Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Young Orson The Years of Luck and Genius on the Path to Citizen Kane by Patrick McGilligan Young Orson: The Years of Luck and Genius on the Path to Citizen Kane by Patrick McGilligan. I must admit that I approached this book with hesitation. Although the author has edited excellent interviews with blacklist victims and screenwriters from Hollywood’s Golden Age to the 1990s, his biographies have sometimes tended to go into National Enquirer territory distracting from a more objective consideration of artistic achievement. McGilligan is at his best when he sympathizes with his subject matter. His explorations of the work of Fritz Lang (2013), Clint Eastwood (2002), and Nicholas Ray (2011) often leave much to be desired since his critical insights often lack the rigor of his otherwise unbiased journalism when he does not succumb to negative subjectivity. Even Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light (2003) has received detailed criticism by Australian Hitchcock expert Ken Mogg on his valuable Web Page “The Macguffin” and one can question whether stories about an aged director’s use of hookers or another’s alleged home movie recording of sexual exploits add much to understanding person and work. However, after learning first hand of favorable reactions to the galleys of McGilligan’s new book on Welles from critics such as Joseph McBride and Jonathan Rosenbaum as well as the enthusiastic approval of Chris Feder Welles and finishing the nearly 800 page book yesterday, I must add my contribution to the positive voices that have acclaimed this study so far. Young Orson is undoubtedly the best book recently published of the early years of Orson Welles concluding with the first day shooting of Citizen Kane (1941) and ending with a detailed account of his last day in 1985. It is far better than Simon Callow’s The Road to Xanadu (1997), the first part of a four-part series which began with the usual negative approach to the director before his more balanced assessment in Hello Americans (2006). (I’ve yet to read his third volume, last year’s One Man Band ). McGilligan has wisely decided to avoid the problematic path of interviewing those who knew Welles now in their 90s whose memories are now subject to the passing of time like the aged Jed Leland in Citizen Kane . The author instead has researched not only well-known sources but also explored reliable archive material to provide a more objective evaluation of his subject that is neither too partisan nor too derogatory. He takes issues with several interpretations of figures such as John Houseman and Simon Callow for the neutral aim of setting the record straight. McGilligan also explodes the myth that Welles fathered Michael Lindsay-Hogg by Geraldine Fitzgerald as “a biological impossibility” (602) examining the supposed facts in a scrupulous manner few have ever done as well as supplying the most logical and less salacious origin of “Rosebud” in Citizen Kane . Yet, how can one review such a mammoth book that deserves a place in the library of any serious critic or budget-assaulted college libraries in the space available? I will focus on the second, often ignored part of the title to reveal how it is so important. Young Orson comprises five main parts, the first beginning with the decades before his birth and the last dealing with his final day. For the first, McGilligan supplies an important backstory concerning the cultural world of the Mid-West that Welles was born into and the creative aspirations of his parents Richard Welles and Beatrice Ives, the first a talented inventor and the second a very cultured woman, Kenosha’s first female school board official, and a leading suffragette. Young Orson was born into a very uniquely creative world, one long gone and sadly lacking today. As he grew up and made his way towards radio and theater, he frequently encountered figures who would later play major roles in Citizen Kane such as young Agnes Moorehead in 1925 (114) Erskine Sanford, Harry Shannon, and Fortunio Bonanova in the same year (116-117). Later in New York during 1934, he would see Joseph Calleia on stage and meet the African-American leads of the anti-racist stage play Stevedore (1934) – Jack Carter, Edna Thomas, and Canada Lee whom he would soon cast in the Harlem stage production of Macbeth (297). In this exciting time of Cultural Front ferment in the realms of radio and theater, he would also meet other future collaborators such as Paul Stewart (326) , Joseph Cotton (325), Everett Sloane (338), George Coulouris (365-366), Bernard Herrmann (379), William Alland (382), as well as temporary ones such as Burgess Meredith (later Prince Hal in Five Kings, an early version of what would later become Chimes at Midnight) ) in Project 891’s production of “Fall of the City” in 1937 (378-379). Robert Coote was engaged for the ill-fated film version of Heart of Darkness but would later appear in 1952’s Othello (589). At the same time he met Cotton working in CBS Radio Welles also encountered Ray Collins (326). McGilligan describes Five Kings as “fated to be the great white whale that Orson chased across miles and years” (518). Not only did it feature Burgess Meredith (an underrated actor not deserving Andrew Britton’s scorn in later years) but also burlesque comedian Gus Schilling, Edgar Barrier, Erskine Sanford, John Berry, Richard Wilson, and William Alland. All these now familiar names appear like thespian version of Pennies from Heaven (music by Arthur Johnston, lyrics by Johnny Burke, 1936) who would appear like rabbits from a magician’s hat in an era of stimulating creativity within the Great Depression and do their most creative work with Welles. McGilligan’s version of his own Road to Xanadu implicitly and explicitly records the influence of the progressive cultural trends of the New Deal movements whose representatives mostly became victims of the Cold War blacklist a decade later, such as radio actress and Radio Guild activist Georgia Backus (616, 727) later uncredited in Abraham Polonsky’s Force of Evil (1949) who would soon disappear from the scene. Welles’s “friendships with the out-of-work black Harlemites who populated his Voodoo Macbeth , and the very public crucible of mounting the production, deepened his liberal politics and his sensitivity to black history” (352). This racial sensitivity would later appear in his defense of wrongly arrested young Mexicans in the 1942 Sleepy Lagoon murder case in Hollywood and his defense of blinded veteran Isaac Woodard Jr. on his 1946 ABC radio show. Critics have long remarked on the cinematic qualities of Welles’s radio productions but McGilligan also notes cinematic features that occurred in the problematic Five Kings production noted at the time by Philadelphia news critic J.H. Keen and later by Burgess Meredith in his 1994 memoir So Far, So Good : The impasse with Five Kings had softened Orson’s resistance to Hollywood. But he had also been gravitating toward a cinematic style for some time. He had been using blackouts and onstage curtains to minimize the time between shifts. The revolving platform of Five Kings , as critic Nelson B. Bell wrote in the Washington Post , was a type of `motion picture technique’, bringing mobility to the settings and characters ‘in such a way that the effect is one of continuous action and dialogue with a revolutionary blending of scenes’. (541) Events in Welles personal life either marked him deeply or provided material for a preliminary mental sketchbook he would develop later. The tragic death of his mother in 1924 implicitly evokes the future cinematic demise of Isabel Amberson while his 1929 encounter with Beijing Opera in Shanghai when on holiday with his father would provide inspiration for one memorable scene in The Lady from Shanghai (171-172). McGilligan notes that “Without the tragedy of his parents, Welles might never have developed his singular drive, his quixotic belief that time and money should not matter” (178). Whether brief or longer, Welles often used the names of those he encountered for humorous effect as with that of his guardian Dr. Bernstein or the father-in-law of his beloved teacher Arthur Lincoln Gettys (221) later embodied in the different characters played by Sloane and Collins in Kane . Yet, no type of reductive derivations appeared in that film. McGilligan notes that despite Herman J. Mankiewicz’s allusions to William Randolph Hearst in the initial screenplay, Welles “wanted Kane to serve as an archetype, not a replication of Hearts. Houseman had failed this part of his task, allowing too many real-life references to Hearst to sneak into the script” (654). As Robert Carringer has shown, the real creative talent in this association was the director not the scenarist. Two other very different real-life tycoons, Samuel Insull and Robert R. McCormick, also went into Welles’s artistic Macbeth -like witches’ cauldron to create Charles Foster Kane (237). A never produced 1934 Caribbean version of Romeo and Juliet set in Martinique envisaged by Welles and journeyman actor Francis Carpenter (294) would provide the inspiration for the Harlem Macbeth ’s location in Haiti, the Negro Unit’s first classical play following previous productions such as Conjur Man Dies (1936) directed by Wisconsin-born Joseph Losey (331-332). The development of Welles’ creativity and the presence of a supportive culturally progressive historical era blended in making him the artist that he became. Throughout this book, McGilligan takes special care to correct many errors and misconceptions due to John Houseman who became envious of his partner’s success.
Katherine Kinney Cold Wars: Black Soldiers in Liberal Hollywood n 1982 Louis Gossett, Jr was awarded the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of Gunnery Sergeant Foley in An Officer and a Gentleman, becoming theI first African American actor to win an Oscar since Sidney Poitier. In 1989, Denzel Washington became the second to win, again in a supporting role, for Glory. It is perhaps more than coincidental that both award winning roles were soldiers. At once assimilationist and militant, the black soldier apparently escapes the Hollywood history Donald Bogle has named, “Coons, Toms, Bucks, and Mammies” or the more recent litany of cops and criminals. From the liberal consensus of WWII, to the ideological ruptures of Vietnam, and the reconstruction of the image of the military in the Reagan-Bush era, the black soldier has assumed an increasingly prominent role, ironically maintaining Hollywood’s liberal credentials and its preeminence in producing a national mythos. This largely static evolution can be traced from landmark films of WWII and post-War liberal Hollywood: Bataan (1943) and Home of the Brave (1949), through the career of actor James Edwards in the 1950’s, and to the more politically contested Vietnam War films of the 1980’s. Since WWII, the black soldier has held a crucial, but little noted, position in the battles over Hollywood representations of African American men.1 The soldier’s role is conspicuous in the way it places African American men explicitly within a nationalist and a nationaliz- ing context: U.S. history and Hollywood’s narrative of assimilation, the combat film.
The magnificent ambersons review Continue For the 2002 television version, watch The Magnificent Amberers (the 2002 film). 1942 film by Orson Helles, Robert Wise Magnificent AmbersonsTheatrical release poster with illustrations by Norman Rockwell 1Director Orson WellesProduced Orson WellesScreenplay Orson WellesBased on Magnificent Amberersby Booth TarkingtonStarring Joseph Cotten Dostren Dolores Costello Ann Baxter Tim Holt Agnes Moorhead Ray Collins Erskine Sanford Richard Bennett Comments Orson WellesMusic No Credit to FilmCinematographyStanley CortezEd ByRobert WiseProductioncompany RKO Radio PicturesMercury Productions Distributed RKO Radio PicturesRelease Date July 10 , 1942 (1942-07-10) Running time 88 minutes148 minutes (original)131 minutes (preview)Country Of the United StatesLanguageEnglishBudget $1.1 million:71-72Box office $1 million (US rent) The Magnificent Ambers (U.S. - American drama 1942, written, produced and directed by Orson Velez. Welles will adapt Booth Tarkington's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1918 novel, about the leaning fortunes of the wealthy Midwestern family and the social changes brought by the car era. The film stars Joseph Cotten, Dolores Costello, Ann Baxter, Tim Holt, Agnes Moorhead and Ray Collins, while Welles has a narration. Heles lost control of RKO's The Magnificent Amberers edit, and the final version released to viewers was significantly different from his rough cut of the film. More than an hour of footage was cut in the studio, which also shot and replaced a happier ending. While Veles's extensive notes on how he wanted the film to be shortened survived, the cut frames were destroyed. Composer Bernard Herrmann insisted that his merit be removed when, like the film itself, his score was heavily edited by the studio.
ORSON WELLES (En El Centenario De Su Nacimiento) 2 Proyector “Marín” De 35Mm (Ca.1970)
cineclub universitario/aula de cine centro de cultura contemporánea - vicerrectorado de extensión universitaria Universidad de Granada P r o g r a m a c i ó n d e octubre 2 0 1 5 MAESTROS DEL CINE CLÁSICO (VIII): ORSON WELLES (en el centenario de su nacimiento) 2 Proyector “Marín” de 35mm (ca.1970). Cineclub Universitario Foto: Jacar [indiscreetlens.blogspot.com] (2015). El CINECLUB UNIVERSITARIO se crea en 1949 con el nombre de “Cineclub de Granada”. Será en 1953 cuando pase a llamarse con su actual denominación. Así pues en este curso 2015-2016 cumplimos 62 (66) años. 2 OCTUBRE 2015 MAESTROS DEL CINE CLÁSICO (VIII): ORSON WELLES (en el centenario de su nacimiento) OCTOBER 2015 MASTERS OF CLASSIC CINEMA (VIII): ORSON WELLES (100 years since his birth) Martes 20 / Tuesday 20th • 21 h. EL EXTRAÑO (1946) ( THE STRANGER) v.o.s.e. / OV film with Spanish subtitles Viernes 23 / Friday 23th • 21 h. SED DE MAL (1958) ( TOUCH OF EVIL ) v.o.s.e. / OV film with Spanish subtitles Martes 27 / Tuesday 27th • 21 h. CAMPANADAS A MEDIANOCHE (1965) ( CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT / CAMPANADAS A MEDIANOCHE ) v.o.s.e. / OV film with Spanish subtitles Viernes 30 / Friday 30th • 21 h. FRAUDE (1973) ( FAKE / QUESTION MARK / VÉRITÉS ET MENSONGES) v.o.s.e. / OV film with Spanish subtitles Todas las proyecciones en el Aula Magna de la Facultad de Ciencias. All projections at the Assembly Hall in the Science College. Seminario “CAUTIVOS DEL CINE” Miércoles 21 octubre / 17 h. EL CINE DE ORSON WELLES Gabinete de Teatro & Cine del Palacio de la Madraza Entrada libre (hasta completar aforo) 3 4 “No creo que en el futuro se me recuerde.
IT’S A CONSPIRACY! As a Cautionary Remembrance of the JFK Assassination—A Survey of Films With A Paranoid Edge Dan Akira Nishimura with Don Malcolm The only culture to enlist the imagination and change the charac- der. As it snows, he walks the streets of the town that will be forever ter of Americans was the one we had been given by the movies… changed. The banker Mr. Potter (Lionel Barrymore), a scrooge-like No movie star had the mind, courage or force to be national character, practically owns Bedford Falls. As he prepares to reshape leader… So the President nominated himself. He would fill the it in his own image, Potter doesn’t act alone. There’s also a board void. He would be the movie star come to life as President. of directors with identities shielded from the public (think MPAA). Who are these people? And what’s so wonderful about them? —Norman Mailer 3. Ace in the Hole (1951) resident John F. Kennedy was a movie fan. Ironically, one A former big city reporter of his favorites was The Manchurian Candidate (1962), lands a job for an Albu- directed by John Frankenheimer. With the president’s per- querque daily. Chuck Tatum mission, Frankenheimer was able to shoot scenes from (Kirk Douglas) is looking for Seven Days in May (1964) at the White House. Due to a ticket back to “the Apple.” Pthe events of November 1963, both films seem prescient. He thinks he’s found it when Was Lee Harvey Oswald a sleeper agent, a “Manchurian candidate?” Leo Mimosa (Richard Bene- Or was it a military coup as in the latter film? Or both? dict) is trapped in a cave Over the years, many films have dealt with political conspira- collapse.
CITIZEN KANE PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Harlan Lebo | 368 pages | 01 May 2016 | Thomas Dunne Books | 9781250077530 | English | United States Citizen Kane () - IMDb Mankiewicz , who had been writing Mercury radio scripts. One of the long-standing controversies about Citizen Kane has been the authorship of the screenplay. In February Welles supplied Mankiewicz with pages of notes and put him under contract to write the first draft screenplay under the supervision of John Houseman , Welles's former partner in the Mercury Theatre. Welles later explained, "I left him on his own finally, because we'd started to waste too much time haggling. So, after mutual agreements on storyline and character, Mank went off with Houseman and did his version, while I stayed in Hollywood and wrote mine. The industry accused Welles of underplaying Mankiewicz's contribution to the script, but Welles countered the attacks by saying, "At the end, naturally, I was the one making the picture, after all—who had to make the decisions. I used what I wanted of Mank's and, rightly or wrongly, kept what I liked of my own. The terms of the contract stated that Mankiewicz was to receive no credit for his work, as he was hired as a script doctor. Mankiewicz also threatened to go to the Screen Writers Guild and claim full credit for writing the entire script by himself. After lodging a protest with the Screen Writers Guild, Mankiewicz withdrew it, then vacillated. The guild credit form listed Welles first, Mankiewicz second. Welles's assistant Richard Wilson said that the person who circled Mankiewicz's name in pencil, then drew an arrow that put it in first place, was Welles.
Anti-Apartheid Solidarity in United States–South Africa Relations: from the Margins to the Mainstream
Anti-apartheid solidarity in United States–South Africa relations: From the margins to the mainstream By William Minter and Sylvia Hill1 I came here because of my deep interest and affection for a land settled by the Dutch in the mid-seventeenth century, then taken over by the British, and at last independent; a land in which the native inhabitants were at first subdued, but relations with whom remain a problem to this day; a land which defined itself on a hostile frontier; a land which has tamed rich natural resources through the energetic application of modern technology; a land which once imported slaves, and now must struggle to wipe out the last traces of that former bondage. I refer, of course, to the United States of America. Robert F. Kennedy, University of Cape Town, 6 June 1966.2 The opening lines of Senator Robert Kennedy’s speech to the National Union of South African Students (NUSAS), on a trip to South Africa which aroused the ire of pro-apartheid editorial writers, well illustrate one fundamental component of the involvement of the United States in South Africa’s freedom struggle. For white as well as black Americans, the issues of white minority rule in South Africa have always been seen in parallel with the definition of their own country’s identity and struggles against racism.3 From the beginning of white settlement in the two countries, reciprocal influences have affected both rulers and ruled. And direct contacts between African Americans and black South Africans date back at least to the visits of American 1 William Minter is editor of AfricaFocus Bulletin (www.africafocus.org) and a writer and scholar on African issues.
RFC’s Library’s Book Guide 2017 Since the beginning of our journey at the Royal Film Commission – Jordan (RFC), we have been keen to provide everything that promotes cinema culture in Jordan; hence, the Film Library was established at the RFC’s Film House in Jabal Amman. The Film Library offers access to a wide and valuable variety of Jordanian, Arab and International movies: the “must see” movies for any cinephile. There are some 2000 titles available from 59 countries. In addition, the Film Library has 2500 books related to various aspects of the audiovisual field. These books tackle artistic, technical, theoretical and historical aspects of cinema and filmmaking. The collec- tion of books is bilingual (English and Arabic). Visitors can watch movies using the private viewing stations available and read books or consult periodi- cals in a calm and relaxed atmosphere. Library members are, in addition, allowed to borrow films and/or books. Membership fees: 20 JOD per year; 10 JOD for students. Working hours: The Film Library is open on weekdays from 9:00 AM until 8:00 PM. From 3:00 PM until 8:00 PM on Saturdays. It is closed on Fridays. RFC’s Library’s Book Guide 2 About People In Cinema 1 A Double Life: George Cukor Patrick McGilligan 2 A Hitchcock Reader Marshall Dentelbaum & Leland Poague 3 A life Elia Kazan 4 A Man With a Camera Nestor Almenros 5 Abbas Kiarostami Saeed-Vafa & Rosenbaum 6 About John Ford Lindsay Anderson 7 Adventures with D.W. Griffith Karl Brown 8 Alexander Dovzhenko Marco Carynnk 9 All About Almodovar Epps And Kakoudeki
The African e-Journals Project has digitized full text of articles of eleven social science and humanities journals. This item is from the digital archive maintained by Michigan State University Library. Find more at: http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/africanjournals/ Available through a partnership with Scroll down to read the article. The Archaeology of Black Theatre by VeVe A. Clark INTRODUCTION Black theatre history is turning artifacts into living monuments. During the 1970s, important studies of the Federal Theatre, black community theatres in California, Trinidad Carnival and the Ejagham Leopard mime from Nigeria and Cameroon have unearthed, analyzed and described performances and texts as diverse as the black world itself. (1) What these books have in common, besides impeccable scholarship and readibility, is their fundamental approach. They each treat theatre as cultural expression combining literature, art and sociology. Why such milestones in black theatre history have appeared at this time is a question not easily answered. All of these recent works have made full use of primary sources - a rare circumstance for most researchers in black theatre. There may be another distinction these studies suggest as well. Each demonstrates a commitment to the use of ethnographic and oral history techniques in a field that generally relies solely on written archives. Perhaps, as of the '70s, a new methodology for the study of black theatre has emerged. From my own work in the field and analysis of the literature devoted to world theatre, I have come to call the new methodology archaeology. (2) How archaeology in a black context differs from the literal definition of the term, what archaeology collects, analyzes and describes, how an archaeologist distributes the results of analysis are subjects in need of scholarly dis- cussion.
Welles Exploring New Hollywood Production Opportunities: Sex and Nudity in the Other Side of the Wind Massimiliano Studer
Miscellanea – peer-reviewed Cinergie – Il cinema e le altre arti. N.16 (2019) https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.2280-9481/8762 ISSN 2280-9481 Welles Exploring New Hollywood Production Opportunities: Sex and Nudity in The Other Side of the Wind Massimiliano Studer Submitted: December 10, 2018 – Revised version: May 30, 2019; July 24, 2019 Accepted: November 25, 2019 – Published: December 23, 2019 Abstract In November 1968, Jack Valenti, then president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), cre- ated the Rating System so that theater owners could indicate to families which films were suitable for chil- dren. New and talented young producers such as Bert Schneider took great advantage of the new opportu- nities this system offered. Orson Welles, still self-exiled in Europe, himself wanted to take advantage ofthe changed climate in Hollywood. Thanks to the support of his new partner, Oja Kodar, Orson Welles decided that his films would explore sexuality in a more explicit way. Nudity, corporeity, and sex (though already appearing in his previous films) are copiously dealt with in The Other Side of the Wind, whose initial con- ception and realization was largely due to Oja Kodar. One of the film’s most iconic sequences, the “car sex scene”, features well-known Wellesian techniques as applied to the depiction of dominant female sexuality. Keywords: The Other Side of the Wind; Orson Welles; New Hollywood; Rating System; Jack Valenti. Acknowledgements I wish to thank Professor Francesco Pitassio, Professor Joseph McBride and Ray Kelly for their invaluable comments, suggestions and support. I express profound gratitude to Steven North for sharing with me his personal insights and thoughts about the New Hollywood.
Lee Says He'll Play Othello' After Native Son' Closes Ruby 'S Huge New Aloha R Anch Popular Spot Orson Wolios to NEWS of THEATRES
SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1941 THE PHOENIX INDEX, PHOENIX, ARIZONA PAGE SEVEN Lee Says He'll Play Othello' After Native Son' Closes Ruby 's Huge New Aloha R anch Popular Spot Orson Wolios To NEWS OF THEATRES "¦’ »'*• ¦¦'i ¦-—g=rrr . ¦¦. • ”wi ¦!-.iL. '¦ ly* •y_ * «•¦».¦ ¦ » 1 ¦ 1 ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦'.-.'¦ ¦¦.—» ¦ 1 jtjii¦ 1 ¦ Be The Director By BERNICE AND DELORES CALVIN a NEW— (C) —Canada (Bigger Thomas) Lee, has been i4// Alone And Lonely” Is offered to do the leading role in Shakespeare’s ‘ Othello” next season,,as soon as ‘‘Native Son’’ closes. And it will be directed by the master of showmen,Orson Welles, who de- serves at least 1-3 of the credit for “Native Son" being the huge success that it is. (Author Richard Wright .and actor Destined For Hit Parade Canada Lee get the other 2-3rds). This important secret Mr. Lee modestly revealed to U 3 when we visited him backstage j Pearson, Sanders in his dressing room after his June 3rd performance. Asked They Wrote Hit Nufnber who would be in the leading feminine lea- Vlr. Lee replied: Really Have One, “I don’t know. You see, the oth- —: er actors haven’t even been chos Asserts Dorsey c-n yet.” In Topsy s Roast And that’s not all. This actor NEW YORK CITY— <SNS) has two picture offers pending, When Jimmy Dorsey’s Decca re- both from R.K.O. “I’m not sure cord of “A.!l Alone and Lonely” was yet what they’ll be like. I don’t released last week a lot of people want any yassuh mess or Stephin were very happy Swing master Fetchit stuff.