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Director:

Cy Raker Endfield

  • Born: 1914 in Scranton, Pennsylvania
  • Died: Apr 16, 1995 in England
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '40s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Crime, Adventure
  • Career Highlights: Zulu Dawn, Zulu, Sea Fury
  • First Major Screen Credit: Radio Bugs (1944)

Biography

South African-born Cy Endfield was educated at Yale and New York City's New Theater School. After a few terms as a drama teacher, Endfield came to Hollywood, where he worked as a writer. Shortly before his wartime service, Endfield was given his first chance to direct on MGM's Our Gang short subjects series. He remained in the MGM shorts department during the months just following VE day, helming the one- and two-reel entries in the studio's Passing Parade and Crime Does Not Pay series. His first feature-length directorial effort, which he also scripted, was Monogram's Gentleman Joe Palooka (1946). He persevered as a director of several modest but well-received melodramas until he was blacklisted as a result of the dubious "revelations" of the HUAC. He worked in England during the 1950s, often pseudonymously, directing episodes of such London-based TV series as Colonel March of Scotland Yard. Endfield's re-entry into mainstream filmmaking came about when he formed a partnership with actor Stanley Baker. The best of Cy Endfield's later works include Mysterious Island (1961), Zulu (1964) and Sands of the Kalahari (1965); he was also one of several directors who tried but failed to make cinematic sense of the 1969 farrago DeSade. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Cy Endfield

Cyril Raker Endfield (November 10 1914April 16 1995) was an American screenwriter, film director, theatre director, author and sometime inventor, based in Britain from 1953.

Born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, after attending Yale University, Endfield began his career as a theatre director and drama coach, becoming an important figure in New York's progressive theatre scene. Despite this shared background, it was largely Endfield's skill as a card magician which brought him to the attention of Orson Welles, who recruited him as an apprentice for Mercury Productions (at that time based at RKO Pictures). Following the debacle surrounding the production of The Magnificent Ambersons (which ended with the expulsion of the Mercury team from the RKO lot) Endfield signed on as a contract director at MGM, directing a wide variety of shorts (including the last films in the long-running Our Gang series), before moving on to freelance on low-budget productions for Monogram and independents.

It was with the 1950 film noir The Underworld Story, an independent production released through United Artists, that Endfield first came to critical and studio attention. The film was a major leap from anything he had produced before in terms of budget and social commentary, a coruscating attack on press corruption which could equally be taken as a wider attack on the McCarthyite ideology of the times. He followed this with the film often cited as his masterpiece, The Sound of Fury (aka Try And Get Me!), a lynching thriller based on a true story. It was with these two films that Endfield's signature approach to character developed, pessimistic without being uncompassionate.

In 1951 Endfield was named as a Communist at a HUAC hearing. Blacklisted by the movie studio bosses, he was unable to get work in Hollywood and moved to Britain where he wrote and directed films under various pseudonyms, often starring fellow blacklistees. In 1958, Endfield was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best British Screenplay for Hell Drivers. In 1961 he made Mysterious Island featuring special effects by Ray Harryhausen.

His most famous work is 1964's Zulu. After a few more independent productions he withdraw from film direction in 1971. In 1979 he wrote the non-fiction book Zulu Dawn, which tells the story of the British military campaign against the Zulu Nation in 1879. A film adaptation of the book was released in the same year, co-written by Endfield and directed by Douglas Hickox.

Another accomplishment that Endfield is credited is a pocket-sized/miniature computer with a chorded keypad that allows rapid typing wothout a bulky single-stroke keyboard. It functions like a musical instrument by pressing combinations of keys that he called a "Microwriter" and later, "CyKey", to generate a full alphanumeric character set. It is currently under further development by Endfield's former partner, Chris Rainey and Bellaire Electonics.

For a link with further information, see [1].

Cy Endfield died in 1995 in Shipston-on-Stour, Warwickshire, England, aged 80.

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Director. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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