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Director:

Edward J. Montagne Jr.

  • Born: May 20, 1912
  • Occupation: Director
  • Active: '60s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Did You Hear the One About the Traveling Saleslady?, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force
  • First Major Screen Credit: Project X (1949)

Biography

Edward J. Montagne Jr. had a directing and producing career sufficient for three men: He made short films in the 1940s and directed one of the finest realistic crime thrillers of that decade; he was the producer (and sometime director) of two of the most successful television comedy series of the 1950s and '60s; and he was the producer and director of a string of successful theatrical and made-for-television features during the late '60s and '70s. The movie business was part of Montagne's birthright -- his father, also named Edward J. Montagne (1882-1932), was associated with Thomas A. Edison's film company in the first decade of the 20th century and was still writing important scripts 20 years later, during the transition period from silents to talkies.

Edward J. Montagne Jr. was born in Brooklyn in 1912. Director Norman Taurog, who had entered the industry with help from the elder Montagne, brought the man's son into the business at the outset of the 1930s by recommending him for a job at Paramount Pictures. Montagne Jr. started as a gopher and moved up to production assistant and later assistant director and second-unit director. Along the way, he got to know such luminaries as W.C. Fields and Jack Oakie, and worked in various capacities on movies such as It's a Gift (which he says was unique in its time for using a three-camera setup) and Million Dollar Legs. He later passed through the organizations of independent producers Edward Small, Walter Wanger, and Hal Roach. His earliest official credits were as an assistant director on movies such as The Villain Still Pursued Her (1940), Second Chorus (1940), and Fiesta (1941, credited in those years as Eddie Montagne).

Montagne was drafted in 1942 and served in the army as a combat photographer in the European Theater of Operations -- among other events, he was the photographer on the scene in Milan when Mussolini was strung up. After leaving the service in 1946, Montagne joined the documentary unit at RKO-Pathe and made a handful of nonfiction short films, then rejoined Hal Roach very briefly and returned to RKO-Pathe in New York. In 1949, Montagne began a five-year run as the director of a television series called Man Against Crime, starring Ralph Bellamy, which was done live, 52 shows a year, for its first three seasons. (Bellamy was appearing on Broadway at the time and would do the television show from a studio located in Grand Central Station, then jump into a waiting patrol car and be taken under siren to the theater for the night's performance; partway into the run of the show, the producers brought Robert Preston in as the Bellamy character's brother, to give him a few weeks' vacation.)

Man Against Crime was shot throughout the streets of New York, and was so successful and so popular with the producers and with the New York City Police Department that it led to Montagne's first major feature film, The Tattooed Stranger (1950). A murder mystery and manhunt shot entirely on-location in New York, it followed a trail blazed by Jules Dassin in The Naked City, but carried that movie's verisimilitude one step further, staying away from actors who even looked or sounded like Hollywood performers. The Tattooed Stranger was not only one of the grittier movies of its era in its look, but one of the more violent crime dramas of its time, elements that evidently helped turn it into an art-house favorite in France and possibly a serious influence on various New Wave directors in the making.

Montagne's next big success was, again, on the small screen, when he took over as production manager and then producer for the last four seasons of Phil Silvers' hit military sitcom, Sgt. Bilko (aka You'll Never Get Rich). He did two pilots with Silvers that didn't sell after that series left the air, and joined Universal Pictures' television unit in the early '60s, by which time he was pegged as a comedy expert. It was there that, at the suggestion of executive Sam Northcross, he was asked to take a look at a failed pilot for an hour-long World War II drama about a PT boat crew in the Pacific, called "Seven Against the Sea." He re-thought it as a comedy, eliminated one role and wrote in another for an antagonist, and he sought out the services of a young local television comic, then called Tom Conway, working in Chagrin Falls. Montagne got him signed up (and renamed Tim Conway, in deference to the British-born actor Tom Conway, long a Screen Actors Guild member), and McHale's Navy -- starring Ernest Borgnine, Joe Flynn, and Tim Conway -- was born. It was also Montagne's idea to add the character of Fuji (played by Yoshio Yoda), a surrendered Japanese sailor who was only too happy to serve the PT boat crew as their valet. This character was based on Montagne's memories of his service in Italy during the war, where his unit had surrendered Italian ex-soldiers on hand, not free but not quite prisoners, who did a lot of the heavy work required. (Montagne recalled in 2003 that years later, long after the series was over, Yoda called him from Japan and asked if he could name his just-born son after him, a rare honor in a business where actors and producers seldom see eye to eye.)

McHale's Navy ended up running four seasons and would have had a fifth if only MCA chairman Lew Wasserman hadn't hesitated to switch to color shooting, fearing that the first four seasons (done in black-and-white) would be dead in syndication if they did. The show was so popular during its run that Wasserman insisted that Montagne make a movie, McHale's Navy (1964), out of the series. The resulting script, about the PT boat's crew finding a champion Australian race horse on a Pacific island after the ship it was on is sunk, was based on a true story that Montagne remembered. That movie was so popular (perhaps the only successful feature film ever spun out of a television sitcom that was still on the air, defying the established wisdom that audiences wouldn't pay to see entertainment that they could get for free at home) that a second movie, McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965), followed in short order. For that film, Montagne was left without the services of Ernest Borgnine, over a money edict from the studio. Joe Flynn was getting more money by then, and Wasserman declared that they could only afford to have two of show's three stars in the film; Montagne opted for Conway and Flynn, in what proved to be a very funny military satire, highlighted by some outrageous sight gags.

During the late '60s, Montagne was responsible for producing a string of successful feature films starring Don Knotts, most notably the poignant and psychologically complex comedy The Reluctant Astronaut (1967, which he also directed) and the Western spoof The Shakiest Gun in the West (1968), the latter a very effective remake of The Paleface starring Knotts and Barbara Rhoades. Montagne's other credits included the detective thriller P.J. (1968) and the Andy Griffith-starring feature Angel in My Pocket (1969). He was later the producer of such series as Quincy and Delta House, and produced (and wrote the original story for) the made-for-television feature Short Walk to Daylight, which was the basis for Rob Cohen's 1996 feature film Daylight. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Edwards, Jonathan,
the younger, 1745–1801, American theologian, b. Northampton, Mass., grad. College of New Jersey (now Princeton), 1765; son of Jonathan Edwards (1703–58). His career in some ways paralleled that of his famous father. After serving as pastor of a New Haven church from 1769 to 1795, he was dismissed for opposing the Half-Way Covenant. Until 1799 he was pastor at Colebrook, Conn. Edwards was then made president of Union College at Schenectady, N.Y., but he died before he could make much impression on the college. He edited some of his father's works and generally held to his doctrines, although in On the Necessity of the Atonement the younger Edwards expounded a theory of the Atonement that was more liberal and more popular than his father's theory.

Bibliography

See his works (2 vol., 1842) ed. by his grandson, T. Edwards.

 
Works: Works by Jonathan Edwards Jr
(1745-1801)

1785Three Sermons on the Necessity of the Atonement. Here the son of the famous minister demonstrates that God's grace is available to more people than even his father professed. These sermons, given before the General Assembly of Connecticut, argue that the death of Christ signifies that sin will be punished and that anyone can be a sinner.
1791The Injustice and Impolicy of the Slave Trade and Slavery. One of the first antislavery treatises by a New England clergyman argues that slavery is a sin and advises that Christians are "obligated" to free their slaves at once.

 
Wikipedia: Jonathan Edwards (athlete)
Medal record
Competitor for Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Men’s athletics
Olympic Games
Gold 2000 Sydney Triple jump
Silver 1996 Atlanta Triple jump
World Championships
Gold 1995 Gothenburg Triple jump
Gold 2001 Edmonton Triple jump
Silver 1997 Athens Triple jump
Bronze 1993 Stuttgart Triple jump
Bronze 1999 Seville Triple jump
World Indoor Championships
Silver 2001 Lisbon Triple jump
European Championships
Gold 1998 Budapest Triple jump
Bronze 2002 Munich Triple jump
European Cup
Gold 1995 Villeneuve d'Ascq Triple jump
Gold 1996 Madrid Triple jump
Gold 1997 Munich Triple jump
Gold 1998 Saint Petersburg Triple jump
Gold 2001 Bremen Triple jump
Gold 2002 Annecy Triple jump
Silver 1999 Paris Triple jump
European Indoor Championships
Gold 1998 Valencia Triple jump

Jonathan David Edwards, CBE, (born May 10, 1966 in London, England) is a former British triple jumper and widely regarded as the finest triple jumper of all time. He is a former Olympic, European and World champion, and has held the world record in the event since 1995. He lives with his wife Alison in Gosforth, Tyneside and also has a flat in London.

Education

Edwards attended West Buckland School where his potential for the triple jump was spotted at an early age. He was a strong all-rounder and on leaving received the school's top award for sporting and academic excellence, the Fortescue Medal. Contemporaries with Edwards at West Buckland School included Victor Ubogu, Steve Ojomoh, both former England Rugby international players. Edwards then read Physics at Durham University, attending Van Mildert College.

Athletics career

Because of his strong Christian beliefs during his athletic career, discussed in more detail below, he initially refused to compete on Sundays, but eventually decided to do so in 1993. This decision proved timely, since the qualifying round at that year's World Championships took place on a Sunday. He went on to win the bronze medal.

In his breakthrough year of 1995, he produced an astonishing jump of 18.43 m (60 feet 5½ inches) at the European Cup. The leap was wind assisted and did not count for record purposes but it was a sign of things to come as he capped an unbeaten year with a historic gold medal performance at the World Championships in which he broke the world record twice in the same meet. On his first jump, he became the first man to legally pass the 18-metre barrier (18.16 m/59 feet 7 inches). That record lasted for about 20 minutes. His second jump of 18.29 m made him the first to jump 60 feet. Later the same year Edwards became the BBC Sports Personality of the Year.

During 1996 Edwards went into the Olympic games as favourite and world record holder, but it was American Kenny Harrison who took the gold with a jump of 18.09 m. Edwards walked away with the silver after a leap of 17.88 m (the longest ever jump not to win gold), but some have speculated that one of the jumps he fouled on could have been the longest ever recorded, or at least won him the gold. Edwards won the gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympic Games, and was awarded the CBE shortly afterwards. He also won golds at the 2001 World Championships and 2002 Commonwealth Games. At one point in 2002, Edwards held all the gold medals for the "four majors" (Olympic Games, World Championships, Commonwealth Games & European Championships). He retired after the 2003 World Championships as Great Britain's most successful medal winning athlete.

Post-athletics career

Following his retirement, Edwards pursued a media career as a television presenter mainly working for the BBC as a sports commentator and on programmes such as Songs of Praise until he gave up this programme, due to his loss of faith, in February 2007.[1]

Dr. Jonathan Edwards at the University of Ulster Winter Graduation Ceremony - Tuesday, 19th December, 2006
Enlarge
Dr. Jonathan Edwards at the University of Ulster Winter Graduation Ceremony - Tuesday, 19th December, 2006

He is a member of the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games, representing athletes in the organisation of the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Personal Bests

  • Triple Jump - 18.29 (WR)
  • 100m - 10.48
  • Long jump - 7.41m

Awards

An honorary doctorate was conferred upon him at a ceremony at the University of Exeter on 21 January, 2006.

Later in the same year, an honorary doctorate of the university (DUniv) was conferred upon him at the winter graduation ceremony of the University of Ulster (19th December, 2006).

Religious beliefs

He once occasionally preached at Jesmond Parish Church.

He initially refused to compete on Sundays due to his devout Christian beliefs, a decision which cost him a chance to compete in the 1991 World Championships. However in 1993, after much deliberation and discussion with his father (a vicar), he changed his mind, deciding that God gave him his talent in order for him to compete in the 1993 World Championships.

On 2 February 2007 it was widely reported that Edwards had lost his faith in God despite him once saying "My relationship with Jesus and God is fundamental to everything I do. I have made a commitment and dedication in that relationship to serve God in every area of my life." [1]

The Daily Mail described Edwards as a "man deeply troubled by the collapse of his Christian faith" but revealed that a friend said "[Edwards] has a deep, theological comprehension of the Bible, making his spiritual meltdown even more unlikely ... They still go to church as a family"[2][3] The Daily Mail article also quoted Edwards as saying that he is going through a difficult period in his life, one that is deeply personal to him and his family such that he does not wish to comment on.[2]

Edwards presented episodes of the Christian praise show Songs of Praise until 2007.

In an interview in The Times on 27 June 2007[4], Edwards said: "If there is no God, does that mean that life has no purpose? Does it mean that personal existence ends at death? They are thoughts that do my head in. One thing that I can say, however, is that even if I am unable to discover some fundamental purpose to life, this will not give me a reason to return to Christianity. Just because something is unpalatable does not mean that it is not true." Furthermore, in the interview with the Times he also stated "When you think about it rationally, it does seem incredibly improbable that there is a God". Jonathan Edwards confirmed his rejection of Christianity in an interview on BBC Five Live Sportsweek on 29 July 2007.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b
  2. ^ a b "Olympic champ Jonathan Edwards insists his marriage is intact despite his Christianity crisis", Daily Mail, 12 February 2007
  3. ^ "Olympian Jonathan Edwards has 'crisis of faith'", Tom Knight, The Daily Telegraph, 12 February 2007
  4. ^ "‘I have never been happier’ says the man who won gold but lost God", The Times, 27 June 2007

External links


Preceded by
Damon Hill
BBC Sports Personality of the Year
1995
Succeeded by
Damon Hill
Preceded by
Colin Jackson
Men's European Athlete of the Year
1995
Succeeded by
Jan Železný
Preceded by
Wilson Kipketer
Men's European Athlete of the Year
1998
Succeeded by
Tomáš Dvořák
Preceded by
Romario
L'Équipe's International Champion of Champions
1995
Succeeded by
Michael Johnson
Preceded by
Johan Olav Koss
United Press International
Athlete of the Year

1995
Succeeded by
none
Post-war British Olympic champions in men's athletics
1956: Chris Brasher (3000 m steeplechase) | 1960: Don Thompson (50 km walk) | 1964: Ken Matthews (20 km walk) | 1964: Lynn Davies (long jump) | 1968: David Hemery (400 m hurdles) | 1980: Allan Wells (100 m) | 1980: Steve Ovett (800 m) | 1980 & 1984: Sebastian Coe (1500 m) | 1980 & 1984: Daley Thompson (decathlon) | 1992: Linford Christie (100 m) | 2000: Jonathan Edwards (triple jump) | 2004: Jason Gardener, Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish & Mark Lewis-Francis (4 x 100 m relay)

 
 

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Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jonathan Edwards (athlete)" Read more

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