Thursday, September 30, 2010

Bernie Schwartz - eternal ladies man (1925-2010)

Tony Curtis in 1955 as Jerry Florea in Six Bridges To Cross
When I got home a few hours ago I read Tony Curtis died yesterday. I can't say I was too shocked or surprised (although I feel a bit odd as I posted a still with him just last week). 
I saw the man, who came in the world as Bernard Schwartz, last year or two years ago on Jonathan Ross' talkshow on the BBC and he looked so fragile. I felt sorry for him then as I feel genuine sadness now hearing of his death. 

I've always had a soft spot for him since growing up with The Persuaders on our television in the early seventies. Next to cool and sophisticated Brett Sinclair (played by Roger Moore), Curtis played lovable foil Danny Wilde who was of course always after the ladies. Something I did not quite understand when I was 9, but what fascinated me immensely nevertheless and made Danny my favorite Persuader. 

Many, many years and thousands of movies later, I still see this persona when I think of Tony Curtis. I'm pretty sure he had the same image of himself. Even as his brittle self with Jonathan Ross, he was still projecting his dame-chasing image, not banal or offensive, but rather sweet and innocent as a little boy. He was after all not just a ladies man, but a ladies man with the biggest Peter Pan complex in the world. 

Many, many years and thousands movies later, I have also learned he was more than just a pretty boy, he was a very fine and energetic actor with a great humorous and warm voice. Anyone who has seen The Sweet Smell Of Success or Some Like It Hot will say Amen to that. His last part was, slightly ironic, a serious cameo as old Mr. Schwartz in David & Fatima. Nevertheless here's a tribute to Bernie with stills from the time he was young and handsome and lovable whether he played a small time crook, a sycophantic press-agent or the best looking crossdresser escaping the maffia. I'm pretty sure Danny Wilde would appreciate that.

With Joanne Dru in Forbidden (1953)
With Barbara Nicholls in Sweet Smell Of Success (1957)
Starring as Sidney Falco opposite Burt Lancaster's J.J. Hunsecker
In drag as Josephine in Some Like It Hot (1959)

Changing from drag to Cary Grant-like tycoon in Some Like It Hot

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Poses and props

In an earlier entry I mentioned three types of movie production stills. My favorite group is the one of the publicity stills. They differ from the scene stills or behind the scenes stills in that they clearly are set up to let's say over-dramatized effect. They are made in order to accentuate a specific feature of the movie. It's these stills that were used the most in advertising campaigns as they were most suited to highlight protagonists or subplots. Very often this means luscious and glossy close-up portrait shots of the featured cast. I will feature those in the next entry or so. Portraits aren't always glossy or necessarily true depictions. THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (1954) pictured above was not known to stand up straight or do the Mexican wave.






I like props and poses the best though. They are sly and humorous and often have a twist in referring to a small but key part of the plot. It's easy to understand that lovely Nan Grey is a bit unsure of the embrace with her mystery man in THE INVISIBLE MAN RETURNS (1940) and that said man has reason to hang on, or putting it more precisely cling on, to the love of his life.







On the other hand you might wonder why Melanie Griffith's mum , Tippi Hedren, is making such a fuss during THE BIRDS (1963).









1963 was a good year for our black feathered friends. Here's Olive Sturgess showing off hers in Roger Corman's THE RAVEN, though it's fair to say that this not-parrot wouldn't "voom" if you put four million volts through it.











All pictured poses reveal some of the bonds between protagonists in the movie. In the fantastic, definitely must-see THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN (1957) poor Grant Williams is the victim of radiation and is slowly but surely shrinking into infinity. Common household objects, such as match boxes, pins and pencils are used to show this shrinking process. This publicity still zooms in on the production design that visualizes the process.



 In some cases props personify. Has anybody seen PSYCHO (1960)?  Here's the almost complete cast with Vera Miles, John Gavin, Janet Leigh and .....


It's not only doom and danger though that's represented in publicity stills. Comedy productions tend to have a more happy approach and ending. In SOME LIKE IT HOT (1959) it is obvious that Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe are meant for each other.



Not all ends are happy though. The last still here is an all-time favourite. It's a great ensemble composition. Everybody's is ready to go and full of determination. They're as hungry as a junior football team getting to their first finals. You'll never see them in the actual movie like this though, nor will neither of them manage to get to the finale of the picture.


These are Hans "Mr. Takagi won't be joining us for the rest of his life" Gruber's (Alan Rickman) terrorist boys who will all be put straight by Bruce Willis in DIE HARD (1988)

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Million-Dollar Weekend


Well that was great. In the last blog I wrote I hoped to get to meet Thelma Schoonmaker last weekend. Not only did I so, but I was also invited for a chat and a cup of tea over in Thelma's cottage accompagnied by Michael Powell's son Columba. The cottage was bought by Thelma when Michael died in 1990 to preserve the history and memory of her late husband. I was struck by the hospitality and indeed the energy of Mrs. Schoonmaker. She arrived only Sunday afternoon as the filming of HUGO CABRET at the Shepperton Studios took up all Saturday. Apparently the production is a bit over schedule. Surely she must have been quite tired.
She talked about the pitfalls of 3D and digital filmmaking as well as how difficult it is to find funding for restoration projects and how overjoyed she and Martin Scorsese, who has been Michael Powell's champion for decades, were about the tremendous reception of the restored RED SHOES (1948) in Cannes last year. Here are two stills from that movie with stars Marius Goring, Moira Shearer and Anton Walbrook .




She also talked about the cottage itself. Michael Powell moved in here with his love of his life then Pamela Brown. To be accurate they moved into two adjacent cottages as they were not married and did not want to attract too much attention. The sixties may have been a liberating period, but living together not in wedlock was still not one for the option.


I don't have a suitable still in my collection of Pamela Brown, so this time only I've added a lobby card from I KNOW WHERE I'M GOING (1945). Miss Brown is the actress in the middle.
Hey! I tell a lie, here she is in ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT IS MISSING (1942).


The cottage itself is quite small, Michael Powell was in dire financial straits at the time. He wanted it to look like a boat, so he had the woodpanelling darkened, the floor painted black and a huge desk positioned at the end of the living room as a captain's table. Mr Powell of course had a thing with boats. He made his mark with the documentary styled EDGE OF THE WORLD (sorry, no stills) in 1937 in which the way of the life of the fishing communities on a small Shetland island is depicted. His next movie, The SPY IN BLACK (1939), his first movie with long-time collaborator EMERIC PRESSBURGER was an international commercial success starring the indomitable Conrad Veidt and Valerie Hobson and feature a submarine as vehicle for the plot. Boats and water were to be a recurrent theme in lots of P&P movies.

Powell and Pressburger's last commercial success chronicled the major naval battle in World War II: THE BATTLE OF THE RIVER PLATE (1956). To conclude this entry here's a fantastic behind the scene still from that particular movie. It features an artist whose work was hugely important for the films of Powell and Pressburger. How poignant that two works of art of HEIN HECKROTH feature so prominently still in Michael Powell's cottage now.


This encapsules the romantic value of a still as I discussed earlier in What Oh What. Here's a moment gone forever, caught in time with light-sensitive materials. 
This particular still has the bonus that it has a snipe on the back. Paper snipes are very useful to date a still and give information on what is supposed to be represented.
The snipe informs;

290.Pub.36   INFORMAL GROUP pictured on the set at Pinewood during filming of "THE BATTLE OF THE RIVER PLATE" are left to right:
Designer Hein Heckroth, Director Michael Powell with his 4-year-old son Columba, Mrs. Michael Powell [Frankie Reidy], and Emeric Pressburger, Heckroth acted as "guest" designer for the Manolo's Bar set.

"THE BATTLE OF THE RIVER PLATE" is written, produced and directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. A Michael Powell - Emeric Pressburger Production in VistaVision and Eastman Colour amde for the J. Arthur Rank Organisation at Pinewood Studios; starring John Gregson, Anthony Quayle and Peter Finch as Captain Langsdorf.

Still by Ian Jeayes

Thanks again Thelma and Columba for a wonderful visit!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Directors in front of a camera


Tomorrow I'm flying to England on a special mission. I'm trying to meet Thelma Schoonmaker. Mrs. Schoonmaker plays quite an important role in my movie world as she connects two directors whose work I admire greatly. As editor she's been the right hand of Martin Scorsese for over forty years and has won three Oscars for Raging Bull, The Aviator and The Departed. For me even more significant is that she's the widow of Michael Powell whose A Matter of Life and Death and I Know Where I'm Going totally blew me away when I first saw them.

I've met Mrs. Schoonmaker before. In the late 1980's, still a relatively fresh kid,  I was determined to meet Michael Powell at the Dutch Filmmuseum. I went to the retrospective in his honour and he signed his autobiography and a poster for me. I hung around and sneaked into the official ceremonials. I can still remember the strange tension I felt at the time, a sort of mixture of elation, awe and sense of voyeurism. Hopefully if I can renew my acquaintance with Mrs Schoonmaker this weekend I'll be more level-headed. I have an ulterior motive with this visit, but that needs to be withheld for the moment. In any case I'm sure I will attend a pretty British affair.

Okay, to the stills. Stills of directors are comparatively rare. Stills from movies can be divided in three groups. The first group consists of stills depicting scenes of a particular movie. The majority of stills belong to this group as there are made quite a few of them, sometimes running in the hundreds. With older movies these kind of stills can be recognized by a double set of reference codes (most often numbers). The first set refers to the production code, the second to a scene. Basically you can follow the plot of the movie by following the stills. For a beautiful example, buy the great book La Dolce Vita L'Album by Sam Stourdze which shows almost all French stills made for this classic film La Dolce Vita L'Album .

As directors are behind the camera and not in the scenes you won't find them in those, except of course when they have a cameo of sorts in a movie. I like this one as an example. John Cromwell was an A-list director in the thirties shooting pictures with stars as Bette Davis, James Stewart, Katharine Hepburn and Carole Lombard. Here he plays a bishop in Robert Altman's  A Wedding (1978) with Lilian Gish.


The second group of stills are publicity stills. The still photographer assigned to the movie makes a set of photographs where the cast poses in stead of acts. Usually they wear their costumes or use specific props but they are not re-enacting scenes from the movie. These stills have a different coding than the scene code, often the number code start with a letter, like  "P" or "PUB" for publicity or sometimes "F" or "X". Because directors usually don't pose, but rant & rave, stills of posing directors are quite rare. This one of William Castle is a beautifully stylized one. William Castle was famous for his publicity stunts to sell his teenage-targeted movies, for example attaching vibrating buzzers to theatre seats which would go off when an alleged monster appeared on screen during The Tingler (1959).
Here Castle strikes the perfect director's pose for The Night Walker (1964).


The most stills with directors will be found in the third group, the "behind the scenes"-stills. Behind the scenes the director is of course the Big Cheese and he will be represented as such. Often we'll see him (and very sometimes her) in royal serenity on his throne, the director's chair, or wielding his mighty weapon, the camera. Another popular representation is the one of the director actually directing his cast, gesturing with purpose, eyes full with intent and concentration. This wil be the subject of one of my later entries in this blog. As I'm off soon trying to meet the right hand of one of the biggest directors around, it's only fair to feature him as well at his directorial best for After Hours (1985) talking the scene or script through with actor/producer Griffin Dunne.


Obviously it is important for a director to stay on the good side with the producer. According to legend this does not happen too often. Maybe that's why stills of producer and director in blissful harmony are contenders to be the rarest stills of all.
One more reason to be very happy to have this still in my collection. My hero Michael Powell with famous producer J. Arthur Rank at the set of Black Narcissus (1947).