For some reason, I find it funny that the director of 1954’s White
Christmas was actually born on Christmas Eve. Through Curtiz career he directed
many of the greatest movies ever put on film. Curtiz was born Kertész Kaminer Manó to a Jewish family in Budapest, Hungary (then Austria-Hungary) on December
24, 1886. Curtiz loved to tell stories and he claimed he had been a member of
the Hungarian fencing team at the 1912 Olympic
Games. In reality,
Curtiz had a conventional middle-class upbringing; he
studied at Markoszy University and the Royal Academy of Theater and Art, Budapest, before beginning his career as an actor and director as
Mihály Kertész at the National
Hungarian Theater in 1912.
Details of his
early experience as a director are sparse, and it is not clear what part he may
have played in the direction of several early films, but he is known to have
directed at least one film in Hungary before spending six months in 1913 at the
Nordisk studio in Denmark honing his craft. While in Denmark,
Curtiz worked as the assistant director for August Blom on Denmark's
first multi-reel feature film, Atlantis. On the
outbreak of World War I, he briefly
served in the artillery of the Austro-Hungarian
Army, but he had
returned to film-making by 1915. In that or the following year he married for
the first time, to actress Lucy Doraine. The couple
divorced in 1923. Curtiz left Hungary when the film industry was nationalized
in 1919, during the brief Hungarian
Soviet Republic, and soon settled in Vienna. He made at least 21 films for Sascha Films, among them
the Biblical epics Sodom
und Gomorrha (1922) and Die Sklavenkönigin (1924). The latter, released in the
US as Moon of Israel, caught the attention of Jack Warner, who hired
Curtiz for his own studio with the intention of having him direct a similar
film for Warner Brothers, Noah's
Ark, eventually
produced in 1928. When he left for the United States, he left behind at least
one illegitimate son and one illegitimate daughter.
Curtiz arrived
in the United States in 1926 (according to some sources on the fourth of July, but according
to others in June). He took the anglicized name "Michael Curtiz". He
had a lengthy and prolific Hollywood career, with directing credits on over 100
films in many film genres. During the
1930s, he was often credited on four films in a single year, although he was
not always the sole director on these projects. In the pre-Code period, Curtiz directed such films as Mystery
of the Wax Museum, Doctor X (both shot in
two-strip Technicolor), and The
Kennel Murder Case. In the mid-1930s, he began the successful cycle of
adventure films starring Errol Flynn that included Captain
Blood (1935), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936), The
Adventures of Robin Hood (1938), Dodge
City, The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939), The
Sea Hawk and Santa
Fe Trail (1940).
Prime examples
of his work in the 1940s are The
Sea Wolf (1941), Casablanca (1942) and Mildred
Pierce (1945). During
this period he also directed the pro-Soviet propaganda film Mission to Moscow (1943), which
was commissioned at the request of president Franklin D.
Roosevelt in order to
aid the wartime effort. Other Curtiz efforts included Four Daughters (1938), Yankee
Doodle Dandy (1942), Life With Father (1947), Young
Man with a Horn and The
Breaking Point (1950).
While Curtiz
himself had escaped Europe before the rise of Nazism, other members of his family were not as lucky. His
sister's family was sent to Auschwitz, where her husband died. Curtiz paid part of his own
salary into the European Film
Fund; a benevolent
association which helped European refugees in the film business establish
themselves in the U.S.
In the late
1940s, he made a new agreement with Warners under which the studio and his own
production company were to share the costs and profits of his subsequent films.
These films did poorly, however, whether as part of the changes in the film
industry in this period or because Curtiz "had no skills in shaping the
entirety of a picture". Either way, as Curtiz himself said, "You are only
appreciated so far as you carry the dough into the box office. They throw
you into gutter next day". The long partnership between director and
studio descended into a bitter court battle.
After his
relationship with Warners broke down, Curtiz continued to direct on a freelance
basis from 1954 onwards and he made many films for Paramount from White
Christmas (1954),
starring Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye to King Creole (1958),
starring Elvis Presley. His final
film, The Comancheros, was released six months before his death from cancer on April 10, 1962, aged 75…
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ReplyDeleteDefinitely my "desert island" director. He never bored his audience.
ReplyDelete