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William Wyler

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
German-born American filmmaker (1902–1981)

William Wyler
Wyler in 1945
Born
Willi Wyler

(1902-07-01)July 1, 1902
DiedJuly 27, 1981(1981-07-27) (aged 79)
Beverly Hills, California, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California, U.S.
Citizenship
  • United States (after 1928)
  • Switzerland
Occupations
  • Film director
  • producer
Years active1925–1970
Spouses
Children5
RelativesCarl Laemmle Jr. (cousin)
Military career
Allegiance United States
BranchArmy National Guard
Army Air Forces
Years of service1921–1922(National Guard)
1942–1945(Army Air Forces)
RankLieutenant Colonel
UnitArmy Signal Corps
New York Army National Guard
Battles / warsWorld War II
AwardsPurple Heart[citation needed]
American Campaign Medal[citation needed]
European–African–Middle Eastern Campaign Medal
World War II Victory Medal[citation needed]

William Wyler (/ˈwlər/; bornWilli Wyler[1] (German:[ˈvɪliˈvi:lɐ]); July 1, 1902 – July 27, 1981) was a German-born American film director and producer. Known for his work in numerous genres over five decades, he received numerous awards and accolades, including threeAcademy Awards. He holds the record of twelve nominations for theAcademy Award for Best Director. For his oeuvre of work, Wyler was awarded theIrving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, theDirectors Guild of America Lifetime Achievement Award, and theAmerican Film InstituteLife Achievement Award.

Wyler emigrated to the United States in 1921 where he worked first forUniversal Studios in New York before moving to Los Angeles. By 1925, he was the youngest director at Universal, and in 1929 he directedHell's Heroes, Universal's first sound production filmed entirely on location. Wyler went on to win theAcademy Award for Best Director three times, forMrs. Miniver (1942),The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), andBen-Hur (1959), all of which also won forBest Picture. He was Oscar-nominated forDodsworth (1936),Wuthering Heights (1939),The Letter (1940),The Little Foxes (1941),The Heiress (1949),Detective Story (1952),Roman Holiday (1953),Friendly Persuasion (1956), andThe Collector (1965).

Film historianIan Freer calls Wyler a "bona fide perfectionist", whose penchant for retakes and an attempt to hone every last nuance "became the stuff of legend."[2]: 57  His ability to direct a string of classic literary adaptations into huge box-office and critical successes made him one of "Hollywood's most bankable moviemakers" from the 1930s to the 1960s. Through his talent for staging, editing, and camera movement, he turned dynamic theatrical spaces into cinematic ones.[3] Wyler is also known for his work as an actors' director, often propelling them to stardom.

Early life

[edit]

Wyler was born to aJewish family[4]: 1220  inMulhouse,Alsace-Lorraine (then part of theGerman Empire, nowFrance).[5]: 3  HisSwiss-born father Leopold started as atraveling salesman but later became a thrivinghaberdasher in Mulhouse.[6]: 37 [7] His mother, Melanie (née Auerbach;[3] died February 13, 1955,Los Angeles, aged 77), wasGerman-born, and a cousin ofCarl Laemmle, founder ofUniversal Pictures. During Wyler's childhood, he attended a number of schools and developed a reputation as "something of a hellraiser", being expelled more than once for misbehavior.[4]: 1222  His mother often took him and his older brotherRobert toconcerts,opera, and thetheatre, as well as theearly cinema. Sometimes at home his family and their friends would stage amateur theatricals for personal enjoyment.[4]: 1223 

Wyler was supposed to inherit the family haberdashery business in Mulhouse. AfterWorld War I and the ceding of Alsace-Lorraine to France, he spent a dismal year working inParis at100.000Chemises selling shirts and ties. He was so poor that he often spent his time wandering around thePigalle district. After realizing that Willy was not interested in the haberdashery business, his mother, Melanie, contacted her distant cousin,Carl Laemmle, who ownedUniversal Studios, about opportunities for him.

Laemmle was in the habit of coming toEurope each year, searching for promising young men who would work in theUnited States. In 1921, Wyler, while traveling as aSwiss citizen (his father's status automatically conferred Swiss citizenship on his sons), met Laemmle who hired him to work atUniversal Studios inNew York. As Wyler said: "America seemed as far away as the moon." Booked onto a ship to New York with Laemmle for his return voyage, Wyler met a youngCzech man,Paul Kohner (later the famous independent agent), aboard the same ship. Their enjoyment of the first class trip was short-lived, however, as they found they had to repay the cost of the passage out of their $25 weekly income as messengers to Universal Pictures. After working in New York for several years, and even serving in theNew York Army National Guard for a year, Wyler moved toHollywood to become a director.[6]: 37 

Career

[edit]
Main article:William Wyler filmography

1923–1929: Early work and silent films

[edit]

Around 1923, Wyler arrived inLos Angeles and began work on the Universal Studios lot in theswing gang, cleaning the stages and moving the sets. His break came when he was hired as a second assistant editor. But his work ethic was uneven, and he would often sneak off and play billiards in a pool hall across the street from the studio, or organize card games during working hours. After some ups and downs (including getting fired), Wyler put all his efforts into becoming a director. He started as a third assistant director and by 1925 he became the youngest director on the Universal lot directing thewesterns that Universal was famed for turning out. Wyler was so engrossed in his work that he would dream about "different ways (for an actor) to get on a horse". In several of the one-reelers, he would join the posse in the inevitable chase of the 'bad man'.

He directed his first non-Western, the lostAnybody Here Seen Kelly?, in 1928. This was followed by his first part-talkie films,The Shakedown andThe Love Trap. He proved himself an able craftsman. In 1928 he became anaturalizedUnited States citizen.[5]: 73  His first all-talking film, and Universal's first sound production to be filmed entirely on location, wasHell's Heroes, filmed in theMojave Desert in 1929.

1930–1949: Career acclaim and stardom

[edit]

In the early 1930s Wyler directed a wide variety of films at Universal, ranging from high-profile dramas such asThe Storm,A House Divided withWalter Huston, andCounsellor at Law withJohn Barrymore, to comedies likeHer First Mate withZasu Pitts andThe Good Fairy withMargaret Sullavan. He became well known for his insistence on multiple retakes, resulting in often award-winning and critically acclaimed performances from his actors. After leaving Universal he began a long collaboration withSamuel Goldwyn for whom he directed such classics asDodsworth (1936) where he earned his first nomination for theAcademy Award for Best Director. The film starredWalter Huston,Ruth Chatterton andMary Astor, "sparking a 20-year run of almost unbroken greatness."[2]: 24 [8] He also directedThese Three (1936) withMiriam Hopkins andMerle Oberon,Dead End (1937) withHumphrey Bogart,Wuthering Heights (1939) withLaurence Olivier and Merle Oberon,[9]The Westerner (1940) withGary Cooper andWalter Brennan,The Little Foxes (1941) withBette Davis, andThe Best Years of Our Lives (1946) withMyrna Loy andFredric March.

Wyler's visual style pioneered long, uncut takes in what has come to be calleddeep-focus cinematography - the use of lenses which can take in the entire depth of a room, keeping everything in focus, i.e. depth of field, and thus can contain dramatic changes in lighting and characters' movements in the same shot. In this, he collaborated with the pathbreaking young cinematographer of 1940'sCitizen Kane,Gregg Toland. Gregg Toland shot three of the director's most celebrated films:Wuthering Heights (1939), where Toland's use of low angles, dark shadows and diffusion won him the Oscar for best cinematography; next inLillian Hellman's adaptation of her searing stage play,The Little Foxes, into Wyler's 1941 film, which had Wyler and Toland working closely together to bring the hard-edged deep focus from Citizen Kane to bear on another tale of soul-destroying family wealth - including inventing a totally white make-up scheme for its star, Bette Davis, conveying her soullessness. Third, and most famously, is Toland's work in one of the cinematographer's last films, Wyler's heart-wrenching masterpiece,The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). This story of three American servicemen struggling to adjust to civilian life after fighting in World War 2 hit a chord with postwar audiences. Memorable examples of deep focus here include the complex scene in which the three men wind up at the same bar, unable to stay at home, and, in its powerful closing shot, a crowded family wedding disperses, leaving only two young lovers staring at one another across the expanse of an empty living room, as stunned in place, seemingly, as the camera. All three films were decorated with multiple Oscars (see the following section).[10][11][12]

It was all Wyler. I had known all the horrors of no direction and bad direction. I now knew what a great director was and what he could mean to an actress. I will always be grateful to him for his toughness and his genius.

—Bette Davis, discussingJezebel[5]: 162 [13]

Bette Davis received three Oscar nominations for her screen work under Wyler, and won her second Oscar for her performance in Wyler's 1938 filmJezebel.[14][15][16] She toldMerv Griffin in 1972 that Wyler trained her with that film to be a "far, far better actress" than she had been.[17] She recalled a scene that was only a bare paragraph in the script, but "without a word of dialog, Willy created a scene of power and tension. This was moviemaking on the highest plane," she said. "A scene of such suspense that I never have not marveled at the direction of it."[5]: 162  During her acceptance speech when she received theAFI Life Achievement Award in 1977, she thanked him.[18]

Olivier and Oberon inWuthering Heights

Laurence Olivier, whom Wyler directed inWuthering Heights (1939) for his first Oscar nomination, credited Wyler with teaching him how to act for the screen, despite clashing with Wyler on multiple occasions. Olivier would go on to hold the record for the most nominations in theBest Actor category at nine, tied withSpencer Tracy. CriticFrank S. Nugent wrote inThe New York Times: "William Wyler has directed it magnificently. It is, unquestionably, one of the most distinguished pictures of the year."[19]: 88 Variety described Olivier's performance as "fantastic... he not only brings conviction to his portrayal but translates intelligently its mystical quality."[19]: 93 

Five years later, in 1944, while visiting London, Wyler met with Olivier and his actress wife,Vivien Leigh. She invited him to see her performance inThe Doctor's Dilemma, and Olivier asked him to direct him in his planned film,Henry V. But Wyler said he was "not a Shakespearian" and turned down the offer.[20][21]

If any film actor is having trouble with his career, can't master the medium and, anyway, wonders whether it's worth it, let him pray to meet a man like William Wyler.

—Laurence Olivier[19]: 86 

In 1950, Wyler and Olivier made a second film together,Carrie, which was not a commercial success. However, some critics state that it nonetheless contains Olivier's finest film performance, but because of its old-fashioned story, the film was very under-appreciated:[19]: 128 [22] In criticMichael Billington's opinion:

If there were any justice in the world, Laurence Olivier would have got an Oscar for his unforgettable performance inCarrie.[23]: 137 

Director and screenwriterJohn Huston had been a close friend of Wyler during his career. When he was twenty-eight and penniless, sleeping in parks in London, Huston returned to Hollywood to see if he could find work. Wyler, four years his senior, had met Huston when he was directing his father,Walter Huston, inA House Divided in 1931, and they got along well. Wyler read dialogue suggestions that Huston had given to his father Walter and hired John to work on the dialogue for the script. He later inspired Huston to become a director and became his "early mentor."[24]: xiii  When America enteredWorld War II in 1941, Wyler, Huston,Anatole Litvak andFrank Capra, by then all directors, enlisted at the same time.[25] Later in his career, Huston recalled his friendship with Wyler during an interview:

Willy was certainly my best friend in the industry.... We seemed instantly to have many things in common.... Willy liked the things that I liked. We'd go down to Mexico. We'd go up in the mountains. And we'd gamble. He was a wonderful companion....He was equally capable of playing Beethoven on his violin, speeding around town on his motorcycle, or schussing down steep virgin snow trails.[26]

Wyler and the Second World War

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In 1941, Wyler directedMrs. Miniver, based on the 1940 novel; it was the story of a middle-class English family adjusting to the war in Europe and the bombingblitz in London.[27][28] It starredGreer Garson andWalter Pidgeon. Pidgeon originally had doubts about taking on the role, until fellow actorPaul Lukas told him, "You will find working with Wyler to be the most delightful experience you ever had, and that's the way it turned out." Pidgeon recalled: "One thing that would have been a terrific regret in my life is if I had succeeded in getting out of doingMrs. Miniver"[29]: 335  He received his first Oscar nomination for his role, while his co-star,Greer Garson, won her first and only Academy Award for her performance.

The film idea was controversial because it was intended to cause the United States to be less isolationist. It was thought that by seeing the suffering of British citizens depicted in fiction story, Americans might be made more willing to aid Britain during their war effort.[27][30] The film succeeded in its propagandistic aims, eliciting sympathy for the British people by showing Britain during its darkest days of the war.[29]: 145  Years later, having been in the war himself, Wyler said that the film "only scratched the surface of war... It was incomplete."[29]: 228 

U.S. ambassador to the United KingdomJoseph Kennedy told the studios to stop making pro-British and anti-German films, because he believed that British defeat was imminent.[31] But MGM producerEddie Mannix disagreed, saying that "someone should salute England. And even if we lose $100,000, that'll be okay."[32]: 344 Mrs. Miniver went on to win six Academy Awards, becoming the top box office hit of 1942. It was Wyler's first Academy Award for Best Director.[33]

Dear Mad Willy. I sawMrs. Miniver last night. It is absolutely wonderful. You repeatedly amaze me with the demonstrations of your talent and I ask you to believe that it is with genuine pleasure that I salute this latest and greatest example of your work.

—producerDavid Selznick[6]: 235 

President Roosevelt and British Prime MinisterWinston Churchill both loved the film, said historian Emily Yellin, and Roosevelt wanted prints rushed to theaters nationwide. TheVoice of America radio network broadcast the minister's speech from the film, magazines reprinted it, and it was copied onto leaflets and dropped overGerman-occupied countries. Churchill sent MGM chiefLouis B. Mayer a telegram claiming that "Mrs. Miniver is propaganda worth 100 battleships."[34]Bosley Crowther wrote in hisNew York Times review thatMrs. Miniver was the finest film yet made about the war, "and a most exalting tribute to the British."[35]

Between 1942 and 1945, Wyler volunteered to serve as amajor in theUnited States Army Air Forces and directed a pair of documentaries:The Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress (1944), about aBoeing B-17 and its U.S. Army Air Force crew;[36] andThunderbolt! (1947), highlighting aP-47 fighter-bomber squadron in theMediterranean. Wyler filmedThe Memphis Belle at great personal risk, flying over enemy territory on actual bombing missions in 1943; on one flight, Wyler lost consciousness from lack of oxygen. Wyler's associate, cinematographer Harold J. Tannenbaum, aFirst Lieutenant, was shot down and perished during the filming.[37] DirectorSteven Spielberg describes Wyler's filming ofMemphis Belle in the 2017 Netflix series,Five Came Back.[38] Before being assigned to the Air Force, Wyler was hired to direct the documentaryThe Negro Soldier onAfrican-Americans in the United States Armed Forces.[39]

Working onThunderbolt! Wyler was exposed to such loud noise that he passed out. When he awoke, he found he was deaf in one ear.[5] Partial hearing with the aid of a hearing aid eventually came back years later.[40] Wyler returned from the War alieutenant colonel[41] and a disabled veteran.[42]

Returning from the War and unsure whether he could work again, Wyler turned to a subject that he knew well[42] and directed a film which captured the mood of the nation as it turned to peace after the war,The Best Years of Our Lives (1946).[43] This story of the homecoming of three veterans fromWorld War II dramatized the problems of returning veterans in their adjustment back to civilian life. Arguably his most personal film,Best Years drew on Wyler's own experience returning home to his family after three years at the front.The Best Years of Our Lives won theAcademy Award for Best Director (Wyler's second) andAcademy Award for Best Picture, as well as six other Academy Awards including one Academy Honorary Award.

In 1949, Wyler directedThe Heiress, which earnedOlivia de Havilland her second Oscar and garnered additional Oscars forBest Art Direction,Best Costume Design, andBest Music. The film is considered by some to be a highlight in her career, "that could strike envy even in the most versatile and successful actress," according to one critic.[44][45][46]

De Havilland had seen the play in New York and felt she could play the lead perfectly. She then called Wyler to convince him to have Paramount buy the film rights. He flew to New York to see the play and moved by the story, persuaded the studio to buy it. Along with de Havilland, he managed to getMontgomery Clift andRalph Richardson to co-star.[20]: 265 [47][48]

1950–1959: Established director

[edit]
Audrey Hepburn inRoman Holiday (1953)

In 1951, Wyler produced and directedKirk Douglas andEleanor Parker inDetective Story, portraying a day in the lives of the various people in a detective squad.Lee Grant andJoseph Wiseman made their screen debuts in the film, which was nominated for fourAcademy Awards, including one for Grant.[49] CriticBosley Crowther lauded the film, describing it as "a brisk, absorbing film by producer-director William Wyler, with the help of a fine, responsive cast."[50]

Carrie was released in 1952 starring Jennifer Jones in the title role and Laurence Olivier as Hurstwood. Eddie Albert played Charles Drouet. Carrie received two Academy Award nominations: Costume Design (Edith Head), and Best Art Direction (Hal Pereira, Roland Anderson, Emile Kuri). Wyler was reluctant to cast Jennifer Jones, and the filming was subsequently plagued by a variety of troubles. Jones had not revealed that she was pregnant; Wyler was mourning the death of his year-old son; Olivier had a painful leg ailment, and he developed a dislike for Jones. Hollywood was reeling under the effects of McCarthyism, and the studio was afraid to distribute a film that could be attacked as immoral. Ultimately, the ending was changed and the film was cut to make it more positive in tone.

During the immediate postwar period, Wyler directed a handful of critically acclaimed and influential films.Roman Holiday (1953) introducedAudrey Hepburn to U.S. audiences in her first starring role, winning her an Academy Award for Best Actress.[51][52] Wyler said of Hepburn years later, when describing truly great actresses, "In that league there's only ever been Garbo, and the other Hepburn, and maybe Bergman. It's a rare quality, but boy, do you know when you've found it."[53] The film was an instant hit, also winning for Best Costume Design (Edith Head), and Best Writing (Dalton Trumbo). Hepburn would eventually do three movies with Wyler, who her son said was one of the most important directors in her career.[54][55]

Friendly Persuasion (1956) was awarded thePalme d'Or (Golden Palm) at theCannes Film Festival. And in 1959, Wyler directedBen-Hur, which won 11 Oscars, a feat unequaled untilTitanic in 1997 andThe Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King in 2003. He had also assisted in the production of the1925 version.

Charlton Heston as Ben-Hur

Wyler and its star,Charlton Heston, both knew what the film meant forMGM, which had massive investments in its outcome, with the film's budget having gone from $7 million to $15 million, and the fact that MGM was already in dire financial straits.[56] They were aware that if it failed at the box office, MGM might go bankrupt.[57]

The film, like many epics, was difficult to make. When Heston was asked which scene he enjoyed doing most, he said "I didn't enjoy any of it. It was hard work."[58] Part of the reason for that was the financial stress placed on making the film a success. With a cast of fifteen thousand extras, a leading star, and shot on 70mm film with stereophonic tracks, it was the most expensive film ever made at that time.[57] The nine-minute chariot race, for example, took six months to film.[59]

Ben-Hur became a great box office success. Wyler won his third Academy Award for Best Director andCharlton Heston his first and only Academy Award as its star.[60][61][62] Heston recalled in his autobiography that at first he had doubts about playing the role. But his agent advised him otherwise: "Don't you know that actors take parts with Wyler without even reading the damn script? I'm telling you, youhave to do this picture!"[20]

Kirk Douglas had lobbied Wyler, who directed him inDetective Story in 1951, for the title role, but only after Wyler had already decided on Heston. He offered him instead the role of Messala, which Douglas rejected. Douglas then went on to star inSpartacus (1960).[63]

Ben-Hur cost $15 million to produce but earned $47 million by the end of 1961 and $90 million worldwide.[64][65] Audiences mobbed movie theaters in the months after it opened. CriticPauline Kael praised Wyler's achievement:

I admire the artist who can make something good for the art house audience; but I also applaud the commercial heroism of a director who can steer a huge production and keep his sanity and perspective and decent human feelings beautifully intact.[66]: 96 

1960–1970: Later work and final films

[edit]
Audrey Hepburn,James Garner andShirley MacLaine inThe Children's Hour (1961)

In 1961, he became a director for20th Century Fox[67] and also castJames Garner inThe Children's Hour withAudrey Hepburn andShirley MacLaine. Garner had beatenWarner Bros. in a lawsuit, enabling him to leave the television seriesMaverick, and had been brieflygraylisted as a result but Wyler broke the graylist by casting him; the following year, Garner played a leading role in four major motion pictures.

In 1968, he directedBarbra Streisand in her debut film,Funny Girl, costarringOmar Sharif, which became a huge financial success.[20]: 385  It was nominated for eight Academy Awards, and likeAudrey Hepburn in her first starring role, Streisand won as Best Actress, becoming the thirteenth actor to win an Oscar under his direction.[20]: 385 [68][69]

Streisand had already starred in the Broadway musical ofFunny Girl, with seven hundred performances. And although she knew the part well, Wyler still had to mold her stage role for the screen.[70] She naturally wanted to be involved in the film's production, often asking Wyler questions, but they got along well.[71][72][73] "Things were ironed out when she discovered some of us knew what we were doing," kidded Wyler.

What originally attracted him to direct Streisand was similar to what attracted him to Audrey Hepburn, who had also been new to film audiences. He met with Streisand during her musical run and became excited at the prospect of guiding another new star into an award-winning performance. He sensed and admired that Streisand had the same kind of dedication to being an actress as did Bette Davis, early in her career. "It just needed to be controlled and toned down for the movie camera."[23] Wyler said afterwards, "I'm terribly fond of her. She was very professional, very good, a hard worker, too hard at times. She would work day and night if you would let her. She is absolutely tireless".[74][75]

Wyler was hired to directPatton (1970), but quit before the beginning of production in 1969.[76]

The last film Wyler directed wasThe Liberation of L.B. Jones, released in 1970.

Style and technique

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Visual style

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Wyler had worked with cinematographerGregg Toland for six of his films, mostly in the 1930s. Toland useddeep focus photographic technique for most of them, whereby he could keep all objects on the screen, whether foreground or background, in sharp focus at the same time. The technique gives the illusion of depth and therefore makes the scene more true to life.[66]: 77 

Aperfectionist, Wyler earned the nickname "40-take Wyler". On the set ofJezebel, Wyler forcedHenry Fonda through 40 takes of one particular scene, his only guidance being "Again!" after each take. When Fonda asked for more direction, Wyler responded, "It stinks." Similarly, whenCharlton Heston quizzed the director about the supposed shortcomings of his performance inBen-Hur, Wyler simply told Heston "Be better!"[77] However, Heston notes that by the time a scene is done, regardless of how hard it was to do, it always came off well:

The only answer I have is that his taste is impeccable and every actor knows it. Your faith in his taste and what it will do for your performance is what makes casting a Wyler picture a cinch...doing a film for Wyler is like getting the works in a Turkish bath. You darn near drown, but you come out smelling like a rose.[5]: 351 

Actors' director

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He helped propel a number of actors to stardom, including finding and directingAudrey Hepburn in her debut starring role,Roman Holiday (1953), and directingBarbra Streisand in her debut film,Funny Girl (1968), with both actresses winning Academy Awards.Olivia de Havilland andBette Davis both won their second Oscars in Wyler films, de Havilland forThe Heiress (1949) and Davis forJezebel (1938).[14] Davis said Wyler made her a "far, far better actress" than she had ever been,[14] whileLaurence Olivier, who received his first Oscar nomination for Wyler'sWuthering Heights (1939), credited Wyler with teaching him how to act for the screen. Wyler's three Best Picture-winning films each featured a Best Actress orActor Oscar winner –Greer Garson inMrs Miniver,Fredric March inThe Best Years of Our Lives, andCharlton Heston inBen-Hur. Other popular Wyler films include:The Westerner (1940) withGary Cooper,The Letter (1940) again with Davis,Detective Story (1951) withKirk Douglas,Friendly Persuasion (1956) with Cooper andDorothy McGuire,The Big Country (1958) withGregory Peck and Heston,The Children's Hour (1961) with Hepburn,Shirley MacLaine andJames Garner, andHow to Steal a Million (1966) with Hepburn andPeter O'Toole.

Personal life

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Wyler was briefly married to actressMargaret Sullavan (from November 25, 1934 – March 13, 1936)[78] and married actressMargaret "Talli" Tallichet on October 23, 1938.[79] The couple remained together until his death. They had five children: Catherine, Judith, William Jr., Melanie and David. Catherine said during an interview that her mother played an important part in his career, often being his "gatekeeper" and his reader of scripts presented to him.[80]

Wyler was aFreemason.[81][82]

He fluently spokeGerman,Alsatian,French andEnglish.

Death

[edit]

On July 24, 1981, Wyler gave an interview with his daughter, Catherine, forDirected by William Wyler, aPBS documentary about his life and career.[83] Three days later, he died of aheart attack.[84] He is interred atForest Lawn Memorial-Park inGlendale, California.[85]

Legacy

[edit]
Bette Davis inJezebel (1938)

Fourteen actors won Oscars under Wyler's direction, includingBette Davis inJezebel (1938) and her nomination forThe Letter (1940).[86] Davis summed up their work together: "It washe who helped me to realize my full potential as an actress. I met my match in this exceptionally creative and talented director."[66]: 79 [87]

Other Oscar winners wereOlivia de Havilland inThe Heiress (1949);Audrey Hepburn in her debut film,Roman Holiday (1953);[88]Charlton Heston inBen-Hur (1959); andBarbra Streisand in her debut film,Funny Girl (1968).

Wyler's films garnered more awards for participating artists and actors than any other director in the history of Hollywood.[89] He received 12 Oscar nominations for Best Director, while dozens of his collaborators and actors won Oscars or were nominated. In 1965, Wyler won theIrving G. Thalberg Memorial Award for career achievement. Eleven years later, he received theAmerican Film InstituteLife Achievement Award. In addition to his Best Picture and Best Director Oscar wins, 13 of Wyler's films earned Best Picture nominations. Other late Wyler films includeThe Children's Hour (1961), which was nominated for five Academy Awards.[citation needed] Later films includedThe Collector (1963),Funny Girl (1968), and his final film,The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970).

Many of Wyler's home movies are held by theAcademy Film Archive; the archive preserved a number of them in 2017.[90]

Honors and awards

[edit]
Main article:List of awards and nominations received by William Wyler

Wyler is the most nominated director inAcademy Awards history with twelve nominations. He won theAcademy Award for Best Director on three occasions, forMrs. Miniver (1942),The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), andBen-Hur (1959). He is tied withFrank Capra and behindJohn Ford, who won four Oscars in this category. He is also the only director in Academy history to direct three Best Picture-winning films (the three for which he won Best Director), and shares withSteven Spielberg the record for directing the greatest number of Best Picture nominees (thirteen).

He has the distinction of having directed more actors to Oscar-nominated performances than any other director in history: thirty-six. Out of these nominees, fourteen went on to win Oscars, also a record.[91] He received the fourthAFI Life Achievement Award in 1976.[92] Among those who thanked him for directing her in her debut film wasBarbra Streisand.[93] For his contributions to the motion picture industry, on February 8, 1960, Wyler has a star on theHollywood Walk of Fame at 1731Vine Street.[94][95] In 1961, Wyler was chosen as one of 50 outstanding Americans of meritorious performance in the fields of endeavor, to be honored as a Guest of Honor to the first annual Banquet of the Golden Plate in Monterey, California. The honor was awarded by vote of the National Panel of Distinguished Americans of theAcademy of Achievement.[96]

Awards and nominations received by Wyler's features
YearTitleAcademy AwardsBAFTA AwardsGolden Globe Awards
NominationsWinsNominationsWinsNominationsWins
1936Dodsworth71
1936Come and Get It21
1937Dead End4
1938Jezebel52
1939Wuthering Heights81
1940The Westerner31
The Letter7
1941The Little Foxes9
1942Mrs. Miniver126
1946The Best Years of Our Lives871122
1949The Heiress8431
1951Detective Story43
1952Carrie22
1953Roman Holiday1034111
1956Friendly Persuasion641
1958The Big Country21111
1959Ben-Hur12111143
1961The Children's Hour53
1965The Collector341
1968Funny Girl81341
1970The Liberation of L.B. Jones1
Total118381292411

References

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  1. ^Birth Certificate No. 1298/1902, Mulhouse Archive. According to Herman, Jan.A Talent for Trouble: The Life of Hollywood's Most Acclaimed Director. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1995.ISBN 0-399-14012-3
  2. ^abFreer, Ian.Movie Makers: 50 Iconic Directors. London: Quercus Publishers (2009)ISBN 978-1-84724-512-0
  3. ^ab"Wyler, William (1902-1981), American film director and producer - American National Biography".anb.org. RetrievedMarch 27, 2018.
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