Fred Zinnemann

Fred Zinnemann

Infobox Actor
bgcolour = silver
name = Fred Zinnemann


birthdate = April 29, 1907
location = Vienna, Austria-Hungary
deathdate = death date and age|1997|3|14|1907|4|29
deathplace = London, England
spouse = Renee Bartlett (1936-1997)
academyawards = Best Short Subject Documentary
1951 "Benjy"
Best Director
1953 "From Here to Eternity"
1966 "A Man for All Seasons"
Best Picture
1966 "A Man for All Seasons"
baftaawards = Best British Film
1967 "A Man for All Seasons"
Best Film from any Source
1967 "A Man for All Seasons"
goldenglobeawards = Best Director - Motion Picture
1953 "From Here to Eternity"
1966 "A Man for All Seasons"
awards = NBR Award for Best Director
1959 "The Nun's Story"
1966 "A Man for All Seasons"
NYFCC Award for Best Director
1952 "High Noon"
1953 "From Here to Eternity"
1959 "The Nun's Story"
1966 "A Man for All Seasons"
Walk of Fame - Motion Picture
6627 Hollywood Blvd

Fred Zinnemann (April 29, 1907–March 14, 1997) was an Academy Award-winning Austrian-American film director. He won four Academy Awards and directed classic movies like "From Here to Eternity", "High Noon" and "A Man for All Seasons".

Life

Zinnemann was born to a Jewish family in Vienna, Austria, and died of a heart attack in London, England. While growing up in Austria, he wanted to become a musician, but went on to study law. While studying at the University of Vienna, he became drawn to films and eventually became a cameraman. He worked in Germany with several other beginners (Billy Wilder and Robert Siodmak also worked with him on the 1929 feature "People on Sunday") before go to America to study film.

One of his first assignments in Hollywood was when he found work as an extra in "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1930), although he was fired from the production for talking back to the director, Lewis Milestone. After some success with short films, he graduated to features in 1942, turning out two crisp B mysteries, "Eyes in the Night" and "Kid Glove Killer" before getting his big break with "The Seventh Cross" (1944), a top-notch A picture starring Spencer Tracy, and his first hit.

He directed many different film genres including thrillers, westerns, "film noir", and play adaptations. Nineteen actors appearing in Zinnemann's films received Academy Award nominations for their performances: among that number are Frank Sinatra, Audrey Hepburn, Glynis Johns, Paul Scofield, Robert Shaw, Wendy Hiller, Jason Robards, Vanessa Redgrave, Jane Fonda, Gary Cooper and Maximilian Schell. Zinnemann's 1950 film "The Men" is noted for giving Marlon Brando his first screen role.

Zinnemann enjoyed an outstanding career spanning six decades, during which he directed 22 features, 19 short subjects and won four Oscars. Perhaps his best-known work is "High Noon" (1952), one of the first 25 American film classics chosen in 1989 for the National Film Registry. With its psychological and moral examinations of its lawman hero, played by Gary Cooper, its allegorical political commentary (on McCarthy-era witch-hunting) and its innovative chronology whereby screen time approximated the tense 80-minute countdown to the confrontational hour, "High Noon" shattered the mould of the formulaic shoot-‘em-up western.

The director's other eminent films, all compelling dramas of lone and principled individuals tested by tragic events, include "From Here to Eternity" (1953); "The Nun's Story" (1959); "A Man For All Seasons" (1966); and "Julia" (1977). Regarded as a consummate craftsman, Zinnemann traditionally endowed his work with meticulous attention to detail, an intuitive gift for brilliant casting and a preoccupation with the moral dilemmas of his characters.

Zinnemann's penchant for realism and authenticity is evident in his first feature "The Wave" (1935), shot on location in Mexico with mostly non-professional actors recruited among the locals, which is one of the earliest examples of realism in narrative film. Earlier in the decade, in fact, Zinnemann had worked with documentarian Robert Flaherty, an association he considered "the most important event of my professional life".

His adaptation of "The Seventh Cross", though filmed entirely on the MGM backlot, captured the essence of the Anna Seghers novel by realistic use of refugee German actors in even the smallest roles.

The filmmaker also used authentic locales and extras in "The Search" (1948), which won an Oscar for screenwriting and secured his position in the Hollywood establishment, a vivid drama of World War II aftermath in Berlin that drew on Zinnemann's skills as both documentarian and dramatist. Shot in war-ravaged Germany, the film stars Montgomery Clift in his screen debut as a GI who cares for a lost Czech boy traumatised by the war. In the critically acclaimed "The Men" (1950), starring newcomer Marlon Brando as a paraplegic war veteran, Zinnemann filmed many scenes in a California hospital where real patients served as extras.

Besides Clift and Brando, other Zinnemann discoveries included Pier Angeli and John Ericson, who co-starred in "Teresa" (1951), with Rod Steiger and Ralph Meeker debuting in secondary roles. And in "Oklahoma!" (1955), Zinnemann's version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, the wide screen format Todd-AO made its debut, as did the film's young star Shirley Jones.

Zinnemann's casting choices were often as daring as they were judicious. For his screen adaptation of the play "The Member of the Wedding" (1952), Zinnemann chose the 26-year-old Julie Harris as the film's 12-year-old protagonist, although she had created the role on Broadway just as the two other leading actors, Ethel Waters and Brandon De Wilde, had. In "From Here to Eternity" (1953), he cast Frank Sinatra, who was at the lowest point of his popularity. As the likable loser Maggio, Sinatra won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. "From Here to Eternity" also featured Deborah Kerr, best known for prim and proper roles, as a philandering Army wife. And Audrey Hepburn, previously cast in delightful comedic roles, gave the performance of her career as the anguished Sister Luke in the highly acclaimed "The Nun's Story".

Throughout his career Zinnemann favoured a protagonist morally impelled to act heroically in defence of his or her beliefs. Hepburn in "The Nun's Story" and Cooper in "High Noon", determined to confront savage outlaws hungry for revenge, are two other prominent examples. Paul Scofield as Sir Thomas More in "A Man For All Seasons" (1966) gave a brilliant portrayal of a man driven by conscience to his ultimate fate.

A variation on that theme is found in "The Seventh Cross," in which the central character -- an escaped prisoner played by Spencer Tracy -- is comparatively passive and fatalistic. He is, however, the subject of heroic assistance from anti-Nazi Germans. In a sense, the protagonist of the movie is not the Tracy character but a humble German worker played by Hume Cronyn, who changes from Nazi sympathizer to active opponent of the regime as he aids Tracy.

And in "Julia" (1977), another of Zinnemann's crowning achievements, Vanessa Redgrave is a doomed American heiress who forsakes the safety and comfort of great wealth to devote her life to the anti-Nazi cause in Germany. (The film is also notable for being the screen debut of Meryl Streep.) Perhaps the most unusual and perversely engaging loner in Zinnemann's films is Edward Fox as the cold-blooded anti-hero assassin in the taut thriller "The Day of the Jackal" (1973), a man who is impelled by sheer professionalism rather than politics to try to kill French president Charles de Gaulle.

He won the Academy Award for Directing for "From Here to Eternity" and "A Man for All Seasons" and also took home the Best Picture Oscar for producing the latter film. He received his first Oscar in 1951 for the documentary short "Benjy".

His final film was "Five Days One Summer" in 1982.

Zinnemann is often regarded as striking a blow against "ageism" in Hollywood. The story (which may be apocryphal) goes that, in the 1980s, during a meeting with a young Hollywood executive, Zinnemann was surprised to find the executive didn't know who he was, despite winning two Academy Awards, and directing many of Hollywood's biggest movies. When the young executive callowly asked Zinnemann to list what he had done in his career, Zinnemann delivered an elegant comeback by reportedly answering, "Sure. You first." In Hollywood, the story is known as "You First," and is often alluded to when veteran creators find that upstarts are unfamiliar with their work. [cite web
last =Weinraub
first =Bernard
title = At Lunch with: John Gregory Dunne; The Bad Old Days In All Their Glory
publisher =The New York Times
date =1994-09-14
url =http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0DE1D9153BF937A2575AC0A962958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2
accessdate = 2007-10-09
]

elected filmography

* "That Mothers Might Live" (1938)
* "The Search" (1948)
* "Act of Violence" (1948)
* "The Men" (1950)
* "Benjy" (1951)
* "High Noon" (1952)
* "From Here to Eternity" (1953)
* "Oklahoma!" (1956)
* "The Nun's Story" (1959)
* "The Sundowners" (1960)
* "Behold a Pale Horse" (1964)
* "A Man for All Seasons" (1966)
* "The Day of the Jackal" (1973)
* "Julia" (1977)
* "Five Days One Summer" (1982)

References

External links

*

Persondata
NAME= Zinnemann, Fred
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Film director
DATE OF BIRTH= April 29, 1907
PLACE OF BIRTH= Vienna, Austria-Hungary
DATE OF DEATH= 1997-3-14
PLACE OF DEATH= London, England


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