), which lead to an
Oscar win for
Best Original Screenplay. After this initial success, his follow up projects were less critically and commercially well received, including Ward's maiden directorial effort,
Cannery Row (1982), and a sequel
The Sting II (1983). Efforts made by Ward to sell a script based on the frontier days of California were scuttled by an industry-wide "ban" on Westerns after the failure of
Michael Cimino's
Heaven's Gate (1980).
In 1986, Ward was contracted by
Sting star
Robert Redford, who hired the screenwriter to work on the Redford-directed
The Milagro Beanfield War. The response to this project enabled Ward to sell
Morgan Creek and Mirage Productions to bankroll
Major League (1988), a baseball comedy that he'd been pitching to producers without success since 1982.
Major League was a labor of love for Ward, who had lived in the
Cleveland suburb of
South Euclid as a child and had rooted for the
Indians' teams of the 1950s, including the 1954
American League Champions. Perhaps autobiographically,
Major League and Ward's subsequent efforts as a writer and director,
King Ralph (1991) and
Major League II (1994), were about underdogs who triumphed over the gadflies and nay-sayers of the world.