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Michael Curtiz

Michael Curtiz (/kɜːrˈtz/ kur-Tiz; born Manó Kaminer; from 1905 Mihály Kertész; Hungarian: Kertész Mihály; December 24, 1886 – April 10, 1962) was a Hungarian-American film director, recognized as one of the most prolific directors in history.[2]: 67  He directed classic films from the silent era and numerous others during Hollywood's Golden Age, when the studio system was prevalent.

Michael Curtiz
Curtiz c. 1928
Born
Manó Kaminer

(1886-12-24)December 24, 1886[1]
DiedApril 10, 1962(1962-04-10) (aged 75)
Other namesMike Curtiz
Mihály Kertész
CitizenshipHungary (1886-1933)
United States (after 1933)
OccupationFilm director
Years active1912–1961
Spouses
(m. 1918; div. 1923)
(m. 1929)
Children2

Curtiz was already a well-known director in Europe when Warner Bros. invited him to Hollywood in 1926, when he was 39 years of age. He had already directed 64 films in Europe, and soon helped Warner Bros. become the fastest-growing movie studio. He directed 102 films during his Hollywood career, mostly at Warners, where he directed ten actors to Oscar nominations. James Cagney and Joan Crawford won their only Academy Awards under Curtiz's direction. He put Doris Day and John Garfield on screen for the first time, and he made stars of Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, and Bette Davis. He himself was nominated five times, and won twice, once for Best Short Subject for Sons of Liberty and once as Best Director for Casablanca.

Curtiz was among those who introduced to Hollywood a visual style using artistic lighting, extensive and fluid camera movement, high crane shots, and unusual camera angles. He was versatile, and could handle any film genre: melodrama, comedy, love story, film noir, musical, war story, Western, horror, or historical epic. He always paid attention to the human-interest aspect of every story, stating that the "human and fundamental problems of real people" were the basis of all good drama.[3]

The death of 25 horses in The Charge of the Light Brigade under Curtiz's direction led to a near-violent confrontation between Curtiz and star Errol Flynn, which led to the U.S. Congress and the ASPCA to enact legislation and policy to prevent cruelty to animals on the sets of movies.

Curtiz helped popularize the classic swashbuckler, with films such as Captain Blood (1935) and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938). He directed many other dramas which are considered classics: Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), The Sea Wolf (1941), Casablanca (1942), and Mildred Pierce (1945). He directed leading musicals, including Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), This Is the Army (1943), and White Christmas (1954), and he made comedies, with Life with Father (1947) and We're No Angels (1955).

Early life edit

Curtiz was born Manó Kaminer[a] to a Jewish family in Budapest in 1886, where his father was a carpenter and his mother an opera singer.[1][4]: 20 [5] In 1905, he Magyarised his name to Mihály Kertész.[b][c] Curtiz had a lower-middle-class upbringing. He recalled during an interview that his family's home was a cramped apartment, where he had to share a small room with his two brothers and a sister. "Many times, we are hungry," he added.[4]: 20 

After graduating from high school, he studied at Markoszy University, followed by the Royal Academy of Theater and Art, in Budapest, before beginning his career.[d]

Career in Europe edit

Actor edit

Curtiz became attracted to the theater when he was a child in Hungary. He built a little theatre in the cellar of his family home when he was 8 years old, where he and five of his friends re-enacted plays. They set up the stage, with scenery and props, and Curtiz directed them.

After he graduated from college at age 19, he took a job as an actor with a travelling theatre company, where he began working as one their travelling players.[7] From that job, he became a pantomimist with a circus for a while, but then returned to join another group of travelling players for a few more years. They played Ibsen and Shakespeare in various languages, depending on what country they were in. They performed throughout Europe, including France, Hungary, Italy, and Germany, and he eventually learned five languages.[7] He had various responsibilities:

We had to do everything—make bill posters, print programmes, set scenery, mend wardrobe, sometimes even arrange chairs in the auditoriums. Sometimes we travelled in trains, sometimes in stage coaches, sometimes on horseback. Sometimes we played in town halls, sometimes in little restaurants with no scenery at all. Sometimes we gave shows out of doors. Those strolling actors were the kindest-hearted people I have ever known. They would do anything for each other.[7]

Director edit

He worked as Mihály Kertész at the National Hungarian Theater in 1912.[8]: 5  and was a member of the Hungarian fencing team at the Olympic Games in Stockholm. Kertész directed Hungary's first feature film, Today and Tomorrow (Ma és holnap, 1912), in which he also had a leading role. He followed that with another film, The Last Bohemian (Az utolsó bohém, also 1912).[9]: 163 

Curtiz began living in various cities in Europe to work on silent films in 1913. He first went to study at Nordisk studio in Denmark, which led to work as an actor and assistant director to August Blom on Denmark's first multireel feature film, Atlantis (1913).[10]

 
Movie poster, 1924

After World War I began in 1914, he returned to Hungary, where he served in the army for a year, before he was wounded fighting on the Russian front.[10][11] Curtiz wrote of that period:

The intoxicating joy of life was interrupted, the world had gone mad ... We were taught to kill. I was drafted into the Emperor's Army ... After that, many things happened: destruction, thousands forever silenced, crippled or sent to anonymous graves. Then came the collapse [of Austria-Hungary]. Fate had spared me.[4]: 22 

He was assigned to make fund-raising documentaries for the Red Cross in Hungary.[10] In 1917, he was made director of production at Phoenix Films, the leading studio in Budapest, where he remained until he left Hungary.[12]: 173  However, none of the films he directed there survive intact, and most are completely lost.[12]: 173 

By 1918, he had become one of Hungary's most important directors,[10] having by then directed about 45 films.[9]: 163  However, following the end of the war, in 1919, the new communist government nationalized the film industry, so he decided to return to Vienna to direct films there.[10]

Curtiz briefly worked at UFA GmbH, a German film company, where he learned to direct large groups of costumed extras, along with using complicated plots, rapid pacing, and romantic themes.[9] His career truly started due to his work for Count Alexander Kolowrat (known as Sascha), with whom he made at least 21 films for the count's film studio, Sascha Films. Curtiz later wrote that at Sascha, he "learned the basic laws of film art, which, in those days, had progressed further in Vienna than anywhere else."[12]: 173 

Among the films he directed were Biblical epics such as Sodom und Gomorrha (1922) and Die Sklavenkönigin (1924) (titled Moon of Israel in the U.S.).[10] He also made Red Heels (1925) and The Golden Butterfly (1926),[1] and once directed 14-year-old Greta Garbo in Sweden.[13] During this period, he tended to specialize in directing two kinds of films, either sophisticated light comedies or historical spectaculars.[12]: 173  He launched the career of Lucy Doraine, who went on to become an international star, along with that of Lili Damita, who later married Errol Flynn.[12]: 173 

I was laid in the aisles by Curtiz's camera work ... [by] shots and angles that were pure genius.

Jack L. Warner, after watching Moon of Israel[14]: 136 

The Moon of Israel (1924) was a spectacle of the enslavement of the children of Israel and their miraculous deliverance by way of the Red Sea. Shot in Vienna with a cast of 5,000, it had for its theme the love story of an Israelite maiden and an Egyptian prince.[9]: 163  Paramount Pictures in the U.S. bought the rights to the film to compete with Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments. However, The Moon of Israel caught the attention of Jack and Harry Warner, and Harry went to Europe in 1926 just to meet Curtiz and watch him work as director.[e]

The Warners were impressed that Curtiz had developed a unique visual style which was strongly influenced by German Expressionism, with high crane shots and unusual camera angles. The film also showed that Curtiz was fond of including romantic melodrama "against events of vast historical importance, for driving his characters to crises and forcing them to make moral decisions," according to Rosenzweig.[14]: 136  He offered Curtiz a contract to be a director at his new film studio in Hollywood, Warner Bros., where he would direct a similar epic that had been planned, Noah's Ark (1928).[10][16] By the time Curtiz accepted Warner's offer, he was already a prolific director, having made 64 films in countries including Hungary, Austria, and Denmark.[17]: 3 

Career in the US edit

1920s edit

Curtiz arrived in the United States in the summer of 1926,[18]: 63  and began directing at Warner Bros. under the anglicised name Michael Curtiz. During what became a 28-year period at Warner Bros., he directed 86 films, including his best work.

Although he was an experienced filmmaker, now aged 38, Warners assigned him to direct a number of average-quality films to break him in, the first being The Third Degree (1926).[1] Curtiz's unique camerawork technique was used throughout, visible in dramatic camera angles, in a style which one critic assumed other directors would likely envy.[19]

When I first came here I was called on to direct six or seven pictures a year. I never turned down a single story. That was my schooling. I worked hard on every one of them. That is how you learn.

– Michael Curtiz[20]

Learning English quickly was an immediate hurdle, however, since he had no free time. When Jack Warner gave him the film to direct, Curtiz recalls, "I could not speak one word of English."[20] It was a romantic story about jail life and gangsters in Chicago, a place he had never been about American underworld figures he had never met.[13]

To gain some direct experience about the subject, Curtiz convinced the Los Angeles sheriff to let him spend a week in jail. "When I came out, I knew what I needed for the picture."[20]

Curtiz firmly believed that investigating the background of every story should be done first and done thoroughly before starting a film.[20] He said that whenever someone asked him how he, a foreigner, could make American films, he told them, "human beings are the same all over the world. Human emotions are international." He treated his first films in the U.S. as learning experiences:

The only things that are different in different parts of the world are customs ... But those customs are easy to find out if you can read and investigate. Downtown there is a fine public library. There you can open a book and find out anything you want to know.[20]

Curtiz never gave second-hand treatment to an assignment once it was accepted. He went ahead and graced plot and character with fluid camera movement, exquisite lighting, and a lightning-fast pace. Even if a script was truly poor and the leading players were real amateurs, Curtiz glossed over inadequacies so well that an audience often failed to recognize a shallow substance until it was hungry for another film a half-hour later.

– Author William Meyer[12]: 174 

Although the language barrier made communicating with the casts and crews a hardship, he continued to invest time in preparation. Before he directed his first Western, for example, he spent three weeks reading about the histories of Texas and the lives of its important men.[11] He found it necessary to continue such intensive studying of American culture and habits in preparation for most other film genres.[11] But he was quite satisfied being in Hollywood:

It is splendid to work here in this country. One has everything at hand to work with. The director does not have to worry about anything except his ideas. He can concentrate on those with no worry about his production otherwise.[21]

The Third Degree (1926), available at the Library of Congress, made good use of Curtiz's experience in using moving cameras to create expressionistic scenes, such as a sequence shot from the perspective of a bullet in motion.[1] The film was the first of eight Curtiz films to have Dolores Costello as its star.[1]

 
1928 Curtiz film

Warner Bros. had Curtiz direct three other mediocre stories to be sure he could take on larger projects, during which time he was able to familiarize himself with their methods and work with the technicians, including cameramen, whom he would use in subsequent productions.[14]: 137  As biographer James C. Robertson explains, "In each case, Curtiz strove valiantly, but unsuccessfully to revitalize unconvincing scripts through spectacular camera work and strong central performances, the most noteworthy features of all those films."[14]: 137 

 
Curtiz (r) with Ilya Tolstoy in 1927

On a visit to Hollywood in 1927, Ilya Tolstoy, Leo Tolstoy's son, who had been a friend of Curtiz in Europe, wanted him to direct several films based on his father's novels. He chose Curtiz because he already knew the locale and its people.[22] During this period, Warner Bros. began experimenting with talking films. They assigned two part-talking pictures for Curtiz to direct: Tenderloin (1928) and Noah's Ark (1928), both of which also starred Costello.[16]

Noah's Ark included two parallel stories, one recounting the biblical flood, and the other a World War I-era romance. It was the first epic film attempted by Warner Bros., and in handing production over to Curtiz, they were hoping to assure its success. The climactic flood sequence was considered "spectacular" at the time, observed historian Richard Schickel,[23]: 31  while biographer James C. Robertson said it was "one of the most spectacular incidents in film history."[6]: 16  Its cast was made up of over 10,000 extras. However, the reissue of the film in 1957 cut an hour off the original time of 2 hours and 15 minutes. The story was an adaptation written by Bess Meredyth, who married Curtiz a few years later.[24]

The critical success of these films by Curtiz contributed to Warner Bros' becoming the fastest-growing studio in Hollywood.[1]

1930s edit

In 1930, Curtiz directed Mammy (1930), Al Jolson's fourth film after being in Hollywood's first true talking picture, The Jazz Singer (1927). During the 1930s, Curtiz directed at least four films each year.

The most obvious aspect of Curtiz's directorial signature is his expressionistic visual style, and its most obvious feature is its unusual camera angles and carefully detailed, crowded, complex compositions, full of mirrors and reflections, smoke and fog, and physical objects, furniture, foliage, bars, and windows, that stand between the camera and the human characters and seem to surround and entrap them.

– Biographer Sidney Rosenzweig[8]: 157 

Although unusual projects for Warner Bros., Curtiz directed two horror films for the studio, Doctor X (1932) and Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933), both in early Technicolor, with numerous atmospheric scenes filmed on the studio's back lot.[1]

Another breakthrough film was 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), starring then little-known actors Spencer Tracy and Bette Davis in one of their earliest films.[25] MGM head Louis B. Mayer saw the film and was impressed enough by Tracy's acting that he hired him on to MGM's roster of stars.[26]: 221 

Curtiz's American career did not really take off until 1935.[2]: 63  In the early 1930s, Warner Bros. was struggling to compete with the larger MGM, which was releasing costume dramas such as Queen Christina (1933) with Greta Garbo, Treasure Island (1934) with Wallace Beery, and The Count of Monte Cristo (1934). Warner Bros. decided to take a chance and produce their own costume drama.

Until then, it was a genre in which Warners' had assumed they could never succeed, owing to its higher production budgets during the years of the Great Depression. However, in March 1935, Warners announced it would produce Captain Blood (1935), a swashbuckler action drama based on the novel by Rafael Sabatini, and directed by Curtiz.[2]: 63  It would star a then unknown extra, Errol Flynn,[13] alongside the little-known Olivia de Havilland.[27]

 
Errol Flynn in The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936)

The film was a major success with positive critical reviews. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, and though not nominated, Curtiz received the second-highest number of votes for Best Director, solely from write-in votes. It also made stars of both Flynn and de Havilland, and it elevated Curtiz to being the studio's leading director.[2]: 63 

Curtiz continued the successful genre of adventure films starring Flynn (often with de Havilland) that included The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936), a depiction of the British Light Brigade during the Crimean War.[28] The film, another Oscar winner, was a greater success at the box-office than Captain Blood.[2]: 64  It was followed by The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938, co-directed with William Keighley whom Curtiz replaced), the most profitable film that year,[2]: 64  also winning three Academy Awards and being nominated for Best Picture.[29] It is in Rotten Tomatoes' list of Top 100 Movies.[30]

That being their third Curtiz film together, Flynn and de Havilland continued to star in other hugely successful films under his direction, including The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939), also co-starring Bette Davis.[31] Davis starred in a Curtiz film in most years during the 1930s.[2]: 73 

 
Edward G. Robinson (l) with Curtiz, during filming of Kid Galahad (1937)

Curtiz elicited some of the finest work from Edward G. Robinson in Kid Galahad (1937), where Robinson played a tough and sardonic, but ultimately soft-hearted, boxing manager.[32] The picture co-starred Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart.[1][33]

Because of Curtiz's high film productivity, Warner Bros. created a special unit for his pictures, which then allowed him to manage two film crews. One worked with him during actual filming, while the other prepared everything for the next picture.[34]

John Garfield was among Curtiz's discoveries. Curtiz discovered Garfield, a stage actor, by accident, when he came across a discarded screen test he gave, and thought he was very good. Garfield had assumed he failed the screen test and was already heading back to New York in disgust. Curtiz then went to Kansas City to intercept the train, where he pulled Garfield off and brought him back to Hollywood.[13] Garfield made his debut in Four Daughters (1938), followed by a co-starring role in its sequel, Four Wives (1939). Garfield also later co-starred in Curtiz's The Sea Wolf (1941).

In Four Daughters, Garfield co-starred with Claude Rains, who would star in 10 Curtiz movies over his career, with six of those during the 1930s.[1] Garfield and Rains "were brilliant together in this unjustly neglected Curtiz classic," says biographer Patrick J. McGrath.[35] Garfield considered it his "obscure masterpiece."[35] Reviews praised his role: "Perhaps the greatest single occurrence having to do with Four Daughters on reading the critics appears to be the debut of John Garfield, a brilliant young actor recruited from the Broadway stage."[36] Similar approval came from The New York Times, which called Garfield's acting "bitterly brilliant ... one of the best pictures of anybody's career."[36] Garfield and Rains co-starred the following year in Curtiz' Daughters Courageous (1939).

When James Cagney starred in Curtiz's Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), he was nominated for an Oscar for the first time.[1] The New York Film Critics Circle voted him as best actor for his portrayal in the film, where he played the part of a hoodlum who redeems himself.[2]: 64 [37] Curtiz was also again nominated, solidifying further his status as the studio's most important director.[2]: 64  Curtiz was nominated for the 1938 Oscar for Best Director for both Angels with Dirty Faces and Four Daughters losing to Frank Capra for You Can't Take It with You. Curtiz, however, had split his votes between two films and had actually the greater number of aggregate Academy votes.[38]

The following year, Curtiz directed a short subject, Sons of Liberty (1939), starring Claude Rains, in a biopic which dramatizes the Jewish contribution to America's independence.[2]: 44  Curtiz won an Academy Award in the category of Best Short Subject (Two-reel), for this film.[39]

Three Westerns directed by Curtiz also starring Flynn were Dodge City (1939),[40] Santa Fe Trail (1940) co-starring future US president Ronald Reagan,[41] and Virginia City (1940).[42][43]

1940s edit

During the 1940s Curtiz continued to release more critically acclaimed films, including The Sea Hawk (1940), Dive Bomber (1941), The Sea Wolf (1941), Casablanca (1942), Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), This Is the Army (1943), Mildred Pierce (1945), and Life with Father (1947).

One of the biggest hits of 1940 was The Sea Hawk, starring Errol Flynn in the role of an adventurer in the mold of Sir Francis Drake.[44] Flora Robson played Queen Elizabeth I, and Claude Rains acted as the Spanish ambassador, whose job it was to mislead the Queen who rightly suspected the Spanish Armada was about to attempt to invade England. Some critics felt the story was equivalent to actual events then taking place in Europe, describing it as a "thinly veiled diatribe against American isolationism on World War II's brink."[45] Film columnist Boyd Martin noticed the similarities:

The parallel of the dreams of empire indulged in by King Philip of Spain and those apparently momentarily enjoyed by Hitler is so obvious that it will not escape detection even by the youngest film follower who reads his newspaper and goes to see the film ... In having been supplied with a parallel, Mr. Curtiz rides his Sea Hawk neck and neck with contemporary history.[46]

 
Scene from Dive Bomber (1941)

Dive Bomber (1941)[47] was released a few months before the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Curtiz shot every foot of Dive Bomber with Navy assistance and under strict Navy scrutiny.[48] Filming at the active naval base in San Diego required great care, especially for aerial sequences. To create realistic shots, he mounted cameras on the Navy's planes to achieve "amazing point-of-view shots," taking viewers inside the cockpit during flight. He also mounted cameras underneath the wings of planes to dramatize take-offs from the Enterprise, an aircraft carrier launched a few years earlier.[49]

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times gave it a good review:[50]

The Warners have photographed this picture in some of the most magnificent technicolor yet seen ... masses of brilliantly colored planes, ranked in impressive rows about an air base or upon the huge flight decks of carriers, and roaring in silver majesty, wing to wing, through the limitless West Coast skies. Never before has an aviation film been so vivid in its images, conveyed such a sense of tangible solidity when it is showing us solid things or been so full of sunlight and clean air when the cameras are aloft. Except for a few badly matched shots, the job is well nigh perfect.

The film was well received by the public, becoming the sixth-most popular film that year.[51] No other pre-Pearl Harbor picture matched the quality of its flying scenes.[49] Film columnist Louella Parsons wrote, "Dive Bomber again makes us glad we are Americans protected by a Navy as competent as ours."[49]

Edward G. Robinson starred in The Sea Wolf (1941), his second film directed by Curtiz.[52] He portrayed the rampaging, dictatorial captain of a ship in an adaptation of one of Jack London's best known novels. Robinson said the character he portrayed "was a Nazi in everything but name," which, Robinson observed, was relevant to the state of the world at that time.[1][53] John Garfield and Ida Lupino were cast as the young lovers who attempt to escape his tyranny. Some reviews described the film as one of Curtiz's "hidden gems ... one of Curtiz's most complex works."[54] Robinson was impressed by Garfield's intense personality, which he felt may have contributed to Garfield's death at age 39:

John Garfield was one of the best young actors I ever encountered, but his passions about the world were so intense that I feared any day he would have a heart attack. It was not long before he did.[53]

With Michael Curtiz' magnificent 1941 version of The Sea Wolf ... full justice was for once done to London's text ... with the aid of models, newly introduced fog machines, and a studio tank, the film hauntingly captured an eerie malevolent atmosphere, brooding and full of terror ... From its economic opening scenes ... to its powerful climax ... it gripped consistently. Throughout, Curtiz provided object lessons in the use of sound—the groaning timbers of the ship, creaking footsteps, the wind—and closeups.

– Charles Higham and Joel Greenburg,
Hollywood in the Forties[55]: 281 

Curtiz directed another Air Force film, Captains of the Clouds (1942), about the Royal Canadian Air Force. It starred James Cagney and Brenda Marshall. According to Hal B. Wallis, its producer, it became Warner Bros.' most extensive and difficult production, and everything had to be relocated to Canada.[56]: 76  Like Dive Bomber, the vivid aerial scenes filmed in Technicolor were another feature that garnered critical attention, and the film was nominated for Best Art Direction and Best Color Cinematography.[57]

Shortly after Captains of the Clouds was completed, but released after his next picture, Casablanca, Curtiz directed the musical biopic, Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), a film about singer, dancer, and composer George M. Cohan.[58] It starred James Cagney in a role totally opposite from the one he had played four years earlier in Curtiz's Angels with Dirty Faces. Where the earlier film became a career high point for Cagney's portrayals of a gangster, a role he played in many earlier films, in this film, an overtly patriotic musical, Cagney demonstrates his considerable dancing and singing talents. It was Cagney's favorite career role.[59]

Cagney's bravura performance earned him his only Academy Award as Best Actor. For Warner Bros., it became their biggest box-office success in the company's history up to that time, nominated for nine Academy Awards and winning four. The success of the film also became a high point in Curtiz's career, with his nomination as Best Director. The film has been added to annals of Hollywood as a cinematic classic, preserved in the United States National Film Registry at the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[10]

Curtiz directed Casablanca (1942), a World War II-era romantic drama described by Roger Ebert in 1996 as one of the most popular films ever made.[60] Its stars were Humphrey Bogart, playing an expatriate living in Morocco, and Ingrid Bergman as a woman who was trying to escape the Nazis. The supporting cast features Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Conrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet, and Peter Lorre. The picture received eight Academy Award nominations and won three, including one for Curtiz as Best Director.[1] Time magazine in 2012 described Casablanca as "the best movie ever made".[61]

 
Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca (1942)

Another patriotic Curtiz film was This Is the Army (1943), a musical adapted from the stage play with a score by Irving Berlin.[62] As America was engaged in World War II, the film boosted the morale of soldiers and the public. Kate Smith's rendition of "God Bless America" was one of the highlights of the film's nineteen songs. [63] As a result of the film's numerous popular and generic elements, such as ground and aerial combat, recruitment, training, and marching as well as comedy, romance, song, and dance, it was the most financially successful war-themed film of any kind made during World War II.[64]

This Is the Army is still the freshest, the most endearing, the most rousing musical tribute to the American fighting man that has come out of World War II ... buoyant, captivating, as American as hot dogs or the Bill of Rights ... a warmly reassuring document on the state of the nation. It is, from beginning to end, a great show.

Bosley Crowther, New York Times[64]

During this period, Curtiz also directed the World War II propaganda film Mission to Moscow (1943), a film which was commissioned at the request of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in support of the U.S. and British ally, the Soviet Union, at that time holding down 80% of all German forces as they repelled the Nazi invasion of Russia. The film was mostly well received by critics and was a success at the box office, but the film soon proved to be controversial after it stirred up strong anti-Communist attacks. Curtiz took the criticism personally and vowed never again to direct an overtly political film, a promise which he kept.[14]: 148 

 
Joan Crawford starred in Mildred Pierce.

Mildred Pierce (1945) was based on the novel by James M. Cain.[65] Its star, Joan Crawford, gave one of the strongest performances in her career, playing a mother and successful businesswoman who sacrifices everything for her spoiled daughter, played by Ann Blyth.

At the time Crawford accepted the part from Warner Bros., her 18-year career at MGM had been in decline.[66] She had been one of Hollywood's most prominent and highest-paid stars but her films began losing money, and by the end of the 1930s, she was labeled "box office poison". Rather than remain at MGM and see newer, younger talent draw most of the studio's attention with better roles, she left MGM and signed a contract with Warner Bros. at a reduced salary.[67]

Curtiz originally wanted Barbara Stanwyck for the role. However, Crawford, who by then had not been in a film for two years, did her best to get the part. Rare for a major star, she was even willing to audition for Curtiz. She was already aware that "Mr. Mike Curtiz hated me ... I don't want those big broad shoulders," he said. During her reading of an emotional scene as he watched, she saw him become so overwhelmed by her delivery that he cried, and he then said, "I love you, baby."[68]

To help Crawford prepare for certain court scenes, Curtiz took her downtown, where they spent time visiting jails and watching criminal trials.[69] In photographing her, he used careful film noir camera techniques, a style he learned in Europe, to bring out the features of Crawford's face, using rich black-and-white highlights.[70] He was aware that Crawford guarded her screen image very carefully, and that she truly cared about quality. Crawford learned to appreciate Curtiz's genius with the camera.[71] Eve Arden, who was nominated as Best Supporting Actress for the film, said "Curtiz was one of the few directors who knew what he wanted and was able to express himself exactly, even in his amusing Hungarian accent."[71]

Mildred Pierce was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Only Crawford won, for Best Actress, her first and only Oscar.[67] The novel's author, James M. Cain, gave her a leather-bound copy of Mildred Pierce, which he inscribed: "To Joan Crawford, who brought Mildred to life as I had always hoped she would be, and who has my lifelong gratitude."[72] The film returned Crawford to the ranks of leading stars.

After the success of the film, Jack Warner gave Curtiz two new and exceptional contracts in appreciation, boosting his salary and reducing the number of films he had to direct each year to two.[73]

 
William Powell starred in Life With Father (1947).

Curtiz directed William Powell and Irene Dunne in Life with Father (1947), a family comedy.[74] It was a big hit in the United States, and was nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Actor for Powell. During Powell's career, he acted in 97 films; his third and last nomination was for this film. One review stated, "He is magnificent in the role, imbuing it with every attribute of pomp, dignity, unconscious conceit, and complete loveableness! His is one of the really great screen performances of the year ... that crowns a long screen life."[75]

In the late 1940s, Curtiz made a new agreement with Warner Bros. under which the studio and his own production company were to share the costs and profits of his subsequent films with his films to be released through Warner Bros. "I'm going to try to build my own stock company and make stars of unknowns. It is getting impossible to sign up the big stars, because they are tied up for the next two years," he said.[76] He also said that he was less concerned with looks than personality when using an actor. "If they are good-looking, that's something extra. But I look for personality."[76]

He soon learned that good stories were even harder to come by: "Studios will pay anything for good stories ... they will buy it up before anyone else can get it," he complained. The story for Life With Father was said to have cost the studio $300,000, and the full budget for making the film was about $3 million.[76] The subsequent 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".[18]: 191  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".[18]: 332 

1950s edit

 
Kirk Douglas and Lauren Bacall in Young Man with a Horn (1950)

Curtiz's films continued to cover a wide range of genres, including biopics, comedies, and musicals. Some of the box office successes and well-received films during the 1950s included Young Man with a Horn (1950), Jim Thorpe – All-American (1951), The Story of Will Rogers (1952), White Christmas (1954), We're No Angels (1955), and King Creole (1958).

Young Man with a Horn (1950) starred Kirk Douglas, Lauren Bacall, and Doris Day, with Douglas portraying the rise and fall of a driven jazz musician, based on real-life cornet player Bix Beiderbecke.[77][78] Curtiz directed an actual biopic, Jim Thorpe – All-American (1951), this time starring Burt Lancaster, based on the true story of a Native American athlete who won more gold medals than any other athlete at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm.[79] The film received plaudits as one of the most compelling of all sports movies.[80]

Curtiz followed with I'll See You in My Dreams (1952), with Doris Day and Danny Thomas.[81] The film is a musical biography of lyricist Gus Kahn. It was Day's fourth film directed by Curtiz, who first auditioned her and gave her a starring role in her debut film, Romance on the High Seas (1948). She was shocked at being offered a lead in her first film, and admitted to Curtiz that she was a singer without acting experience. What Curtiz liked about her after the audition was that "she was honest," he said, not afraid to tell him she was not an actress. That, and the observation "her freckles made her look like the All-American Girl," he said. Day would be the discovery he boasted about most later in his career.[13]

The Story of Will Rogers (1952), also a biography, told the story of the humorist and movie star Will Rogers, played by Will Rogers Jr., his son.[82]

The long partnership between Curtiz and Warner Bros., eventually descended into a bitter court battle in the early 1950s. After his relationship with Warner Bros. broke down, Curtiz continued to direct on a freelance basis from 1954 onwards. The Egyptian (1954, based on Mika Waltari's novel about Sinuhe) for Fox starred Jean Simmons, Victor Mature, and Gene Tierney. He directed many films for Paramount, including White Christmas, We're No Angels, and King Creole. White Christmas (1954), Curtiz's second adaptation of an Irving Berlin musical, was a major box-office success, the highest-grossing film of 1954. It starred Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, and Vera-Ellen.[83]

Curtiz directed The Scarlet Hour (1956), which starred newcomers Carol Ohmart and Tom Tryon. It was reported that Curtiz was temperamental and disliked the script. The film was a commercial failure.[84]

 
Elvis in King Creole

Another musical, King Creole (1958), starred Elvis Presley and Carolyn Jones.[85] When asked to direct Presley, who was then the "king of rock and roll", Curtiz could only laugh, assuming Presley would be unable to act. After a few conversations with him, however, his opinion changed: "I began to sit up and take notice," Curtiz said, adding, "I guarantee that he'll amaze everyone. He shows formidable talent. What's more, he'll get the respect he so dearly desires."[86] During filming, Presley was always the first one on the set. When he was told what to do, regardless of how unusual or difficult, he said simply, "You're the boss, Mr. Curtiz."[86]

No, this is a lovely boy, and he's going to be a wonderful actor.

– Michael Curtiz, after first meeting Elvis[87]

The script, the music, and the acting all came together to produce a remarkable picture, the likes of which Presley never again matched in his career.[88] It received good reviews: Variety magazine declared that the film "Shows the young star [Presley] as a better than fair actor".[89] The New York Times also gave it a favorable review: "As for Mr. Presley, in his third screen attempt, it's a pleasure to find him up to a little more than Bourbon Street shoutin' and wigglin'. Acting is his assignment in this shrewdly upholstered showcase, and he does it, so help us, over a picket fence."[90] Presley later thanked Curtiz for giving him the opportunity to show his potential as an actor; of his 33 films, Elvis considered it his favorite.

The final film that Curtiz directed was The Comancheros, released six months before his death from cancer on April 10, 1962. Curtiz was ill during the shoot, but star John Wayne took over directing on the days Curtiz was too ill to work. Wayne did not want to take a co-director credit.

Directing style edit

Preparation edit

Curtiz always invested the time necessary to prepare all aspects of a film before shooting. "As far as I am concerned," he said, "the chief work in directing a film is in preparing a story for the screen ... Nothing is as important ... A director can be likened to the field general of an army. He should know more clearly than anyone else what is coming, what to expect ... I believe this as a sound working plan."[91]

By putting time into preparation, he cut down on delays after production started, which gave him the ability to put out about six films a year until the 1940s. He turned out Front Page Woman (1935) in only three weeks, despite its rapid-fire newspaper dialogue with Bette Davis,[92] then turned around and made Captain Blood almost entirely on the sound stage without having to leave the studio.[93] (Errol Flynn's duel with Basil Rathbone was shot at Three Arch Bay in Laguna Beach.)

Cinematography edit

 
Curtiz planning how best to photograph a scene with Lil Dagover in 1932

Sidney Rosenzweig argues that Curtiz had his own personal style, which was in place by the time of his move to America: "high crane shots to establish a story's environment; unusual camera angles and complex compositions in which characters are often framed by physical objects; much camera movement; subjective shots, in which the camera becomes the character's eye; and high contrast lighting with pools of shadows".[8]: 6–7  Aljean Harmetz states that, "Curtiz's vision of any movie... was almost totally a visual one".[18]: 183–184 

A few months after arriving in Hollywood as Warner Bros.' new director, Curtiz explained that he wanted to make viewers feel as though they were actually witnessing a story on screen:

To accomplish this end the camera must assume many personalities. For the most part it assumes the personality of the audience. At moments when the interest is high and the illusion of the audience is greatest, the camera alternately places itself in the position of the various characters, as the dramatic burden shifts from actor to actor. This entails much movement of the camera. If it cuts off at each position so that it seems to jump from place to place, the effect is noticeable and the reception of the story is marred. In many cases, therefore, the camera must move from position to position without stopping, just as a person would.[94]

In preparing scenes, Curtiz liked to compare himself to an artist, painting with characters, light, motion, and background on a canvas. However, during his career, this "individualism," says Robertson, "was hidden from public view" and undervalued because, unlike many other directors, Curtiz's films covered such a wide spectrum of different genres.[6]: 2  He was therefore seen by many as a versatile master technician who worked under Warner Bros.' direction, rather than as an auteur with a unique and recognizable style.[6]: 2 

Hal B. Wallis, the producer of many of Curtiz's films, including Robin Hood, was always watchful over budgets. He wrote to Jack Warner during the shooting of that film, "In his enthusiasm to make great shots and composition and utilize the great production values in this picture, he is, of course, more likely to go overboard than anyone else ... I did not try to stop Mike yesterday when he was on the crane and making establishing shots."[4]: 123 

Curtiz himself rarely expressed his philosophy or filmmaking style in writing since he was always too busy making films, so no autobiography and only a few media interviews exist.[6]: 3  His brother observed that Curtiz was "shy, almost humble," in his private life, as opposed to his "take-charge" attitude at work.[95] His brother added that "he did not want anybody to write a book about him. He refused to even talk about the idea."[95] When Curtiz was once asked to sum up his philosophy of making movies, he said, "I put all the art into my pictures that I think the audience can stand."[95]

Types of stories edit

Before coming to Hollywood, Curtiz always considered the story before he began working on a film. The human-interest side of a story was key, along with having the plot develop as the film progressed. He explains:

First I look for "human interest" when a story is given me. If that interest is predominant over the action then I believe the story is good. Always it is my desire to tell that story as if the camera were a person relating the incidents of a happening.[3]

I hate to see young directors throwing stories back at the studio. They should never throw a single one back because they do not think it is a good story. They should accept them gratefully ... That is the way they will learn.

– Michael Curtiz[20]

His attitude did not change when he joined a large studio, despite being given large spectacles to direct. As late as the 1940s, he still preferred "homey pictures." He said it was "because I want to deal with human and fundamental problems of real people. That is the basis of all good drama. It is true even in a spectacle, where you must never forget the underlying humanity and identity of your characters no matter how splendid the setting or situations are."[96] However, he also felt that even with the same story, any five different directors would produce five distinctive versions. "No two would be alike," he said, as each director's "work is reflection of himself."[91]

Film historian Peter Wollen says that throughout Curtiz's career, his films portrayed characters who had to "deal with injustice, oppression, entrapment, displacement, and exile."[17]: 85  He cites examples of Curtiz films to support that: 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932) dealt with the theme of social alienation, while Captain Blood, The Adventures of Robin Hood, and The Sea Hawk all concerned a tyrant monarch who was threatening the freedom of ordinary Englishmen.[17]: 90  Wollen states:

The case for Curtiz as an auteur rests on his incredible ability to find the right style for the right picture. If he shows a thematic consistency across several genres, it is in his consistent preference for stressing the struggles of the rebel and the downtrodden against the entrenched and powerful.[2]: 74 

Personal habits edit

 
Curtiz with Will Rogers, Jr., in 1952

Curtiz was always extremely active: he worked very long days, took part in several sports in his spare time, and was often found to sleep under a cold shower.[18]: 188  He skipped lunches since they interfered with his work and he felt they often made him tired. He was therefore dismissive of actors who ate lunch, believing that "lunch bums" had no energy for work in the afternoons.[18]: 188 

Wallis said he was "a demon for work."[56] He arose each morning at 5 am and typically remained at the studio until 8 or 9 pm. He hated to go home at the end of the day, said Wallis. With his high energy level, he also attended to every minute detail on the set.

To broaden his life experiences in the U.S., since he seldom traveled outside of Hollywood, when he did go on location shoots he tended to be restless and curious about everything in the area. Producer Wallis, who was often with him, observed that he explored everything:

He had a thirst for knowledge; he wanted to see the poolrooms, the flophouses, the Chinese sections, the slums—everything strange and exotic and seedy so that he could add to the knowledge that gave his pictures their amazing degree of realism.[56]

He earned the nickname "Iron Mike" from his friends, since he tried to keep physically fit by playing polo when he had time, and owned a stable of horses for his recreation at home. He attributed his fitness and level of energy solely to sober living.[96] Even with his vast success and wealth over the years, he did not allow himself "to be fondled in the lap of luxury."[96]

Working with colleagues edit

The down side of his dedication was an often callous demeanor, which many attributed to his Hungarian roots. Fay Wray, who worked with Curtiz on Mystery of the Wax Museum, said, "I felt that he was not flesh and bones, that he was part of the steel of the camera".[18]: 126  Curtiz was not popular with most of his colleagues, many of whom thought him arrogant.[8]: 7  Nor did he deny that, explaining, "When I see a lazy man or a don't care girl, it makes me tough. I am very critical of actors, but if I find a real actor, I am first to appreciate them."[4]: 122 [18]: 124 

No matter what the story is, Mr. Curtiz is never at a loss. If it's about American small-town life, he is as American as Sinclair Lewis. If it's about Paris, he's as continental as Maurice Chevalier. And if it's a mystery, he's as good a teller of mystery tales as S. S. Van Dine. But English has him stumped.

– Film columnist George Ross[96]

Nevertheless, Bette Davis, who was little known in 1932, made five more films with him, although they argued consistently when filming The Cabin in the Cotton (1932), one of her earliest roles.[97][98] He had a low opinion of actors in general, saying that acting "is fifty percent a big bag of tricks. The other fifty percent should be talent and ability, although it seldom is." Overall, he got along well enough with his stars, as shown by his ability to attract and keep some of the best actors in Hollywood. He got along very well with Claude Rains, whom he directed in ten films.[18]: 190 

He spoke terrible English; his English was always a joke on the set. But the dialog in his films is wonderfully given and directed.

– Film historian David Thomson[99]

Curtiz struggled with English as he was too busy filming to learn the language. He sometimes used pantomimes to show what he wanted an actor to do, which led to many amusing anecdotes about his choice of words when directing. David Niven never forgot Curtiz's saying to "bring on the empty horses" when he wanted to "bring out the horses without riders," so much so that he used it for the title of his memoir.[100] Similar stories abound: For the final scene in Casablanca Curtiz asked the set designer for a "poodle" on the ground so the wet steps of the actors could be seen on camera. The next day the set designer brought a little dog not realizing Curtiz meant "puddle" not "poodle".[101] But not all actors who worked under Curtiz were as amused by his malapropisms. Edward G. Robinson, whom Curtiz directed in The Sea Wolf, had a different opinion about language handicaps by foreigners to Hollywood:

They could fill a book. Even if I did not suspect you'd heard them all, I long ago decided that I would not bore myself or you with Curtizisms, Pasternakisms, Goldwynisms, or Gaborisms. Too many writers have made a cottage industry of reporting the misuse of the English language by Hollywood people.[53]

Personal life edit

When he left for the United States, Curtiz left behind an illegitimate son and an illegitimate daughter.[18]: 122  Around 1918, he married actress Lucy Doraine, and they divorced in 1923. He had a lengthy affair with Lili Damita starting in 1925 and is sometimes reported to have married her, but film scholar Alan K. Rode states in his 2017 biography of Curtiz that this is a modern legend, and there is no contemporary evidence to support it.[102] Their obituaries make no mention of such a marriage.[103][104]

Curtiz had left Europe before the rise of Nazism: other members of his family were less fortunate. He once asked Jack Warner, who was going to Budapest in 1938, to contact his family and help them get exit visas. Warner succeeded in getting Curtiz's mother to the U.S., where she spent the rest of her life living with her son. He could not rescue Curtiz's only sister, her husband, or their three children, who were sent to Auschwitz, where her husband and two of the children were murdered.[4]: 124 

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.[18]

In 1933, Curtiz became a naturalized U.S. citizen.[105] By the early 1940s, he had become fairly wealthy, earning $3,600 per week and owning a substantial estate, complete with polo pitch.[18]: 76  One of his regular polo partners was Hal B. Wallis, who had met Curtiz on his arrival in the country and had established a close friendship with him. Wallis' wife, the actress Louise Fazenda and Curtiz's third wife, Bess Meredyth, an actress and screenwriter, had been close since before Curtiz's marriage to Meredyth in 1929. Curtiz had numerous affairs; Meredyth once left him for a short time but they remained married until 1961, when they separated.[18]: 121  They remained married until his death.[103][106] She was Curtiz's helper whenever his need to deal with scripts or other elements went beyond his grasp of English and he often phoned her for advice when presented with a problem while filming.[18]: 123 

Curtiz was the stepfather of movie and television director John Meredyth Lucas, who talks about him in his autobiography Eighty Odd Years in Hollywood.

Death edit

Curtiz died from cancer on April 10, 1962, aged 75.[107][108] At the time of his death, he was living alone in a small apartment in Sherman Oaks, California.[13] He is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.[109]

Legacy edit

Michael Curtiz is the classic example of a studio director in that he could turn his hand to almost anything. He could go from any genre to another, and somehow this Hungarian knew exactly how those genres worked. Like there was some innate storytelling skill in this man.

Film historian David Thomson[99]

Curtiz directed some of the best known films of the 20th century, achieving numerous award-winning performances from actors. Before moving to Hollywood from his native Hungary when he was 38 years of age, he had already directed 64 films in Europe. He soon helped Warner Bros. become the nation's fastest-growing studio, directing 102 films during his career in Hollywood, more than any other director.[2]: 67  Jack Warner, who first discovered Curtiz after seeing one of his epics in Europe, called him "Warner Brothers' greatest director."[95]

 
Davis and Flynn in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939)

He directed 10 actors to Oscar nominations: Paul Muni, John Garfield, James Cagney, Walter Huston, Humphrey Bogart, Claude Rains, Joan Crawford, Ann Blyth, Eve Arden, and William Powell. Cagney and Crawford won their only Academy Awards under Curtiz's direction, with Cagney on TV later attributing part of his success to "the unforgettable Michael Curtiz."[95] Curtiz himself was nominated five times and won as Best Director for Casablanca.

He earned a reputation as a harsh taskmaster to his actors, as he micromanaged every detail on the set. With his background as director since 1912, his experience and dedication to the art made him a perfectionist. He had an astounding mastery of technical details. Hal B. Wallis, who produced a number of his major films, including Casablanca, said Curtiz had always been his favorite director:

He was a superb director with an amazing command of lighting, mood and action. He could handle any kind of picture: melodrama, comedy, Western, historical epic or love story.[56]

Some, such as screenwriter Robert Rossen, ask whether Curtiz has "been misjudged by cinema history," since he is not included among those often considered to be great directors, such as John Ford, Howard Hawks, Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock: "He was obviously a talent highly alert to the creative movements of his time such as German expressionism, the genius of the Hollywood studio system, genres such as film noir, and the possibilities offered by talented stars."[110]

Film historian Catherine Portuges has described Curtiz as one of the "most enigmatic of film directors, and often underrated."[9]: 161  Film theorist Peter Wollen wanted "to resurrect" Curtiz's critical reputation, observing that with his enormous experience and drive, he "could wring unexpected meanings from a script through his direction of actors and cinematographers."[2]: 75 

Academy Award nominations edit

Curtiz also won an Academy Award in the category of Best Short Subject (Two-reel), for Sons of Liberty.[39]

Six of Curtiz's films were nominated for Best Picture: Captain Blood (1935), The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938), Four Daughters (1938), Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), Casablanca (1943), and Mildred Pierce (1945). Of these, only Casablanca won Best Picture.

Directed Academy Award performances edit

Musicals edit

AFI edit

The American Film Institute ranked Casablanca #3 and Yankee Doodle Dandy #98 on its list of the greatest American movies. The Adventures of Robin Hood and Mildred Pierce were nominated for the list.

Selected Hollywood filmography edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In Hungarian eastern name order Kaminer Manó
  2. ^ In Hungarian eastern name order Kertész Mihály
  3. ^ Other spellings that various biographers have used are Kertész Mihály, Michael Courtice, Michael Kertesz, Mihaly Kertesz, Michael Kertész, and Kertész Kaminer Manó
  4. ^ According to biographer James C. Robertson, because Curtiz had given different accounts about his early life during his career, exact details about his early years have not been confirmed.[6]: 5  For example, he said that he once ran away from home to perform in various acts with a circus.
  5. ^ Some sources state that Jack L. Warner, Harry's younger brother, was who offered Curtiz a contract. In either case, Curtiz initially wanted to throw him off the set while he was working, since visitors made him nervous.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Biography of Michael Curtiz, Turner Classic Movies (TCM)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gerstner, David A., and Staiger, Janet. Authorship and Film, Psychology Press (2003)
  3. ^ a b Los Angeles Times, Oct. 30, 1927, p. 41
  4. ^ a b c d e f Marton, Kati. Great Escape, Simon & Schuster (2006)
  5. ^ Tablet Magazine: "The Brothers Who Co-Wrote 'Casablanca', Writers Julius and Philip Epstein, are also forebears of baseball's Theo Epstein" by Adam Chandler August 22, 2013
  6. ^ a b c d e Robertson, James C. The Casablanca Man: The Cinema of Michael Curtiz, Routledge (1993)
  7. ^ a b c Kingsley, Grace. "Troupers Know Life: Strolling Players in Europe Lead Life of Romance, Says Curtiz, Warner Director", Los Angeles Times, September 25, 1927, p. 15
  8. ^ a b c d Rosenzweig, Sidney. Casablanca and Other Major Films of Michael Curtiz. Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press, 1982. ISBN 0835713040
  9. ^ a b c d e Vasvári, Louise Olga, ed. Portuges, Caterine. "Curtiz, Hungarian Cinema, and Hollywood", Comparative Hungarian Cultural Studies, Purdue Univ. Press (2011)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Biography of Michael Curtiz, Encyclopædia Britannica
  11. ^ a b c Gutterman, Leon. "Our Film Folk", The Wisconsin Chronicle, April 30, 1954, p. 6
  12. ^ a b c d e f Wakeman, John. ed. World Film Directors: 1890–1945, H. W. Wilson Company (1987)
  13. ^ a b c d e f The Tennessean (Nashville), April 12, 1962, p. 57
  14. ^ a b c d e Pontuso, James F. Political Philosophy Comes to Rick's: Casablanca and American Civic Culture, Lexington Books (2005)
  15. ^ Graham, Sheilah. "Hollywood Today," The Courier-Journal (Louisville, Kentucky) September 29, 1946, p. 31
  16. ^ a b Noah's Ark movie trailer (1928)
  17. ^ a b c Leonard, Suzanne; Tasker, Yvonne, Fifty Hollywood Directors, Routledge (2015)
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Harmetz, Aljean. Round Up the Usual Suspects: The Making of "Casablanca". Orion Publishing Co, 1993., p. 221 ISBN 0297812947
  19. ^ Oakland Tribune, December 19, 1926, p. 58
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  21. ^ Kingsley, Grace. "Will Make 'Noah's Ark'", Los Angeles Times, Oct. 2, 1926, p. 6
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  23. ^ Schickel, Richard, and Perry, George. You Must Remember This: The Warner Brothers Story, Running Press (2008)
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  28. ^ Charge of the Light Brigade Trailer
  29. ^ The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) Trailer
  30. ^ "Top 100 Movies Of All Time". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 14, 2019.
  31. ^ The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939) Official Trailer
  32. ^ Kid Galahad (1937) – Trailer
  33. ^ Photo of Michael Curtiz directing fight scene in Kid Galahad
  34. ^ "Rush Work on Three Pictures: Special Unit is Formed For Famed Director Michael Curtiz," Harrisburg Telegraph (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania), August 12, 1939, p. 9
  35. ^ a b McGrath, Patrick J. John Garfield: The Illustrated Career in Films and on Stage, McFarland (1993) pp. 28-29
  36. ^ a b "Critics Acclaim 'Four Daughters'", The Culver Citizen, October 19, 1938, p. 9
  37. ^ Angels with Dirty Faces – Trailer
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  39. ^ a b . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2011. Archived from the original on May 20, 2011. Retrieved May 16, 2008.
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  41. ^ Santa Fe Trail (1940)- Official Trailer
  42. ^ Virginia City (1940) Official Trailer
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  55. ^ Beck, Robert. The Edward G. Robinson Encyclopedia, McFarland (2002)
  56. ^ a b c d Wallis, Hal, and Higham, Charles. Starmaker: The Autobiography of Hal Wallis, Macmillan Publishing (1980) p. 25
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  58. ^ Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) Official Trailer
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  63. ^ "Kate Smith sings "God Bless America" in This Is the Army (1943)
  64. ^ a b Eberwein, Robert. The Hollywood War Film, John Wiley & Sons (2010) p. 48
  65. ^ Mildred Pierce (1945) – Trailer
  66. ^ "Mick Garris on Mildred Pierce"
  67. ^ a b Hay, Peter. MGM: When the Lion Roars, Turner Publishing, (1991) pp. 194-198
  68. ^ Joan Crawford "Always the Star", 1996 documentary
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  70. ^ Solomons, Gabriel. World Film Locations: Los Angeles, Intellect Books (2011) p. 16
  71. ^ a b Davis, Ronald L. Zachary Scott: Hollywood's Sophisticated Cad, Univ. Press of Mississippi (2006) p. 97
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  74. ^ Life With Father (1947) – trailer
  75. ^ Parry, Florence Fisher. "William Powell's Superb Father Day Makes Him Candidate for an Oscar", The Pittsburgh Press, August 31, 1947, p. 33
  76. ^ a b c Graham, Sheilah. "Movie Stars Clamor to Work Under Director Mike Curtiz", The Courier-Journal, September 29, 1946, p. 31
  77. ^ Young Man with a Horn 1950) – Trailer
  78. ^ Thomas, Tony. The Films of Kirk Douglas. Citadel Press, New York, 1991, p. 64; ISBN 0-8065-1217-2.
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  80. ^ Review of Jim Thorpe – All-American, Turner Classic Movies
  81. ^ I'll See You in My Dreams (1951) Official Trailer
  82. ^ The Story of Will Rogers (1952) title sequence
  83. ^ White Christmas (1954) – trailer
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  93. ^ Ross, George. "Slaying the King's English", The Pittsburgh Press, August 10, 1938, p. 11
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  99. ^ a b David Thomson discussing Michael Curtiz, TCM Tribute to Michael Curtiz
  100. ^ Bring on the Empty Horses, Amazon books
  101. ^ "Incredible behind the scenes facts about Casablanca". September 12, 2018.
  102. ^ https://rode, "Curtiz: A Life in Film" page 68
  103. ^ a b "MICHAEL CURTIZ, DIRECTOR, 72, DIES". The New York Times. Associated Press. April 12, 1962. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  104. ^ "Lili Damita". The Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. March 24, 1994. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  105. ^ Kingsport Times (Kingsport, Tennessee), April 27, 1941, p. 26
  106. ^ https://rode, "Curtiz: A Life in Film" page 535
  107. ^ Los Angeles Times, which states he died "Tuesday night" (April 10)
  108. ^ Alan K. Rode, Michael Curtiz: A Life in Film, p. 543
  109. ^ Michael Curtz: a life in film
  110. ^ Rossen, Robert; Fumento, Rocco; Williams, Tony. Jack London's The Sea Wolf: A Screenplay, Southern Illinois Univ. Press (1998) p. xiv

External links edit

  •   Media related to Michael Curtiz at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Works by or about Michael Curtiz at Wikisource
  • Michael Curtiz at IMDb
  • Literature on Michael Curtiz

michael, curtiz, native, form, this, personal, name, kertész, mihály, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, ɜːr, born, manó, kaminer, from, 1905, mihály, kertész, hungarian, kertész, mihály, december, 1886, april, 1962, hung. The native form of this personal name is Kertesz Mihaly This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Michael Curtiz k ɜːr ˈ t iː z kur Tiz born Mano Kaminer from 1905 Mihaly Kertesz Hungarian Kertesz Mihaly December 24 1886 April 10 1962 was a Hungarian American film director recognized as one of the most prolific directors in history 2 67 He directed classic films from the silent era and numerous others during Hollywood s Golden Age when the studio system was prevalent Michael CurtizCurtiz c 1928BornMano Kaminer 1886 12 24 December 24 1886 1 Budapest Austria HungaryDiedApril 10 1962 1962 04 10 aged 75 Los Angeles California U S Other namesMike CurtizMihaly KerteszCitizenshipHungary 1886 1933 United States after 1933 OccupationFilm directorYears active1912 1961SpousesLucy Doraine m 1918 div 1923 wbr Bess Meredyth m 1929 wbr Children2 Curtiz was already a well known director in Europe when Warner Bros invited him to Hollywood in 1926 when he was 39 years of age He had already directed 64 films in Europe and soon helped Warner Bros become the fastest growing movie studio He directed 102 films during his Hollywood career mostly at Warners where he directed ten actors to Oscar nominations James Cagney and Joan Crawford won their only Academy Awards under Curtiz s direction He put Doris Day and John Garfield on screen for the first time and he made stars of Errol Flynn Olivia de Havilland and Bette Davis He himself was nominated five times and won twice once for Best Short Subject for Sons of Liberty and once as Best Director for Casablanca Curtiz was among those who introduced to Hollywood a visual style using artistic lighting extensive and fluid camera movement high crane shots and unusual camera angles He was versatile and could handle any film genre melodrama comedy love story film noir musical war story Western horror or historical epic He always paid attention to the human interest aspect of every story stating that the human and fundamental problems of real people were the basis of all good drama 3 The death of 25 horses in The Charge of the Light Brigade under Curtiz s direction led to a near violent confrontation between Curtiz and star Errol Flynn which led to the U S Congress and the ASPCA to enact legislation and policy to prevent cruelty to animals on the sets of movies Curtiz helped popularize the classic swashbuckler with films such as Captain Blood 1935 and The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 He directed many other dramas which are considered classics Angels with Dirty Faces 1938 The Sea Wolf 1941 Casablanca 1942 and Mildred Pierce 1945 He directed leading musicals including Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 This Is the Army 1943 and White Christmas 1954 and he made comedies with Life with Father 1947 and We re No Angels 1955 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career in Europe 2 1 Actor 2 2 Director 3 Career in the US 3 1 1920s 3 2 1930s 3 3 1940s 3 4 1950s 4 Directing style 4 1 Preparation 4 2 Cinematography 4 3 Types of stories 4 4 Personal habits 4 5 Working with colleagues 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Academy Award nominations 8 1 Directed Academy Award performances 9 Musicals 10 AFI 11 Selected Hollywood filmography 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksEarly life editCurtiz was born Mano Kaminer a to a Jewish family in Budapest in 1886 where his father was a carpenter and his mother an opera singer 1 4 20 5 In 1905 he Magyarised his name to Mihaly Kertesz b c Curtiz had a lower middle class upbringing He recalled during an interview that his family s home was a cramped apartment where he had to share a small room with his two brothers and a sister Many times we are hungry he added 4 20 After graduating from high school he studied at Markoszy University followed by the Royal Academy of Theater and Art in Budapest before beginning his career d Career in Europe editActor edit Curtiz became attracted to the theater when he was a child in Hungary He built a little theatre in the cellar of his family home when he was 8 years old where he and five of his friends re enacted plays They set up the stage with scenery and props and Curtiz directed them After he graduated from college at age 19 he took a job as an actor with a travelling theatre company where he began working as one their travelling players 7 From that job he became a pantomimist with a circus for a while but then returned to join another group of travelling players for a few more years They played Ibsen and Shakespeare in various languages depending on what country they were in They performed throughout Europe including France Hungary Italy and Germany and he eventually learned five languages 7 He had various responsibilities We had to do everything make bill posters print programmes set scenery mend wardrobe sometimes even arrange chairs in the auditoriums Sometimes we travelled in trains sometimes in stage coaches sometimes on horseback Sometimes we played in town halls sometimes in little restaurants with no scenery at all Sometimes we gave shows out of doors Those strolling actors were the kindest hearted people I have ever known They would do anything for each other 7 Director edit He worked as Mihaly Kertesz at the National Hungarian Theater in 1912 8 5 and was a member of the Hungarian fencing team at the Olympic Games in Stockholm Kertesz directed Hungary s first feature film Today and Tomorrow Ma es holnap 1912 in which he also had a leading role He followed that with another film The Last Bohemian Az utolso bohem also 1912 9 163 Curtiz began living in various cities in Europe to work on silent films in 1913 He first went to study at Nordisk studio in Denmark which led to work as an actor and assistant director to August Blom on Denmark s first multireel feature film Atlantis 1913 10 nbsp Movie poster 1924 After World War I began in 1914 he returned to Hungary where he served in the army for a year before he was wounded fighting on the Russian front 10 11 Curtiz wrote of that period The intoxicating joy of life was interrupted the world had gone mad We were taught to kill I was drafted into the Emperor s Army After that many things happened destruction thousands forever silenced crippled or sent to anonymous graves Then came the collapse of Austria Hungary Fate had spared me 4 22 He was assigned to make fund raising documentaries for the Red Cross in Hungary 10 In 1917 he was made director of production at Phoenix Films the leading studio in Budapest where he remained until he left Hungary 12 173 However none of the films he directed there survive intact and most are completely lost 12 173 By 1918 he had become one of Hungary s most important directors 10 having by then directed about 45 films 9 163 However following the end of the war in 1919 the new communist government nationalized the film industry so he decided to return to Vienna to direct films there 10 Curtiz briefly worked at UFA GmbH a German film company where he learned to direct large groups of costumed extras along with using complicated plots rapid pacing and romantic themes 9 His career truly started due to his work for Count Alexander Kolowrat known as Sascha with whom he made at least 21 films for the count s film studio Sascha Films Curtiz later wrote that at Sascha he learned the basic laws of film art which in those days had progressed further in Vienna than anywhere else 12 173 Among the films he directed were Biblical epics such as Sodom und Gomorrha 1922 and Die Sklavenkonigin 1924 titled Moon of Israel in the U S 10 He also made Red Heels 1925 and The Golden Butterfly 1926 1 and once directed 14 year old Greta Garbo in Sweden 13 During this period he tended to specialize in directing two kinds of films either sophisticated light comedies or historical spectaculars 12 173 He launched the career of Lucy Doraine who went on to become an international star along with that of Lili Damita who later married Errol Flynn 12 173 I was laid in the aisles by Curtiz s camera work by shots and angles that were pure genius Jack L Warner after watching Moon of Israel 14 136 The Moon of Israel 1924 was a spectacle of the enslavement of the children of Israel and their miraculous deliverance by way of the Red Sea Shot in Vienna with a cast of 5 000 it had for its theme the love story of an Israelite maiden and an Egyptian prince 9 163 Paramount Pictures in the U S bought the rights to the film to compete with Cecil B DeMille s The Ten Commandments However The Moon of Israel caught the attention of Jack and Harry Warner and Harry went to Europe in 1926 just to meet Curtiz and watch him work as director e The Warners were impressed that Curtiz had developed a unique visual style which was strongly influenced by German Expressionism with high crane shots and unusual camera angles The film also showed that Curtiz was fond of including romantic melodrama against events of vast historical importance for driving his characters to crises and forcing them to make moral decisions according to Rosenzweig 14 136 He offered Curtiz a contract to be a director at his new film studio in Hollywood Warner Bros where he would direct a similar epic that had been planned Noah s Ark 1928 10 16 By the time Curtiz accepted Warner s offer he was already a prolific director having made 64 films in countries including Hungary Austria and Denmark 17 3 Career in the US edit1920s edit Curtiz arrived in the United States in the summer of 1926 18 63 and began directing at Warner Bros under the anglicised name Michael Curtiz During what became a 28 year period at Warner Bros he directed 86 films including his best work Although he was an experienced filmmaker now aged 38 Warners assigned him to direct a number of average quality films to break him in the first being The Third Degree 1926 1 Curtiz s unique camerawork technique was used throughout visible in dramatic camera angles in a style which one critic assumed other directors would likely envy 19 When I first came here I was called on to direct six or seven pictures a year I never turned down a single story That was my schooling I worked hard on every one of them That is how you learn Michael Curtiz 20 Learning English quickly was an immediate hurdle however since he had no free time When Jack Warner gave him the film to direct Curtiz recalls I could not speak one word of English 20 It was a romantic story about jail life and gangsters in Chicago a place he had never been about American underworld figures he had never met 13 To gain some direct experience about the subject Curtiz convinced the Los Angeles sheriff to let him spend a week in jail When I came out I knew what I needed for the picture 20 Curtiz firmly believed that investigating the background of every story should be done first and done thoroughly before starting a film 20 He said that whenever someone asked him how he a foreigner could make American films he told them human beings are the same all over the world Human emotions are international He treated his first films in the U S as learning experiences The only things that are different in different parts of the world are customs But those customs are easy to find out if you can read and investigate Downtown there is a fine public library There you can open a book and find out anything you want to know 20 Curtiz never gave second hand treatment to an assignment once it was accepted He went ahead and graced plot and character with fluid camera movement exquisite lighting and a lightning fast pace Even if a script was truly poor and the leading players were real amateurs Curtiz glossed over inadequacies so well that an audience often failed to recognize a shallow substance until it was hungry for another film a half hour later Author William Meyer 12 174 Although the language barrier made communicating with the casts and crews a hardship he continued to invest time in preparation Before he directed his first Western for example he spent three weeks reading about the histories of Texas and the lives of its important men 11 He found it necessary to continue such intensive studying of American culture and habits in preparation for most other film genres 11 But he was quite satisfied being in Hollywood It is splendid to work here in this country One has everything at hand to work with The director does not have to worry about anything except his ideas He can concentrate on those with no worry about his production otherwise 21 The Third Degree 1926 available at the Library of Congress made good use of Curtiz s experience in using moving cameras to create expressionistic scenes such as a sequence shot from the perspective of a bullet in motion 1 The film was the first of eight Curtiz films to have Dolores Costello as its star 1 nbsp 1928 Curtiz film Warner Bros had Curtiz direct three other mediocre stories to be sure he could take on larger projects during which time he was able to familiarize himself with their methods and work with the technicians including cameramen whom he would use in subsequent productions 14 137 As biographer James C Robertson explains In each case Curtiz strove valiantly but unsuccessfully to revitalize unconvincing scripts through spectacular camera work and strong central performances the most noteworthy features of all those films 14 137 nbsp Curtiz r with Ilya Tolstoy in 1927 On a visit to Hollywood in 1927 Ilya Tolstoy Leo Tolstoy s son who had been a friend of Curtiz in Europe wanted him to direct several films based on his father s novels He chose Curtiz because he already knew the locale and its people 22 During this period Warner Bros began experimenting with talking films They assigned two part talking pictures for Curtiz to direct Tenderloin 1928 and Noah s Ark 1928 both of which also starred Costello 16 Noah s Ark included two parallel stories one recounting the biblical flood and the other a World War I era romance It was the first epic film attempted by Warner Bros and in handing production over to Curtiz they were hoping to assure its success The climactic flood sequence was considered spectacular at the time observed historian Richard Schickel 23 31 while biographer James C Robertson said it was one of the most spectacular incidents in film history 6 16 Its cast was made up of over 10 000 extras However the reissue of the film in 1957 cut an hour off the original time of 2 hours and 15 minutes The story was an adaptation written by Bess Meredyth who married Curtiz a few years later 24 The critical success of these films by Curtiz contributed to Warner Bros becoming the fastest growing studio in Hollywood 1 1930s edit In 1930 Curtiz directed Mammy 1930 Al Jolson s fourth film after being in Hollywood s first true talking picture The Jazz Singer 1927 During the 1930s Curtiz directed at least four films each year The most obvious aspect of Curtiz s directorial signature is his expressionistic visual style and its most obvious feature is its unusual camera angles and carefully detailed crowded complex compositions full of mirrors and reflections smoke and fog and physical objects furniture foliage bars and windows that stand between the camera and the human characters and seem to surround and entrap them Biographer Sidney Rosenzweig 8 157 Although unusual projects for Warner Bros Curtiz directed two horror films for the studio Doctor X 1932 and Mystery of the Wax Museum 1933 both in early Technicolor with numerous atmospheric scenes filmed on the studio s back lot 1 Another breakthrough film was 20 000 Years in Sing Sing 1932 starring then little known actors Spencer Tracy and Bette Davis in one of their earliest films 25 MGM head Louis B Mayer saw the film and was impressed enough by Tracy s acting that he hired him on to MGM s roster of stars 26 221 Curtiz s American career did not really take off until 1935 2 63 In the early 1930s Warner Bros was struggling to compete with the larger MGM which was releasing costume dramas such as Queen Christina 1933 with Greta Garbo Treasure Island 1934 with Wallace Beery and The Count of Monte Cristo 1934 Warner Bros decided to take a chance and produce their own costume drama Until then it was a genre in which Warners had assumed they could never succeed owing to its higher production budgets during the years of the Great Depression However in March 1935 Warners announced it would produce Captain Blood 1935 a swashbuckler action drama based on the novel by Rafael Sabatini and directed by Curtiz 2 63 It would star a then unknown extra Errol Flynn 13 alongside the little known Olivia de Havilland 27 nbsp Errol Flynn in The Charge of the Light Brigade 1936 The film was a major success with positive critical reviews It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and though not nominated Curtiz received the second highest number of votes for Best Director solely from write in votes It also made stars of both Flynn and de Havilland and it elevated Curtiz to being the studio s leading director 2 63 Curtiz continued the successful genre of adventure films starring Flynn often with de Havilland that included The Charge of the Light Brigade 1936 a depiction of the British Light Brigade during the Crimean War 28 The film another Oscar winner was a greater success at the box office than Captain Blood 2 64 It was followed by The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 co directed with William Keighley whom Curtiz replaced the most profitable film that year 2 64 also winning three Academy Awards and being nominated for Best Picture 29 It is in Rotten Tomatoes list of Top 100 Movies 30 That being their third Curtiz film together Flynn and de Havilland continued to star in other hugely successful films under his direction including The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 1939 also co starring Bette Davis 31 Davis starred in a Curtiz film in most years during the 1930s 2 73 nbsp Edward G Robinson l with Curtiz during filming of Kid Galahad 1937 Curtiz elicited some of the finest work from Edward G Robinson in Kid Galahad 1937 where Robinson played a tough and sardonic but ultimately soft hearted boxing manager 32 The picture co starred Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart 1 33 Because of Curtiz s high film productivity Warner Bros created a special unit for his pictures which then allowed him to manage two film crews One worked with him during actual filming while the other prepared everything for the next picture 34 John Garfield was among Curtiz s discoveries Curtiz discovered Garfield a stage actor by accident when he came across a discarded screen test he gave and thought he was very good Garfield had assumed he failed the screen test and was already heading back to New York in disgust Curtiz then went to Kansas City to intercept the train where he pulled Garfield off and brought him back to Hollywood 13 Garfield made his debut in Four Daughters 1938 followed by a co starring role in its sequel Four Wives 1939 Garfield also later co starred in Curtiz s The Sea Wolf 1941 In Four Daughters Garfield co starred with Claude Rains who would star in 10 Curtiz movies over his career with six of those during the 1930s 1 Garfield and Rains were brilliant together in this unjustly neglected Curtiz classic says biographer Patrick J McGrath 35 Garfield considered it his obscure masterpiece 35 Reviews praised his role Perhaps the greatest single occurrence having to do with Four Daughters on reading the critics appears to be the debut of John Garfield a brilliant young actor recruited from the Broadway stage 36 Similar approval came from The New York Times which called Garfield s acting bitterly brilliant one of the best pictures of anybody s career 36 Garfield and Rains co starred the following year in Curtiz Daughters Courageous 1939 When James Cagney starred in Curtiz s Angels with Dirty Faces 1938 he was nominated for an Oscar for the first time 1 The New York Film Critics Circle voted him as best actor for his portrayal in the film where he played the part of a hoodlum who redeems himself 2 64 37 Curtiz was also again nominated solidifying further his status as the studio s most important director 2 64 Curtiz was nominated for the 1938 Oscar for Best Director for both Angels with Dirty Faces and Four Daughters losing to Frank Capra for You Can t Take It with You Curtiz however had split his votes between two films and had actually the greater number of aggregate Academy votes 38 The following year Curtiz directed a short subject Sons of Liberty 1939 starring Claude Rains in a biopic which dramatizes the Jewish contribution to America s independence 2 44 Curtiz won an Academy Award in the category of Best Short Subject Two reel for this film 39 Three Westerns directed by Curtiz also starring Flynn were Dodge City 1939 40 Santa Fe Trail 1940 co starring future US president Ronald Reagan 41 and Virginia City 1940 42 43 1940s edit During the 1940s Curtiz continued to release more critically acclaimed films including The Sea Hawk 1940 Dive Bomber 1941 The Sea Wolf 1941 Casablanca 1942 Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 This Is the Army 1943 Mildred Pierce 1945 and Life with Father 1947 One of the biggest hits of 1940 was The Sea Hawk starring Errol Flynn in the role of an adventurer in the mold of Sir Francis Drake 44 Flora Robson played Queen Elizabeth I and Claude Rains acted as the Spanish ambassador whose job it was to mislead the Queen who rightly suspected the Spanish Armada was about to attempt to invade England Some critics felt the story was equivalent to actual events then taking place in Europe describing it as a thinly veiled diatribe against American isolationism on World War II s brink 45 Film columnist Boyd Martin noticed the similarities The parallel of the dreams of empire indulged in by King Philip of Spain and those apparently momentarily enjoyed by Hitler is so obvious that it will not escape detection even by the youngest film follower who reads his newspaper and goes to see the film In having been supplied with a parallel Mr Curtiz rides his Sea Hawk neck and neck with contemporary history 46 nbsp Scene from Dive Bomber 1941 Dive Bomber 1941 47 was released a few months before the attack on Pearl Harbor Curtiz shot every foot of Dive Bomber with Navy assistance and under strict Navy scrutiny 48 Filming at the active naval base in San Diego required great care especially for aerial sequences To create realistic shots he mounted cameras on the Navy s planes to achieve amazing point of view shots taking viewers inside the cockpit during flight He also mounted cameras underneath the wings of planes to dramatize take offs from the Enterprise an aircraft carrier launched a few years earlier 49 Bosley Crowther of The New York Times gave it a good review 50 The Warners have photographed this picture in some of the most magnificent technicolor yet seen masses of brilliantly colored planes ranked in impressive rows about an air base or upon the huge flight decks of carriers and roaring in silver majesty wing to wing through the limitless West Coast skies Never before has an aviation film been so vivid in its images conveyed such a sense of tangible solidity when it is showing us solid things or been so full of sunlight and clean air when the cameras are aloft Except for a few badly matched shots the job is well nigh perfect The film was well received by the public becoming the sixth most popular film that year 51 No other pre Pearl Harbor picture matched the quality of its flying scenes 49 Film columnist Louella Parsons wrote Dive Bomber again makes us glad we are Americans protected by a Navy as competent as ours 49 Edward G Robinson starred in The Sea Wolf 1941 his second film directed by Curtiz 52 He portrayed the rampaging dictatorial captain of a ship in an adaptation of one of Jack London s best known novels Robinson said the character he portrayed was a Nazi in everything but name which Robinson observed was relevant to the state of the world at that time 1 53 John Garfield and Ida Lupino were cast as the young lovers who attempt to escape his tyranny Some reviews described the film as one of Curtiz s hidden gems one of Curtiz s most complex works 54 Robinson was impressed by Garfield s intense personality which he felt may have contributed to Garfield s death at age 39 John Garfield was one of the best young actors I ever encountered but his passions about the world were so intense that I feared any day he would have a heart attack It was not long before he did 53 With Michael Curtiz magnificent 1941 version of The Sea Wolf full justice was for once done to London s text with the aid of models newly introduced fog machines and a studio tank the film hauntingly captured an eerie malevolent atmosphere brooding and full of terror From its economic opening scenes to its powerful climax it gripped consistently Throughout Curtiz provided object lessons in the use of sound the groaning timbers of the ship creaking footsteps the wind and closeups Charles Higham and Joel Greenburg Hollywood in the Forties 55 281 Curtiz directed another Air Force film Captains of the Clouds 1942 about the Royal Canadian Air Force It starred James Cagney and Brenda Marshall According to Hal B Wallis its producer it became Warner Bros most extensive and difficult production and everything had to be relocated to Canada 56 76 Like Dive Bomber the vivid aerial scenes filmed in Technicolor were another feature that garnered critical attention and the film was nominated for Best Art Direction and Best Color Cinematography 57 Shortly after Captains of the Clouds was completed but released after his next picture Casablanca Curtiz directed the musical biopic Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 a film about singer dancer and composer George M Cohan 58 It starred James Cagney in a role totally opposite from the one he had played four years earlier in Curtiz s Angels with Dirty Faces Where the earlier film became a career high point for Cagney s portrayals of a gangster a role he played in many earlier films in this film an overtly patriotic musical Cagney demonstrates his considerable dancing and singing talents It was Cagney s favorite career role 59 Cagney s bravura performance earned him his only Academy Award as Best Actor For Warner Bros it became their biggest box office success in the company s history up to that time nominated for nine Academy Awards and winning four The success of the film also became a high point in Curtiz s career with his nomination as Best Director The film has been added to annals of Hollywood as a cinematic classic preserved in the United States National Film Registry at the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 10 Curtiz directed Casablanca 1942 a World War II era romantic drama described by Roger Ebert in 1996 as one of the most popular films ever made 60 Its stars were Humphrey Bogart playing an expatriate living in Morocco and Ingrid Bergman as a woman who was trying to escape the Nazis The supporting cast features Paul Henreid Claude Rains Conrad Veidt Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre The picture received eight Academy Award nominations and won three including one for Curtiz as Best Director 1 Time magazine in 2012 described Casablanca as the best movie ever made 61 nbsp Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca 1942 Another patriotic Curtiz film was This Is the Army 1943 a musical adapted from the stage play with a score by Irving Berlin 62 As America was engaged in World War II the film boosted the morale of soldiers and the public Kate Smith s rendition of God Bless America was one of the highlights of the film s nineteen songs 63 As a result of the film s numerous popular and generic elements such as ground and aerial combat recruitment training and marching as well as comedy romance song and dance it was the most financially successful war themed film of any kind made during World War II 64 This Is the Army is still the freshest the most endearing the most rousing musical tribute to the American fighting man that has come out of World War II buoyant captivating as American as hot dogs or the Bill of Rights a warmly reassuring document on the state of the nation It is from beginning to end a great show Bosley Crowther New York Times 64 During this period Curtiz also directed the World War II propaganda film Mission to Moscow 1943 a film which was commissioned at the request of President Franklin D Roosevelt in support of the U S and British ally the Soviet Union at that time holding down 80 of all German forces as they repelled the Nazi invasion of Russia The film was mostly well received by critics and was a success at the box office but the film soon proved to be controversial after it stirred up strong anti Communist attacks Curtiz took the criticism personally and vowed never again to direct an overtly political film a promise which he kept 14 148 nbsp Joan Crawford starred in Mildred Pierce Mildred Pierce 1945 was based on the novel by James M Cain 65 Its star Joan Crawford gave one of the strongest performances in her career playing a mother and successful businesswoman who sacrifices everything for her spoiled daughter played by Ann Blyth At the time Crawford accepted the part from Warner Bros her 18 year career at MGM had been in decline 66 She had been one of Hollywood s most prominent and highest paid stars but her films began losing money and by the end of the 1930s she was labeled box office poison Rather than remain at MGM and see newer younger talent draw most of the studio s attention with better roles she left MGM and signed a contract with Warner Bros at a reduced salary 67 Curtiz originally wanted Barbara Stanwyck for the role However Crawford who by then had not been in a film for two years did her best to get the part Rare for a major star she was even willing to audition for Curtiz She was already aware that Mr Mike Curtiz hated me I don t want those big broad shoulders he said During her reading of an emotional scene as he watched she saw him become so overwhelmed by her delivery that he cried and he then said I love you baby 68 To help Crawford prepare for certain court scenes Curtiz took her downtown where they spent time visiting jails and watching criminal trials 69 In photographing her he used careful film noir camera techniques a style he learned in Europe to bring out the features of Crawford s face using rich black and white highlights 70 He was aware that Crawford guarded her screen image very carefully and that she truly cared about quality Crawford learned to appreciate Curtiz s genius with the camera 71 Eve Arden who was nominated as Best Supporting Actress for the film said Curtiz was one of the few directors who knew what he wanted and was able to express himself exactly even in his amusing Hungarian accent 71 Mildred Pierce was nominated for six Academy Awards including Best Picture Only Crawford won for Best Actress her first and only Oscar 67 The novel s author James M Cain gave her a leather bound copy of Mildred Pierce which he inscribed To Joan Crawford who brought Mildred to life as I had always hoped she would be and who has my lifelong gratitude 72 The film returned Crawford to the ranks of leading stars After the success of the film Jack Warner gave Curtiz two new and exceptional contracts in appreciation boosting his salary and reducing the number of films he had to direct each year to two 73 nbsp William Powell starred in Life With Father 1947 Curtiz directed William Powell and Irene Dunne in Life with Father 1947 a family comedy 74 It was a big hit in the United States and was nominated for four Academy Awards including Best Actor for Powell During Powell s career he acted in 97 films his third and last nomination was for this film One review stated He is magnificent in the role imbuing it with every attribute of pomp dignity unconscious conceit and complete loveableness His is one of the really great screen performances of the year that crowns a long screen life 75 In the late 1940s Curtiz made a new agreement with Warner Bros under which the studio and his own production company were to share the costs and profits of his subsequent films with his films to be released through Warner Bros I m going to try to build my own stock company and make stars of unknowns It is getting impossible to sign up the big stars because they are tied up for the next two years he said 76 He also said that he was less concerned with looks than personality when using an actor If they are good looking that s something extra But I look for personality 76 He soon learned that good stories were even harder to come by Studios will pay anything for good stories they will buy it up before anyone else can get it he complained The story for Life With Father was said to have cost the studio 300 000 and the full budget for making the film was about 3 million 76 The subsequent 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 18 191 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 18 332 1950s edit nbsp Kirk Douglas and Lauren Bacall in Young Man with a Horn 1950 Curtiz s films continued to cover a wide range of genres including biopics comedies and musicals Some of the box office successes and well received films during the 1950s included Young Man with a Horn 1950 Jim Thorpe All American 1951 The Story of Will Rogers 1952 White Christmas 1954 We re No Angels 1955 and King Creole 1958 Young Man with a Horn 1950 starred Kirk Douglas Lauren Bacall and Doris Day with Douglas portraying the rise and fall of a driven jazz musician based on real life cornet player Bix Beiderbecke 77 78 Curtiz directed an actual biopic Jim Thorpe All American 1951 this time starring Burt Lancaster based on the true story of a Native American athlete who won more gold medals than any other athlete at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm 79 The film received plaudits as one of the most compelling of all sports movies 80 Curtiz followed with I ll See You in My Dreams 1952 with Doris Day and Danny Thomas 81 The film is a musical biography of lyricist Gus Kahn It was Day s fourth film directed by Curtiz who first auditioned her and gave her a starring role in her debut film Romance on the High Seas 1948 She was shocked at being offered a lead in her first film and admitted to Curtiz that she was a singer without acting experience What Curtiz liked about her after the audition was that she was honest he said not afraid to tell him she was not an actress That and the observation her freckles made her look like the All American Girl he said Day would be the discovery he boasted about most later in his career 13 The Story of Will Rogers 1952 also a biography told the story of the humorist and movie star Will Rogers played by Will Rogers Jr his son 82 The long partnership between Curtiz and Warner Bros eventually descended into a bitter court battle in the early 1950s After his relationship with Warner Bros broke down Curtiz continued to direct on a freelance basis from 1954 onwards The Egyptian 1954 based on Mika Waltari s novel about Sinuhe for Fox starred Jean Simmons Victor Mature and Gene Tierney He directed many films for Paramount including White Christmas We re No Angels and King Creole White Christmas 1954 Curtiz s second adaptation of an Irving Berlin musical was a major box office success the highest grossing film of 1954 It starred Bing Crosby Danny Kaye Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen 83 Curtiz directed The Scarlet Hour 1956 which starred newcomers Carol Ohmart and Tom Tryon It was reported that Curtiz was temperamental and disliked the script The film was a commercial failure 84 nbsp Elvis in King Creole Another musical King Creole 1958 starred Elvis Presley and Carolyn Jones 85 When asked to direct Presley who was then the king of rock and roll Curtiz could only laugh assuming Presley would be unable to act After a few conversations with him however his opinion changed I began to sit up and take notice Curtiz said adding I guarantee that he ll amaze everyone He shows formidable talent What s more he ll get the respect he so dearly desires 86 During filming Presley was always the first one on the set When he was told what to do regardless of how unusual or difficult he said simply You re the boss Mr Curtiz 86 No this is a lovely boy and he s going to be a wonderful actor Michael Curtiz after first meeting Elvis 87 The script the music and the acting all came together to produce a remarkable picture the likes of which Presley never again matched in his career 88 It received good reviews Variety magazine declared that the film Shows the young star Presley as a better than fair actor 89 The New York Times also gave it a favorable review As for Mr Presley in his third screen attempt it s a pleasure to find him up to a little more than Bourbon Street shoutin and wigglin Acting is his assignment in this shrewdly upholstered showcase and he does it so help us over a picket fence 90 Presley later thanked Curtiz for giving him the opportunity to show his potential as an actor of his 33 films Elvis considered it his favorite The final film that Curtiz directed was The Comancheros released six months before his death from cancer on April 10 1962 Curtiz was ill during the shoot but star John Wayne took over directing on the days Curtiz was too ill to work Wayne did not want to take a co director credit Directing style editPreparation edit Curtiz always invested the time necessary to prepare all aspects of a film before shooting As far as I am concerned he said the chief work in directing a film is in preparing a story for the screen Nothing is as important A director can be likened to the field general of an army He should know more clearly than anyone else what is coming what to expect I believe this as a sound working plan 91 By putting time into preparation he cut down on delays after production started which gave him the ability to put out about six films a year until the 1940s He turned out Front Page Woman 1935 in only three weeks despite its rapid fire newspaper dialogue with Bette Davis 92 then turned around and made Captain Blood almost entirely on the sound stage without having to leave the studio 93 Errol Flynn s duel with Basil Rathbone was shot at Three Arch Bay in Laguna Beach Cinematography edit nbsp Curtiz planning how best to photograph a scene with Lil Dagover in 1932 Sidney Rosenzweig argues that Curtiz had his own personal style which was in place by the time of his move to America high crane shots to establish a story s environment unusual camera angles and complex compositions in which characters are often framed by physical objects much camera movement subjective shots in which the camera becomes the character s eye and high contrast lighting with pools of shadows 8 6 7 Aljean Harmetz states that Curtiz s vision of any movie was almost totally a visual one 18 183 184 A few months after arriving in Hollywood as Warner Bros new director Curtiz explained that he wanted to make viewers feel as though they were actually witnessing a story on screen To accomplish this end the camera must assume many personalities For the most part it assumes the personality of the audience At moments when the interest is high and the illusion of the audience is greatest the camera alternately places itself in the position of the various characters as the dramatic burden shifts from actor to actor This entails much movement of the camera If it cuts off at each position so that it seems to jump from place to place the effect is noticeable and the reception of the story is marred In many cases therefore the camera must move from position to position without stopping just as a person would 94 In preparing scenes Curtiz liked to compare himself to an artist painting with characters light motion and background on a canvas However during his career this individualism says Robertson was hidden from public view and undervalued because unlike many other directors Curtiz s films covered such a wide spectrum of different genres 6 2 He was therefore seen by many as a versatile master technician who worked under Warner Bros direction rather than as an auteur with a unique and recognizable style 6 2 Hal B Wallis the producer of many of Curtiz s films including Robin Hood was always watchful over budgets He wrote to Jack Warner during the shooting of that film In his enthusiasm to make great shots and composition and utilize the great production values in this picture he is of course more likely to go overboard than anyone else I did not try to stop Mike yesterday when he was on the crane and making establishing shots 4 123 Curtiz himself rarely expressed his philosophy or filmmaking style in writing since he was always too busy making films so no autobiography and only a few media interviews exist 6 3 His brother observed that Curtiz was shy almost humble in his private life as opposed to his take charge attitude at work 95 His brother added that he did not want anybody to write a book about him He refused to even talk about the idea 95 When Curtiz was once asked to sum up his philosophy of making movies he said I put all the art into my pictures that I think the audience can stand 95 Types of stories edit Before coming to Hollywood Curtiz always considered the story before he began working on a film The human interest side of a story was key along with having the plot develop as the film progressed He explains First I look for human interest when a story is given me If that interest is predominant over the action then I believe the story is good Always it is my desire to tell that story as if the camera were a person relating the incidents of a happening 3 I hate to see young directors throwing stories back at the studio They should never throw a single one back because they do not think it is a good story They should accept them gratefully That is the way they will learn Michael Curtiz 20 His attitude did not change when he joined a large studio despite being given large spectacles to direct As late as the 1940s he still preferred homey pictures He said it was because I want to deal with human and fundamental problems of real people That is the basis of all good drama It is true even in a spectacle where you must never forget the underlying humanity and identity of your characters no matter how splendid the setting or situations are 96 However he also felt that even with the same story any five different directors would produce five distinctive versions No two would be alike he said as each director s work is reflection of himself 91 Film historian Peter Wollen says that throughout Curtiz s career his films portrayed characters who had to deal with injustice oppression entrapment displacement and exile 17 85 He cites examples of Curtiz films to support that 20 000 Years in Sing Sing 1932 dealt with the theme of social alienation while Captain Blood The Adventures of Robin Hood and The Sea Hawk all concerned a tyrant monarch who was threatening the freedom of ordinary Englishmen 17 90 Wollen states The case for Curtiz as an auteur rests on his incredible ability to find the right style for the right picture If he shows a thematic consistency across several genres it is in his consistent preference for stressing the struggles of the rebel and the downtrodden against the entrenched and powerful 2 74 Personal habits edit nbsp Curtiz with Will Rogers Jr in 1952 Curtiz was always extremely active he worked very long days took part in several sports in his spare time and was often found to sleep under a cold shower 18 188 He skipped lunches since they interfered with his work and he felt they often made him tired He was therefore dismissive of actors who ate lunch believing that lunch bums had no energy for work in the afternoons 18 188 Wallis said he was a demon for work 56 He arose each morning at 5 am and typically remained at the studio until 8 or 9 pm He hated to go home at the end of the day said Wallis With his high energy level he also attended to every minute detail on the set To broaden his life experiences in the U S since he seldom traveled outside of Hollywood when he did go on location shoots he tended to be restless and curious about everything in the area Producer Wallis who was often with him observed that he explored everything He had a thirst for knowledge he wanted to see the poolrooms the flophouses the Chinese sections the slums everything strange and exotic and seedy so that he could add to the knowledge that gave his pictures their amazing degree of realism 56 He earned the nickname Iron Mike from his friends since he tried to keep physically fit by playing polo when he had time and owned a stable of horses for his recreation at home He attributed his fitness and level of energy solely to sober living 96 Even with his vast success and wealth over the years he did not allow himself to be fondled in the lap of luxury 96 Working with colleagues edit The down side of his dedication was an often callous demeanor which many attributed to his Hungarian roots Fay Wray who worked with Curtiz on Mystery of the Wax Museum said I felt that he was not flesh and bones that he was part of the steel of the camera 18 126 Curtiz was not popular with most of his colleagues many of whom thought him arrogant 8 7 Nor did he deny that explaining When I see a lazy man or a don t care girl it makes me tough I am very critical of actors but if I find a real actor I am first to appreciate them 4 122 18 124 No matter what the story is Mr Curtiz is never at a loss If it s about American small town life he is as American as Sinclair Lewis If it s about Paris he s as continental as Maurice Chevalier And if it s a mystery he s as good a teller of mystery tales as S S Van Dine But English has him stumped Film columnist George Ross 96 Nevertheless Bette Davis who was little known in 1932 made five more films with him although they argued consistently when filming The Cabin in the Cotton 1932 one of her earliest roles 97 98 He had a low opinion of actors in general saying that acting is fifty percent a big bag of tricks The other fifty percent should be talent and ability although it seldom is Overall he got along well enough with his stars as shown by his ability to attract and keep some of the best actors in Hollywood He got along very well with Claude Rains whom he directed in ten films 18 190 He spoke terrible English his English was always a joke on the set But the dialog in his films is wonderfully given and directed Film historian David Thomson 99 Curtiz struggled with English as he was too busy filming to learn the language He sometimes used pantomimes to show what he wanted an actor to do which led to many amusing anecdotes about his choice of words when directing David Niven never forgot Curtiz s saying to bring on the empty horses when he wanted to bring out the horses without riders so much so that he used it for the title of his memoir 100 Similar stories abound For the final scene in Casablanca Curtiz asked the set designer for a poodle on the ground so the wet steps of the actors could be seen on camera The next day the set designer brought a little dog not realizing Curtiz meant puddle not poodle 101 But not all actors who worked under Curtiz were as amused by his malapropisms Edward G Robinson whom Curtiz directed in The Sea Wolf had a different opinion about language handicaps by foreigners to Hollywood They could fill a book Even if I did not suspect you d heard them all I long ago decided that I would not bore myself or you with Curtizisms Pasternakisms Goldwynisms or Gaborisms Too many writers have made a cottage industry of reporting the misuse of the English language by Hollywood people 53 Personal life editWhen he left for the United States Curtiz left behind an illegitimate son and an illegitimate daughter 18 122 Around 1918 he married actress Lucy Doraine and they divorced in 1923 He had a lengthy affair with Lili Damita starting in 1925 and is sometimes reported to have married her but film scholar Alan K Rode states in his 2017 biography of Curtiz that this is a modern legend and there is no contemporary evidence to support it 102 Their obituaries make no mention of such a marriage 103 104 Curtiz had left Europe before the rise of Nazism other members of his family were less fortunate He once asked Jack Warner who was going to Budapest in 1938 to contact his family and help them get exit visas Warner succeeded in getting Curtiz s mother to the U S where she spent the rest of her life living with her son He could not rescue Curtiz s only sister her husband or their three children who were sent to Auschwitz where her husband and two of the children were murdered 4 124 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 18 In 1933 Curtiz became a naturalized U S citizen 105 By the early 1940s he had become fairly wealthy earning 3 600 per week and owning a substantial estate complete with polo pitch 18 76 One of his regular polo partners was Hal B Wallis who had met Curtiz on his arrival in the country and had established a close friendship with him Wallis wife the actress Louise Fazenda and Curtiz s third wife Bess Meredyth an actress and screenwriter had been close since before Curtiz s marriage to Meredyth in 1929 Curtiz had numerous affairs Meredyth once left him for a short time but they remained married until 1961 when they separated 18 121 They remained married until his death 103 106 She was Curtiz s helper whenever his need to deal with scripts or other elements went beyond his grasp of English and he often phoned her for advice when presented with a problem while filming 18 123 Curtiz was the stepfather of movie and television director John Meredyth Lucas who talks about him in his autobiography Eighty Odd Years in Hollywood Death editCurtiz died from cancer on April 10 1962 aged 75 107 108 At the time of his death he was living alone in a small apartment in Sherman Oaks California 13 He is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale California 109 Legacy editMichael Curtiz is the classic example of a studio director in that he could turn his hand to almost anything He could go from any genre to another and somehow this Hungarian knew exactly how those genres worked Like there was some innate storytelling skill in this man Film historian David Thomson 99 Curtiz directed some of the best known films of the 20th century achieving numerous award winning performances from actors Before moving to Hollywood from his native Hungary when he was 38 years of age he had already directed 64 films in Europe He soon helped Warner Bros become the nation s fastest growing studio directing 102 films during his career in Hollywood more than any other director 2 67 Jack Warner who first discovered Curtiz after seeing one of his epics in Europe called him Warner Brothers greatest director 95 nbsp Davis and Flynn in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 1939 He directed 10 actors to Oscar nominations Paul Muni John Garfield James Cagney Walter Huston Humphrey Bogart Claude Rains Joan Crawford Ann Blyth Eve Arden and William Powell Cagney and Crawford won their only Academy Awards under Curtiz s direction with Cagney on TV later attributing part of his success to the unforgettable Michael Curtiz 95 Curtiz himself was nominated five times and won as Best Director for Casablanca He earned a reputation as a harsh taskmaster to his actors as he micromanaged every detail on the set With his background as director since 1912 his experience and dedication to the art made him a perfectionist He had an astounding mastery of technical details Hal B Wallis who produced a number of his major films including Casablanca said Curtiz had always been his favorite director He was a superb director with an amazing command of lighting mood and action He could handle any kind of picture melodrama comedy Western historical epic or love story 56 Some such as screenwriter Robert Rossen ask whether Curtiz has been misjudged by cinema history since he is not included among those often considered to be great directors such as John Ford Howard Hawks Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock He was obviously a talent highly alert to the creative movements of his time such as German expressionism the genius of the Hollywood studio system genres such as film noir and the possibilities offered by talented stars 110 Film historian Catherine Portuges has described Curtiz as one of the most enigmatic of film directors and often underrated 9 161 Film theorist Peter Wollen wanted to resurrect Curtiz s critical reputation observing that with his enormous experience and drive he could wring unexpected meanings from a script through his direction of actors and cinematographers 2 75 Academy Award nominations editYear Award Film Result 1935 Best Director as write in candidate Captain Blood John Ford The Informer 1938 Best Director Angels with Dirty Faces Frank Capra You Can t Take It with You Best Director Four Daughters 1939 Best Short Subject Sons of Liberty Won 1942 Best Director Yankee Doodle Dandy William Wyler Mrs Miniver 1943 Best Director Casablanca Won Curtiz also won an Academy Award in the category of Best Short Subject Two reel for Sons of Liberty 39 Six of Curtiz s films were nominated for Best Picture Captain Blood 1935 The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 Four Daughters 1938 Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 Casablanca 1943 and Mildred Pierce 1945 Of these only Casablanca won Best Picture Directed Academy Award performances edit Year Performer Film Result Academy Award for Best Actor 1935 Paul Muni Black Fury write in candidate Nominated 1938 James Cagney Angels with Dirty Faces Nominated 1942 James Cagney Yankee Doodle Dandy Won 1943 Humphrey Bogart Casablanca Nominated 1947 William Powell Life with Father Nominated Academy Award for Best Actress 1945 Joan Crawford Mildred Pierce Won Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor 1938 John Garfield Four Daughters Nominated 1942 Walter Huston Yankee Doodle Dandy Nominated 1943 Claude Rains Casablanca Nominated Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress 1945 Eve Arden Mildred Pierce Nominated 1945 Ann Blyth Mildred Pierce NominatedMusicals editYear Title Starring Notes 1942 Yankee Doodle Dandy James Cagney amp Joan Leslie 1943 This is the Army George Murphy Joan Leslie amp Ronald Reagan An Irving Berlin Film 1946 Night and Day Cary Grant Alexis Smith amp Monty Woolley 1948 Romance on the High Seas Jack Carson Doris Day amp Janis Paige 1950 Young Man with a Horn Kirk Douglas Lauren Bacall amp Doris Day 1952 The Jazz Singer Danny Thomas amp Peggy Lee 1954 White Christmas Bing Crosby Danny Kaye Rosemary Clooney amp Vera Ellen An Irving Berlin FilmAFI editThe American Film Institute ranked Casablanca 3 and Yankee Doodle Dandy 98 on its list of the greatest American movies The Adventures of Robin Hood and Mildred Pierce were nominated for the list Selected Hollywood filmography editMain article Michael Curtiz filmography Tenderloin 1928 Noah s Ark 1928 The Mad Genius 1931 with John Barrymore and Marian Marsh The Cabin in the Cotton 1932 with Richard Barthelmess and Bette Davis Doctor X 1932 with Fay Wray and Lionel Atwill Goodbye Again 1933 with Warren William and Joan Blondell 20 000 Years in Sing Sing 1933 with Spencer Tracy and Bette Davis Mystery of the Wax Museum 1933 with Lionel Atwill Fay Wray and Glenda Farrell The Kennel Murder Case 1933 with William Powell as Philo Vance Jimmy the Gent 1934 with James Cagney and Bette Davis British Agent 1934 with Leslie Howard and Kay Francis Black Fury 1935 Front Page Woman 1935 with Bette Davis and George Brent Captain Blood 1935 with Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland Kid Galahad 1937 with Edward G Robinson Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 with Errol Flynn Olivia de Havilland and Basil Rathbone Four Daughters 1938 with John Garfield and Claude Rains Angels with Dirty Faces 1938 with James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart Dodge City 1939 with Errol Flynn and Bruce Cabot The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 1939 with Bette Davis Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland Santa Fe Trail 1940 with Errol Flynn Olivia de Havilland and Ronald Reagan Virginia City 1940 with Errol Flynn and Randolph Scott The Sea Hawk 1940 with Errol Flynn and Alan Hale Sr The Sea Wolf 1941 with Edward G Robinson and John Garfield Dive Bomber 1941 with Fred MacMurray and Ralph Bellamy Captains of the Clouds 1942 with James Cagney and famed fighter pilot Billy Bishop Casablanca 1942 with Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 with James Cagney and Walter Huston Mission to Moscow 1943 with Walter Huston Mildred Pierce 1945 with Joan Crawford and Ann Blyth Night and Day 1946 with Cary Grant as Cole Porter Life with Father 1947 with William Powell Irene Dunne and Elizabeth Taylor Romance on the High Seas 1948 Doris Day s movie debut The Breaking Point 1950 with John Garfield and Patricia Neal I ll See You in My Dreams 1951 a biographical film of composer and lyricist Gus Kahn with Doris Day and Danny Thomas The Jazz Singer 1952 a remake with Danny Thomas and Peggy Lee White Christmas 1954 with Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney The Egyptian 1954 with Jean Simmons Victor Mature and Gene Tierney We re No Angels 1955 with Humphrey Bogart and Peter Ustinov The Vagabond King 1956 with Oreste Kirkop Kathryn Grayson and Rita Moreno The Proud Rebel 1958 with Alan Ladd and Olivia de Havilland King Creole 1958 with Elvis Presley and Walter Matthau The Man in the Net 1959 with Alan Ladd and Carolyn Jones The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 1960 with Eddie Hodges Tony Randall and Patty McCormack The Comancheros 1961 with John Wayne and Stuart WhitmanNotes edit In Hungarian eastern name order Kaminer Mano In Hungarian eastern name order Kertesz Mihaly Other spellings that various biographers have used are Kertesz Mihaly Michael Courtice Michael Kertesz Mihaly Kertesz Michael Kertesz and Kertesz Kaminer Mano According to biographer James C Robertson because Curtiz had given different accounts about his early life during his career exact details about his early years have not been confirmed 6 5 For example he said that he once ran away from home to perform in various acts with a circus Some sources state that Jack L Warner Harry s younger brother was who offered Curtiz a contract In either case Curtiz initially wanted to throw him off the set while he was working since visitors made him nervous 15 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Biography of Michael Curtiz Turner Classic Movies TCM a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gerstner David A and Staiger Janet Authorship and Film Psychology Press 2003 a b Los Angeles Times Oct 30 1927 p 41 a b c d e f Marton Kati Great Escape Simon amp Schuster 2006 Tablet Magazine The Brothers Who Co Wrote Casablanca Writers Julius and Philip Epstein are also forebears of baseball s Theo Epstein by Adam Chandler August 22 2013 a b c d e Robertson James C The Casablanca Man The Cinema of Michael Curtiz Routledge 1993 a b c Kingsley Grace Troupers Know Life Strolling Players in Europe Lead Life of Romance Says Curtiz Warner Director Los Angeles Times September 25 1927 p 15 a b c d Rosenzweig Sidney Casablanca and Other Major Films of Michael Curtiz Ann Arbor Mich UMI Research Press 1982 ISBN 0835713040 a b c d e Vasvari Louise Olga ed Portuges Caterine Curtiz Hungarian Cinema and Hollywood Comparative Hungarian Cultural Studies Purdue Univ Press 2011 a b c d e f g h Biography of Michael Curtiz Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Gutterman Leon Our Film Folk The Wisconsin Chronicle April 30 1954 p 6 a b c d e f Wakeman John ed World Film Directors 1890 1945 H W Wilson Company 1987 a b c d e f The Tennessean Nashville April 12 1962 p 57 a b c d e Pontuso James F Political Philosophy Comes to Rick s Casablanca and American Civic Culture Lexington Books 2005 Graham Sheilah Hollywood Today The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky September 29 1946 p 31 a b Noah s Ark movie trailer 1928 a b c Leonard Suzanne Tasker Yvonne Fifty Hollywood Directors Routledge 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Harmetz Aljean Round Up the Usual Suspects The Making of Casablanca Orion Publishing Co 1993 p 221 ISBN 0297812947 Oakland Tribune December 19 1926 p 58 a b c d e f Gunson Victor Hard to do Films Best Training School for Directors Declares Michael Curtiz The Journal News New York September 27 1946 Kingsley Grace Will Make Noah s Ark Los Angeles Times Oct 2 1926 p 6 Los Angeles Times August 4 1927 p 11 Schickel Richard and Perry George You Must Remember This The Warner Brothers Story Running Press 2008 Parsons Louella O In Movie Studios The Cincinnati Enquirer February 9 1927 p 4 20 000 Years In Sing Sing 1932 Trailer retrieved November 8 2023 Higham Charles Merchant of Dreams Donald I Fine Inc N Y 1993 Captain Blood 1935 original trailer Charge of the Light Brigade Trailer The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 Trailer Top 100 Movies Of All Time Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved May 14 2019 The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex 1939 Official Trailer Kid Galahad 1937 Trailer Photo of Michael Curtiz directing fight scene in Kid Galahad Rush Work on Three Pictures Special Unit is Formed For Famed Director Michael Curtiz Harrisburg Telegraph Harrisburg Pennsylvania August 12 1939 p 9 a b McGrath Patrick J John Garfield The Illustrated Career in Films and on Stage McFarland 1993 pp 28 29 a b Critics Acclaim Four Daughters The Culver Citizen October 19 1938 p 9 Angels with Dirty Faces Trailer https rode Curtiz A Life in Film page 237 a b New York Times Sons of Liberty Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2011 Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved May 16 2008 Dodge City Trailer Santa Fe Trail 1940 Official Trailer Virginia City 1940 Official Trailer AFI CATALOG afi com Retrieved April 19 2016 The Sea Hawk original theatrical trailer 1940 Los Angeles Times May 6 1990 p 653 Martin Boyd Modern Parallel Found in The Sea Hawk The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky August 11 1940 p 24 Dive Bomber 1941 Official Trailer Ames Daily Tribune Ames Iowa September 20 1941 p 12 a b c Welky David The Moguls and the Dictators Johns Hopkins Univ Press 2008 pp 314 316 Crowther Bosley Dive Bomber 1941 Review The New York Times August 30 1941 Retrieved September 4 2009 Film money makers selected by Variety Sergeant York Top Picture Gary Cooper Leading Star The New York Times December 31 1941 p 21 The Sea Wolf 1941 Official Trailer a b c Robinson Edward G All My Yesterdays An Autobiography Hawthorn Books N Y 1973 p 218 Lyttelton Oliver The Essentials 5 Of Michael Curtiz s Greatest Films Indiewire April 10 2012 Beck Robert The Edward G Robinson Encyclopedia McFarland 2002 a b c d Wallis Hal and Higham Charles Starmaker The Autobiography of Hal Wallis Macmillan Publishing 1980 p 25 Captains of the Clouds 1942 Trailer Yankee Doodle Dandy 1942 Official Trailer Flint Peter B March 31 1986 James Cagney Is Dead at 86 Master of Pugnacious Grace The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 28 2023 Ebert Roger September 15 1996 Casablanca Roger Ebert com Retrieved April 10 2022 Cosgrove Ben November 23 2012 The Best Movie of All Time Turns 70 Here s Looking at You Casablanca Time Retrieved April 10 2022 This Is The Army 1943 Original Trailer Kate Smith sings God Bless America in This Is the Army 1943 a b Eberwein Robert The Hollywood War Film John Wiley amp Sons 2010 p 48 Mildred Pierce 1945 Trailer Mick Garris on Mildred Pierce a b Hay Peter MGM When the Lion Roars Turner Publishing 1991 pp 194 198 Joan Crawford Always the Star 1996 documentary Hard to do Films Best Training School for Directors Says Curtiz The Evening Independent Massillon Ohio October 1 1946 p 11 Solomons Gabriel World Film Locations Los Angeles Intellect Books 2011 p 16 a b Davis Ronald L Zachary Scott Hollywood s Sophisticated Cad Univ Press of Mississippi 2006 p 97 Hare William Early Film Noir Greed Lust and Murder Hollywood Style McFarland 2003 p 133 Schatz Thomas The Genius of the System Hollywood Filmmaking in the Studio Era Henry Holt and Company 1988 p 422 Life With Father 1947 trailer Parry Florence Fisher William Powell s Superb Father Day Makes Him Candidate for an Oscar The Pittsburgh Press August 31 1947 p 33 a b c Graham Sheilah Movie Stars Clamor to Work Under Director Mike Curtiz The Courier Journal September 29 1946 p 31 Young Man with a Horn 1950 Trailer Thomas Tony The Films of Kirk Douglas Citadel Press New York 1991 p 64 ISBN 0 8065 1217 2 Jim Thorpe All American 1951 trailer Review of Jim Thorpe All American Turner Classic Movies I ll See You in My Dreams 1951 Official Trailer The Story of Will Rogers 1952 title sequence White Christmas 1954 trailer Clemens Samuel Carol Ohmart The Story of Hollywood s Greatest Actress Lulu Press December 2022 King Creole 1958 Trailer a b Johnson Hazel UPI The Daily Notes Canonsburg Pennsylvania April 9 1958 p 3 Guralnick Peter Last Train to Memphis The Rise of Elvis Presley Back Bay Books 1995 p 450 King Creole Paramount 1958 Elvispresley com Victor Adam The Elvis Encyclopedia p 287 Howard Thompson July 4 1958 Actor With Guitar The New York Times Retrieved June 20 2011 a b Curtiz Michael The Parade of Oscars The Evening Review June 14 1944 p 13 Front Page Woman 1935 trailer Warner Archive Ross George Slaying the King s English The Pittsburgh Press August 10 1938 p 11 U S Cameramen Take New Ways German Idea of Shifting Plan for Narrative Power Adopted The Courier Journal Dec 13 1926 p 2 a b c d e John Frederick Michael Curtiz the Film World s Forgotten Genius St Petersburg Times October 24 1979 p 10 a b c d Curtiz No Mr Malaprop Studio Legend Exploded Famous Director s English is Found to Be Better Than Chroniclers Likes Simple Stories Pittsburgh Press August 23 1942 p 21 Quirk Lawrence J Fasten Your Seat Belts The Passionate Life of Bette Davis New York NY Penguin 1990 ISBN 0 451 16950 6 Cabin in the Cotton 1932 trailer TCM a b David Thomson discussing Michael Curtiz TCM Tribute to Michael Curtiz Bring on the Empty Horses Amazon books Incredible behind the scenes facts about Casablanca September 12 2018 https rode Curtiz A Life in Film page 68 a b MICHAEL CURTIZ DIRECTOR 72 DIES The New York Times Associated Press April 12 1962 Retrieved September 23 2020 Lili Damita The Los Angeles Times Associated Press March 24 1994 Retrieved September 23 2020 Kingsport Times Kingsport Tennessee April 27 1941 p 26 https rode Curtiz A Life in Film page 535 Los Angeles Times which states he died Tuesday night April 10 Alan K Rode Michael Curtiz A Life in Film p 543 Michael Curtz a life in film Rossen Robert Fumento Rocco Williams Tony Jack London s The Sea Wolf A Screenplay Southern Illinois Univ Press 1998 p xivExternal links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Media related to Michael Curtiz at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works by or about Michael Curtiz at Wikisource Michael Curtiz at IMDb Literature on Michael Curtiz Kertesz Kaminer Mano aka Kertesz Mihaly profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Curtiz amp oldid 1214606700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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