
Liev Schreiber
Isaac Liev Schreiber is an American actor. He has received accolades including a Tony Award as well as nominations for nine Primetime Emmy Awards and five Golden Globe Awards.
Why Liev Schreiber Appears in the Documents
Liev Schreiber is mentioned in 6 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 5 articles, 1 email, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These documents include titles such as "Oscars Weekend 2011: A Publicist's Diary", "Oscar Diary", "An Invisible Boy Keeps His Promise". Many of these appearances are in entertainment industry coverage and media articles that mention numerous public figures. Liev Schreiber's inclusion in these documents reflects their public profile rather than any specific connection to Epstein.
Disclaimer: Appearing in the Epstein document corpus does not imply wrongdoing, guilt, or any form of association with criminal activity. Many public figures are mentioned incidentally in these documents due to the broad scope of the released materials.
Documents (6)
Oscars Weekend 2011: A Publicist's Diary
A seasoned publicist chronicles the fevered 2011 Oscar season, tracing the race between The King’s Speech and The Social Network from glamorous pre-award parties to the desperate, carefully orchestrated campaigns of Harvey Weinstein, Tom Hooper, and their rivals. Through insider anecdotes, fashion, and backstage strategy, the piece exposes how prestige, timing, and relentless momentum shape the outcome, culminating in The King’s Speech capturing Best Picture and Hooper clinching Best Director on a night of glamor, anxiety, and institutional theater.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscars Weekend 2011: A Publicist's Diary
A seasoned publicist chronicles the fevered 2011 Oscar season, tracing the race between The King’s Speech and The Social Network from glamorous pre-award parties to the desperate, carefully orchestrated campaigns of Harvey Weinstein, Tom Hooper, and their rivals. Through insider anecdotes, fashion, and backstage strategy, the piece exposes how prestige, timing, and relentless momentum shape the outcome, culminating in The King’s Speech capturing Best Picture and Hooper clinching Best Director on a night of glamor, anxiety, and institutional theater.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscar Diary
This insider’s Oscar diary follows a veteran publicist through the 2011 Academy Awards weekend, tracing the high-stakes, behind-the-scenes campaign between The King’s Speech and The Social Network amid a whirlwind of star-studded parties, fashion, and media frenzy. It culminates with The King’s Speech winning Best Picture and Tom Hooper taking Best Director, as the Hollywood power circle negotiates prestige, headlines, and the adrenaline of the awards season.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscar Diary
Stephanie’s Oscar diary offers an intimate, front‑row narrative of the 2011 awards season, charting the behind‑the‑scenes campaign between The King’s Speech and The Social Network, Harvey Weinstein’s relentless organizing, and a star‑studded crawl of pre‑ and post‑Oscar parties as Hollywood’s power players converge on the Kodak Theatre, culminating in The King’s Speech securing Best Picture and its champions grabbing the spotlight.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscar Diary
Stephanie’s Oscar diary offers an intimate, front‑row narrative of the 2011 awards season, charting the behind‑the‑scenes campaign between The King’s Speech and The Social Network, Harvey Weinstein’s relentless organizing, and a star‑studded crawl of pre‑ and post‑Oscar parties as Hollywood’s power players converge on the Kodak Theatre, culminating in The King’s Speech securing Best Picture and its champions grabbing the spotlight.
Source: House Oversight Committee
An Invisible Boy Keeps His Promise
Zach Braff recalls how theater rescued him from an anxious, “invisible” childhood in New Jersey, the formative, accepting environment of Stagedoor Manor and its mentors who believed in his talent, his early film work and ongoing collaboration with Woody Allen, and his ascent to Broadway as David Shayne in Bullets Over Broadway at the St. James Theatre, a dazzling, collaborative production directed by Susan Stroman that rekindled his dream to sing on Broadway while he continues to work in film, including the project Wish I Was Here.
Source: House Oversight Committee