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Carol Reed

 

(born Dec. 30, 1906, London, Eng. — died April 25, 1976, London) British film director. He made his stage debut as an actor in 1924 and as a director in 1927, staging Edgar Wallace's detective thrillers. He began directing films in 1935, winning praise for The Stars Look Down (1939), Night Train (1940), and the wartime semidocumentary The True Glory (1945). Noted for his technical mastery of the suspense-thriller genre, he had great success with Odd Man Out (1947), The Fallen Idol (1948), and the classic The Third Man (1949). His later films include The Key (1958), Our Man in Havana (1959), and Oliver! (1968, Academy Award). He was the first British film director to be knighted.

For more information on Sir Carol Reed, visit Britannica.com.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Sir Carol Reed
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Reed, Sir Carol, 1906-76, English film director, b. London. He acted and directed on the stage before turning to films in the mid-1930s. Reed powerfully portrayed characters at the end of their tethers, frequently in a postwar environment, in films such as Odd Man Out (1946), The Fallen Idol (1948), The Third Man (1949), Outcast of the Islands (1951), Our Man in Havana (1959), and Oliver! (1968), for which he won an Academy Award.
Director: Carol Reed
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  • Born: Dec 30, 1906 in London, England, UK
  • Died: Apr 25, 1976
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '30s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Third Man, The Agony and the Ecstasy, The Fallen Idol
  • First Major Screen Credit: It Happened in Paris (1935)

Biography

At the end of the 1930s, Carol Reed was regarded as one of the most promising young directors in England; at the end of the 1940s, he was the maker of one of the most popular and critically acclaimed movies of the decade, the most prominent director working in England, and the most lionized British director this side of Alfred Hitchcock, and the world was knocking at his door. During the 1950s, he became the first movie director ever to be awarded a knighthood, and he closed out the 1960s with one of the very few blockbuster musicals of its time to earn a profit or filmmaking honors -- in between and around those triumphs lay a life and career worthy of a movie. Carol Reed was born into a family with some of the best artistic/theatrical credentials of any film director who ever lived. His father was Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1853-1917), the leading actor of his day and, among many other credits, the stage's first Henry Higgins, and his mother was Tree's mistress, May Pinney Reed. Born in London, Carol Reed was educated at Kings School, Canterbury, just slightly ahead of his fellow future filmmaker Michael Powell. Reed's father passed away when he was ten years old, leaving his mother to raise him with help from a small bequest. He was drawn to the theater from an early age and wanted to become an actor, but his mother had little confidence in his ability to earn a living in that field, and encouraged him to try farming, owing to Reed's boyhood hobby of raising animals. The family even sent him to America to learn the workings of a large-scale chicken farm, but farming wasn't remotely a natural fit and eventually they stopped standing in his way.

Reed made his stage debut at age 17 as a member of Sybil Thorndike's theater company, and at 20, joined Edgar Wallace's company, where he advised the author on the adaptations of his books into plays and also served as a stage manager as well as an actor. Reed turned to movies in the early '30s, joining Associated British Talking Pictures in 1932 as a dialogue director and assistant to the studio's founder, director/producer Basil Dean. Reed made the jump to the director's chair in 1935, initially in association with Robert Wyler on It Happened in Paris. This period in Reed's career, characterized by low-budget productions, saw him making as many as three feature films a year. These were successful films, hampered mostly by their rapid production schedules and low budgets, but they often stood out for what style Reed was able to manifest in them, beginning with the comedy Laburnum Grove (1936). He also directed Talk of the Devil (1936), the first movie made at Pinewood Studios, the huge, state-of-the-art facility financed by Alexander Korda; the film was co-written by Reed and future director Anthony Kimmins (who collaborated on Reed's first five movies). Reed's most distinguished early movie was The Stars Look Down (1939), starring Michael Redgrave, a drama dealing with the plight of impoverished Welsh coal miners. The film that put Reed on the map as a popular stylist was Night Train to Munich (1940). Written by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat, the future writer/director/producer team, it was a follow-up to their script for Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes (1938) (and, by virtue of the presence of Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne as cricket enthusiasts Charters and Caldicott, something of a sequel).

With the outbreak of the Second World War, Reed joined the British army's film unit, where he made a series of documentaries intended as acclimation and propaganda for new recruits, and made the best full-length feature of the war dealing with British infantrymen, The Way Ahead (1944), co-authored by Eric Ambler and Peter Ustinov. It was immediately after the war that Reed ascended to the front rank of British filmmakers with Odd Man Out (1947). This coincided with his becoming his own producer, and for the next four years, everything he touched as a director turned to gold. Odd Man Out was a beautifully complex psychological thriller that overcame its grim subject -- the final hours of a mortally wounded IRA gunman on the run -- to become a critical and box-office success on both sides of the Atlantic. Along with Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, David Lean, and Launder and Gilliat, Reed was part of that generation of British filmmakers whose movies transformed the British film industry, for a time, into a serious rival to Hollywood. Unlike the others, however, Reed quickly transferred his career from The Rank Organisation -- whose management was just starting to falter in its handling of those ambitious films -- to Alexander Korda's revived, postwar London Films.

Reed's next movie, The Fallen Idol (1948), based on the work of author Graham Greene, told the story of a boy trying desperately to hide the guilt of his friend, a butler suspected of killing his wife. It was a deeply atmospheric film, filled with haunting emotional resonances, and was a critical and box-office success. And then came The Third Man (1949), based on Greene's novella and produced jointly in association with Alexander Korda and David O. Selznick. A manhunt set amid the corruption and misery of postwar Vienna, the movie transcended the thriller genre, partly through a quintet of brilliant performances by Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli, Trevor Howard, and Bernard Lee, as well as Robert Krasker's atmospheric photography, and, overall, a uniquely wry sense of humor, courtesy of Reed, who set the tone for the entire movie not only as a director but also through his selection of local Viennese zither player Anton Karas to provide the music for the score. The Third Man became the most enduringly popular of all postwar British thrillers, one of the most widely remembered and quoted movies in history, and it made several fortunes. Apart from generating millions of dollars around the world, it turned Alida Valli into an international star and made Karas into an internationally renowned virtuoso overnight. Ironically, it even proved as central to the reputation of Orson Welles as any of the movies that Welles directed himself.

The Third Man proved a high point in Reed's career. His next two movies, Outcast of the Islands (1952) and The Man Between (1953) -- the latter a topical story set in Berlin during the Cold War that ran into script and production problems -- were disappointments. However, between the two, Reed was awarded a knighthood, the first time such an honor had been granted to a movie director. In 1955, he made the jump to color photography with the gentle fable A Kid for Two Farthings; it was well received and, indeed, remains one of the most popular children's films of its era that was not made by Disney. His next movie, Trapeze (1956), was a complete surprise; an Anglo-American production by the company owned by its star, Burt Lancaster, it was also Reed's first in Cinemascope, and it was a hit, but it was also devoid of any of the personal touches that had been found in Reed's earlier movies. The Key (1958), was similarly criticized for its impersonal nature. In 1959, Reed went to Cuba to film Our Man in Havana, based on a story by Graham Greene. The production went off without a hitch amid the turmoil and festivities surrounding Fidel Castro's takeover of the island, and the rebel leader even visited during the final day's location shooting. The resulting movie wasn't well received at the time, although it has since come to be regarded as a minor satirical classic.

The 1960s were a less satisfying time for Reed, as he was replaced on Mutiny on the Bounty by Lewis Milestone, and The Agony and the Ecstacy (1965) failed miserably at the box office. It was fortunate for him that the film's failure was attributed more to the personality of Charlton Heston, its star, who was more dominant in the finished work than Reed. In 1968, the director had his final triumph with the release of the musical Oliver!, based on the stage work by Lionel Bart. It was distinguished not only as one of the few blockbusters of its era to rake in a profit (the landscape was littered with failed musicals in those years, including Robert Wise's Star! and Richard Fleischer's Doctor Dolittle), but one of the very few screen adaptations of a stage work to eclipse the theatrical original. Its brace of Academy Awards included Best Picture and the Best Director Oscar for Reed. Although Reed did two more movies, Flap (1970, dealing with the plight of Native Americans) and The Public Eye (1972), neither was widely distributed, and both suffered from the effects of his declining health and advancing age. He passed away in 1976, following years of weakening health and a mild heart attack. At the time, Reed was known to two different generations of filmgoers for either The Third Man or Oliver! and was remembered by film historians. In the decades since, his movies have been regularly rediscovered by new generations of viewers, and his reputation has risen in conjunction with that reevaluation. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Carol Reed
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Carol Reed
Born Carol Reed
30 December 1906(1906-12-30)
Putney, London, England
Died 25 April 1976 (aged 69)
Chelsea, London, England
Occupation Film director, producer
Years active 1935 ~ 1972
Spouse(s) Diana Wynyard
(1943–1947)
Penelope Dudley-Ward
(1948–1976(His Death))

Sir Carol Reed (30 December 1906 – 25 April 1976) was an English film director, most famous for directing The Third Man, The Agony and the Ecstasy and Oliver!. He won the 1968 Academy Award for Best Director for Oliver!.

Contents

Early life

The son of actor-producer Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree and his mistress, May Pinney Reed, Carol Reed was born in Putney, London, and educated at The King's School, Canterbury. Reed served in the British Army during the Second World War, giving him many experiences which appeared in his later films.

Career

He embarked on an acting career while still in his teens, but soon went into the role of producer/director, and was responsible for The Stars Look Down (1939), Kipps (1941), Odd Man Out (1947), The Fallen Idol (1948), Outcast of the Islands (1952), Our Man in Havana (1959), and The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965). The Fallen Idol and Our Man in Havana are based on the work of Graham Greene.

From 1943 until 1947, he was married to the British film star Diana Wynyard. After their divorce, he married, in 1948, the actress Penelope Dudley Ward, also known as Pempie, the elder daughter of Freda Dudley Ward, who had been a mistress of the Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII of the United Kingdom and Duke of Windsor. They had one son, Max, and a nephew was the actor Oliver Reed. His stepdaughter, Miss Ward's daughter, Tracy Reed, acted in numerous films, notably as the only woman in Dr. Strangelove.

In 1953, he became only the second British film director to be knighted for his craft. The first was Sir Alexander Korda in 1942.

Death

Carol Reed died from a heart attack on 25 April 1976 at his home in Chelsea, London at the age of 69.

Filmography

Year Film Notes
1935 It Happened in Paris
Midshipman Easy
1936 Laburnum Grove
1937 Talk of the Devil Also Writer
Who's Your Lady Friend?
1938 Penny Paradise
Bank Holiday
1939 Climbing High
A Girl Must Live
The Stars Look Down
1940 Girl in the News
Night Train to Munich
1941 Kipps
A Letter from Home
1942 The Young Mr Pitt
1943 The New Lot
1944 The Way Ahead
1945 The True Glory uncredited
1947 Odd Man Out Also Producer
1948 The Fallen Idol Also Producer
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director
1949 The Third Man Also Producer
Grand Prize of the Cannes Film Festival
BAFTA Award for Best British Film
1952 Outcast of the Islands Also Producer
1953 The Man Between Also Producer
1955 A Kid for Two Farthings Also Producer
1956 Trapeze
1958 The Key
1959 Our Man in Havana Also Producer
1962 Mutiny on the Bounty replaced by Lewis Milestone; uncredited
1963 The Running Man Also Producer
1965 The Agony and the Ecstasy Also Producer
1968 Oliver! Academy Award for Best Director
1970 Flap
1972 Follow Me!

[1][2]

Notes

  1. ^ "Carol Reed, Filmography". Internet Movie Database. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0715346/filmotype. Retrieved 7 July 2009. 
  2. ^ "Carol Reed, Awards". Internet Movie Database. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0715346/awards. Retrieved 7 July 2009. 

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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