| Born in a French relocation camp after parents fled their home following the 1956 Hungarian Uprising |
| Moved with family to Chicago while still an infant |
| Raised in Illinois and California |
| Sold a screenplay entitled Black Cat Run to producer Jere Henshaw and Apollo Pictures |
1981 | First film credit, working as a production assistant on the horror film, Hell Night |
1983 | With a group of friends, acquired the rights to a Stephen King short story, Woman in the Room ; eventually wrote, produced and directed a 30-minute adaptation of the story which was later aired on some cable stations and released to video |
1984 | Received credit as a set dresser on Ken Russell s Crimes of Passion |
1987 | First screenplay credit, A Nightmare on Elm Street III: Dream Warriors |
1990 | First credit as producer, the USA Network TV-movie, Buried Alive ; also directed |
1990 | Received a nomination for a Writers Guild of America Award for The Ventriloquist s Dummy, an episode of the HBO horror anthology series, Tales from the Crypt |
1992 | Wrote several episodes of the ABC adventure series, The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles |
1993 | Offered $2.4 million for his screenplay adaptation of Stephen King s short story, Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption by Rob Reiner of Castle Rock Productions, with the chance to also direct another film; Darabont turned it down because he wanted to direct the film based on his screenplay |
1994 | Did screenplay rewrites for Kenneth Branagh s feature, Mary Shelley s Frankenstein |
1994 | Made feature directorial debut with The Shawshank Redemption ; film earned seven Oscar nominations including Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay for Darabont |
1997 | Had small role in the TV miniseries version of King s The Shining, directed by Mick Garris |
1998 | Executive produced and scripted the HBO film Black Cat Run |
1998 | Reportedly worked on the script to Saving Private Ryan, starring Tom Hanks; Robert Rodat, however, received sole credit |
1999 | Returned to filmmaking at the helm of The Green Mile, an adaptation of Stephen King s novel starring Hanks; also produced and scripted; received Oscar nominations for Best Picture and Best Screenplay |
2001 | Returned to filmmaking at the helm of The Majestic, starring Jim Carrey; also co-wrote screenplay |
2005 | Published the novella Walpuski s Typewriter ; originally written in his early twenties, it first appeared in Jessie Horsting s magazine Midnight Graffiti |
2007 | Adapted and directed The Mist, a horror film based on the 1980 novella by Stephen King |