Raoul Walsh
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Raoul Walsh (March 11, 1887 – December 31, 1980) was an American film director, actor, founding member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) and the brother of silent screen actor George Walsh.
Walsh began his entertainment career as a stage actor in New York City, quickly progressing into film acting. In 1914 he became assistant to D.W. Griffith and made his first full-length feature film The Life of General Villa, followed by the newly-revisited and critically-acclaimed Regeneration in 1915, possibly the earliest gangster film. Walsh played Lincoln's murderer in Griffith's towering classic The Birth of a Nation (1915), often cited by critics (along with Citizen Kane) as the greatest movie ever made. Walsh enjoyed success as a director with the innovative and spectacular The Thief of Bagdad in 1924 starring Douglas Fairbanks and Anna May Wong. In the early days of sound with Fox, Walsh directed the first widescreen spectacle The Big Trail in 1930, a wagon train western shot on location across the West and starring then unknown John Wayne, whom Walsh discovered as prop boy Marion Morrison and renamed after Revolutionary War general Mad Anthony Wayne (Walsh happened to be reading a book about General Wayne at the time). Walsh directed The Bowery in 1933, featuring Wallace Beery, George Raft, Fay Wray, and Pert Kelton; the movie recounts the story of Steve Brodie, the first man to supposedly jump off the Brooklyn Bridge and live to brag about it. A not too-distinguished period followed with Paramount Pictures from 1935 to 1939 but Walsh's career rose to new heights soon after moving to Warner Brothers with The Roaring Twenties (1939) featuring James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart; Dark Command (1940) with John Wayne and Roy Rogers; They Drive By Night (1940) with George Raft, Ann Sheridan, Ida Lupino, and Humphrey Bogart; High Sierra (1941) with Ida Lupino and Humphrey Bogart; They Died With Their Boots On (1941) with Errol Flynn as Custer; Manpower (1941) with Edward G. Robinson, Marlene Dietrich, and George Raft; and White Heat (1949) with James Cagney. Walsh's contract at Warners expired in 1953, after which he directed several films, including two with Clark Gable, The Tall Men (1955) and The King and Four Queens (1956). Walsh retired in 1964.
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[edit] Selected Filmgraphy
[edit] Director
- The Life of General Villa (1914), directorial debut
- Regeneration (1915)
- Evangeline (1919)
- The Thief of Bagdad (1924), produced by and starring Douglas Fairbanks, and featuring Anna May Wong
- What Price Glory? (1926), his most successful silent movie
- Sadie Thompson (1928), in which he acted alongside Gloria Swanson
- The Big Trail (1930) with John Wayne; first movie in widescreen
- The Man Who Came Back (1931) with Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell
- Wild Girl (1932) with Charles Farrell, Joan Bennett, Ralph Bellamy, and Eugene Pallette
- Klondike Annie (1936) with Mae West and Victor McLaglen
- The Roaring Twenties (1939) with James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart
- Dark Command (1940) with John Wayne and Roy Rogers
- They Drive by Night (1940) with George Raft, Ann Sheridan, Ida Lupino, and Humphrey Bogart
- High Sierra (1941) with Ida Lupino and Humphrey Bogart
- They Died with Their Boots On (1941) with Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland
- Manpower (1941) with Edward G. Robinson, Marlene Dietrich, and George Raft
- Desperate Journey (1942) with Errol Flynn and Ronald Reagan
- Northern Pursuit (1943) with Errol Flynn
- Gentleman Jim (1943) with Errol Flynn and William Frawley
- Objective, Burma! (1945) with Errol Flynn
- Pursued (1947) with Robert Mitchum and Teresa Wright
- White Heat (1949) with James Cagney and Edmond O'Brien
- Colorado Territory (1949), a remake of High Sierra with Joel McCrea, Virginia Mayo, Dorothy Malone, and Henry Hull
- Captain Horatio Hornblower (1951) with Gregory Peck and Virginia Mayo
- Distant Drums (1951), remarkable for its innovative sound effects
- Blackbeard the Pirate (1952) with Robert Newton and William Bendix
- The Tall Men (1955) with Clark Gable and Jane Russell
- The King and Four Queens (1956) with Clark Gable and Eleanor Parker
- Band of Angels (1957) with Clark Gable, Yvonne DeCarlo, and Sidney Portier
- Esther and the King (1960)
- Marines, Let's Go (1961)
- A Distant Trumpet (1964), final film.
Walsh unofficially co-directed The Enforcer, with Humphrey Bogart and Zero Mostel, when another director fell ill at the beginning of shooting in 1951. Walsh refused to take a screen credit.
[edit] Trivia
- Walsh was set to direct and star in the Western In Old Arizona in 1929, but had to abandon the project when a jackrabbit jumped through a windshield of a jeep he was driving and cost Walsh an eye. Walsh's replacements Warner Baxter won an Academy Award for playing the Cisco Kid in the film, and Irving Cummings was nominated for his direction.
- There are echoes in Walsh's films of events in his own life and that of his family: as a child his parents entertained famous Broadway actor of the day Edwin Thomas Booth, brother of John Wilkes Booth whom Walsh was later to play in The Birth of a Nation (1915); in They Died with Their Boots On (1941) there is an actor playing a bit part as a tailor to the US cavalry officers that might have been a reference to Walsh's father who made uniforms for General Custer and other high-ranking officers before becoming chief designer for Brooks Brothers in New York.
- Like his contemporary Howard Hawks, Walsh was known for never letting the facts get in the way of a good story. According to Walsh, in 1942, a few days after John Barrymore had died, Walsh, as a practical joke, picked up Barrymore's body from the mortuary and managed to sit the body, clad in a business suit, in a chair in Errol Flynn's house just before Flynn was due to arrive home. This story--recounted by both Flynn and Walsh in their autobiographies--was disputed by the artist Gene Fowler, a friend to both Barrymore and Flynn. Fowler states in his autobiograhpy that he spent much of the night during which the joke was supposed to have occurred sitting with Barrymore's body in a Hollywood funeral home.
- Many years earlier, Barrymore had inscribed a photograph of himself to Walsh with this quote from Hamlet: 'Each man in his time plays many different parts. You have played them all.' Walsh used part of the inscription as the title for his autobiography, Each Man in his Time published by Farrar, Strauss and Giroux in 1974. Leonard Maltin has described the book as "entertaining fiction with an occasional nod at the truth".