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WSWS : Arts
Review : Obituary
Obituary: John Schlesinger, filmmaker, 1926-2003
By Paul Bond
8 August 2003
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When news was announced of the death of John Schlesinger, at
the age of 77, I confess to ambivalence. One of the four major
British film directors of the early 1960s, his output was huge
and uneven. While there was much of interest, particularly in
the way he worked with actors, the results were mixed. This reflected
his determination to work at all costs; frequently, what suffered
was the quality of the material.
In thinking about what was memorableand whyin his
films, I repeatedly came up against recollections of performances
and set pieces where memory found no place for the films in which
they occurred. This is suggestive, at least, of what he found
important in his work, as well as its limitations.
Schlesinger was born into a middle-class Jewish family in London
in 1926. His family was able to encourage Schlesingers interest
in theatre and film, giving him his first cine camera when he
was 11. He made films throughout his time at public school. He
was also a talented pianist.
At 18, shortly before the end of the Second World War, he was
conscripted into the army. Breaking his leg and falling ill with
rheumatic fever, he was transferred to the Combined Services Entertainment
Unit, where he performed as a magician. Many of his peers in the
Combined Services Entertainment Unit also became successfulthe
comic actors Kenneth Williams and Stanley Baxter, for example.
The playwright Peter Nichols dramatised his experiences with the
unit in the play Privates on Parade.
After the war the demobbed Schlesinger went to Oxford University.
Here he continued to make films, having now moved up from his
childhood 9.5mm camera to 16mm.
He also started acting with the Oxford Players. On his graduation
in 1950 he worked as a character actor in repertory theatre, film
and television. On stage he appeared in a production of Mourning
Becomes Electra directed by Peter Hall. In films he appeared
in the Boulting Brothers Brothers in Law, as well
as Michael Powells Oh! Rosalinda and Battle of
the River Plate. On television he appeared in episodes of
Ivanhoe and Robin Hood. For the latter he was directed
by a man who came to be seen as part of the same movement in British
film, Lindsay Anderson.
It is important to see this stage in the development of any
craftsman in film, television or theatre. His experiences as an
actor fed much of what was positive in the way he worked over
the rest of his career. (He continued to make acting appearances,
too, right up to the end of his working life). He worked during
this period, too, with many of the most influential directors
in British film and theatre. It is unlikely that Schlesinger did
not assimilate some of Powell or Halls craft in their respective
fields.
Filmmaking was still his ambition, though, and he continued
to make films independently. He was rejected from a course for
television producers. Instead, a short film he had made about
an afternoon in Hyde Park drew him to the attention of the BBCs
documentary film unit.
Schlesinger started on the Tonight programme, before
moving on to Monitor, under Huw Wheldon. It is difficult,
looking at the BBC today, to realise the influence the documentary
unit had, particularly under Wheldons leadership. Where
recent BBC administrations have sought largely to buy in programmes
from freelance production companies, Monitor (in particular)
nurtured a diverse range of filmmakers.
Schlesinger directed pieces on the Cannes Film Festival, Italian
opera, comparative studies of painters, and Benjamin Britten at
Aldeburgh. (Later, Ken Russell was to be similarly encouraged
by Wheldon in his pieces on Elgar and Mahler).
Out of this experience, which served as a solid technical foundation
for his subsequent work, Schlesinger was offered a 30-minute piece
about Waterloo Station by the veteran documentarist Edgar Anstey.
Terminus, which won a Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival
and a British Academy Award, made his name as a director. As a
result he was offered A Kind of Loving, his debut feature.
A Kind of Loving (1962) fitted perfectlyif perhaps
fortuitouslyinto the regional realism of British cinema
of the time. Schlesinger, although not particularly allied to
them in any formal sense, found himself alongside Tony Richardson,
Lindsay Anderson and Karel Reisz as part of a wave of urban filmmaking
dealing with hard-edged stories of working class life.
Whatever else Schlesinger had in mind, he was keen on the frankness
of the story about a young man who finds himself trapped by marriage
to his pregnant girlfriend. This frankness brought him up against
the censor. Referring to a scene in which characters attempt to
buy condoms, Schlesinger was told, You could be opening
the floodgates. Soon everybody will be doing it.
A Kind of Loving also marked the beginning of what was
to become one of Schlesingers more interesting themes, the
development of his relationship with actors. The film gave Alan
Bates his first starring role, and Bates responded with an impressive
performance. Bates went on to work with him again many times over
the years, through Far From the Madding Crowd (1967) to
An Englishman Abroad (1983).
Similarly, Julie Christie was brought into Schlesingers
family for his next film. Billy Liar (1963)
was written by Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall (who had also
adapted Stan Barstows novel A Kind of Loving). Christie
also starred in its follow-up Darling (1965), and Far
From the Madding Crowd. The latter introduced Peter Finch
to Schlesingers films. He was to return with a magnificent
performance in Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
Billy Liar and Darling showed Schlesinger moving
away from the harsh realism that had typified early 1960s British
filmmaking. In its place his films were becoming part of a highly
fashionable Swinging London scene (Julie Christie
was being promoted as the face of 1960s Britain). They
were also becoming more glib and superficial, although his understanding
of actors brought forth some impressive performances. Christie,
for example, manages in all her appearances for Schlesinger to
be more than the fashionable face that is clearly being traded
on.
An enjoyment of the almost theatrical performance was to remain
constant throughout his career, and Schlesinger was a fine judge
of acting talent. In Billy Liar, Tom Courtenay realised
Billys daydreams with panache and relish. Those daydreams
also became a way for Schlesinger to break out of the constraints
of realism. Courtenays fine performance is also admirably
given context by Leonard Rossiter as his fellow bored undertakers
clerk. For all the memorable qualities in the acting, the film
itself is a slight piece, undermined by Billys only opportunity
for escape being to follow Christie to exotic London.
Schlesingers move to colour came with the big-budget
Far From the Madding Crowd, shot by Nicolas Roeg. It marked
perhaps the apotheosis of the fashionable 1960s British film,
starring as it did both Julie Christie and Terence Stamp, the
dream couple for British casting directors of the
time. It is a testament to both actors, and also to Schlesingers
handling of them, that their performances are so good.
Far From the Madding Crowd did not do well at the box
office, but it marked his international acceptance as a director
of stature, and paved the way for his move to Hollywood. It also
marked his distance from the other members of the early 1960s
wave of British directors. (Lindsay Anderson had moved to colour
for the scabrous political satire of If ... and Tony Richardsons
costume drama, a confused but politically-loaded Charge of
the Light Brigade.)
Move to Hollywood
On the back of the success of these early films, Schlesinger
moved to Hollywood, where he made his best-known work Midnight
Cowboy (1969). Here is the full Schlesinger experiencethe
powerful, slightly theatrical performances, the strong set-pieces,
yet also a stylistic glibness that is a little disappointing.
The tale of a naive hicks (Jon Voight) descent into destitution
in New York is certainly overwrought, but there is a great deal
of trust on offer to some fine actors. The famous scene in which
the ill Ratso Rizzo (Dustin Hoffman) avoids traffic
as he walks in the gutter was in part the result of Schlesinger
leaving the camera operating as Hoffman improvised.
It looks today as dated as the Swinging London material, but
the film won Oscars both for Best Director and for Best Film.
It was the first X-rated film to win the latter award. (The films
rating was subsequently lowered). Its success enabled Schlesinger
to return to Britain and make Sunday, Bloody Sunday with
Peter Finch.
Sunday, Bloody Sunday was perhaps the most personal
of Schlesingers films. Although flawed, the film had the
great power of Finchs performance at its centre, and was
pioneering in its presentation of homosexuality (in contrast to
Midnight Cowboy, which failed to tackle the subject with
anything like the same directness). Sunday, Bloody Sunday,
said Schlesinger, marked his coming out in public,
and represented a new stage in representations of homosexuality
on screen.
Even here, though, the highs stand out from a work marred by
silliness. The embrace between Finch and the young lover (Murray
Head) that they are forced to share with Glenda Jackson is a striking
moment. Finchs final scene, circled by the camera as he
speaks of his quest for love and his future alone, is the culmination
of an impressive performance. Yet all this takes place in the
context of an improbable and not overly interesting love-triangle
among the affluent middle class of Hampstead and their foolish
children.
Repeatedly, Schlesinger seems to be saying that it is only
the dignity of the individual that merits attention. The social
world around them is only a vessel for those individuals. Had
he worked with lesser actors than Peter Finch, Alan Bates, Tom
Courtenay, Terence Stamp et al, or been less sensitive to their
strengths, the weaknesses of some of his films would have quickly
been more glaringly apparent.
Sunday, Bloody Sunday saw a drying up of work offers.
Schlesinger started accepting strange commissions, like part of
a film about the 1972 Olympics. The slowing of offers went hand
in hand with some critical disasters, like his only musical I
and Albert. When his interesting adaptation of Nathanael Wests
Day of the Locustabout young performers finding disappointment
in Hollywoodwas panned by the critics, he was looking desperately
for another commercial success.
He found it with Marathon Man (1976). This mediocre
thriller is best known for Laurence Oliviers demeaning pantomime
Nazi dentist, and also the anecdotal dispute about acting styles
between Olivier and Dustin Hoffman. The fact that sooner or later
in every dentists waiting room somebody will say Is
it safe? is a testament to his ability to orchestrate the
big moment, rather than any tribute to the quality of the film.
From here on, Schlesingers films veer between the moderately
interesting (Yanks) and the god awful (The Believers).
It is an indication of how far his film work had fallen that
some obituarists saw the workaday thriller Pacific Heights
(1991)which was a commercial successas being in some
way an assured piece of work. It features, though, a customarily
theatrical performance, this time from Michael Keaton as the psychotic
neighbour wreaking havoc on a middle class couple that moves into
the block.
There was some more interesting work in other media. Schlesinger
had directed on the stage (with varying results) throughout the
1970s. After Honky Tonk Freeway (1979) was such an expensive
disaster that it effectively curtailed his filmmaking in Hollywood,
he returned to London to direct Sam Shepherds True West
for the National Theatre. Out of that came a meeting with Alan
Bennett, which resulted in Schlesinger agreeing to work for television.
An Englishman Abroad (1983), was a distinguished piece
of work about the spy Guy Burgess (Alan Bates) and his unlikely
meeting in Moscow with the actress Coral Browne (who played herself).
Bates was marvellous as the homesick and self-pitying Burgess,
while Browne was in imperiously watchable form. If the story was
Bennetts (based on his discussions with Browne) it had clearly
struck a chord with Schlesinger. Here was the outsider being in
some way rescued by someone equally marginal, a travelling
actress.
Schlesinger and Bennett would return to the theme of the Cambridge
graduates spying for the Soviet Union in A Question of Attribution
(1992). That piece focused on Anthony Blunt (James Fox), the royal
art expert, in an encounter with the Queen (Prunella Scales).
In a way the stories of the Cambridge spies were perfect for Schlesingers
sensibilities: their confused political hankering for fairness,
coupled with their marginalisation because of their sexuality,
allowed him to rub beneath the surface, as he put
it, in a way that many of his films did not. The detached Blunt
could encounter the monarch, have an interestingly fraught discussion
on art history tense with the underlying differences between them,
and still not be quite accepted or acceptable. The Cambridge spies
were establishment figures who did not quite belong in the establishment.
The television work attained a quality that seemed beyond Schlesinger
in film now. His adaptation of Cold Comfort Farm (1995)
was a charming romp that confirmed his love of the big performance
(Rufus Sewell smouldered like there was no tomorrow, and Ian McKellen
ranted and roared as the old preacher in a way that suggested
the entire shoot had been one big family outing). It is also,
significantly, about a young woman who finds herself entirely
marginalised (by her family).
He kept returning to films, but the quality was no longer there,
and some of the work was just plain bad. Schlesinger fared better
as an opera director, where Georg Solti and Placido Domingo invited
him to direct for them. Productions of Les Contes dHoffmann
and Der Rosenkavalier achieved success at the Royal Opera
House.
Schlesinger once said, I couldnt bear the idea
of not working. He threw himself enthusiastically into adverts,
and made party political broadcasts for the Conservative Party.
One such broadcast for John Majors 1992 election campaign
showed Majors roots in a working class suburb of south London.
It highlighted the trough Schlesinger had thrown himself into.
The director who had once, in even a limited way, sought to inspect
the anxieties and failings of his characters, was reduced by his
own limitations of vision and his workaholism to fictionalising
the populist roots of a Tory Prime Minister.
Schlesinger was proud of the populism that mars much of his
work. He had criticised Lindsay Anderson for being too selective,
accusing him of being reluctant to work regularlyor perhaps
being incapable of it. This was fundamentally a political disagreement.
For all his flaws and idiosyncrasies, it is hard to think of Anderson
selling his art or craft so cheap as Schlesinger at his lowest
points.
The early films, on which Schlesingers reputation was
based, all share a similar outlook. They are tales of lonely people,
outsiders in some way, dependent on their illusions, adrift in
a world that is bitter but not without sympathy. To some extent
this must have drawn from Schlesingers own Jewish, gay background.
The strengths and weaknesses of that view are summed up by
Schlesingers comment in 1970 that Im only interested
in one thingthat is tolerance. Im terribly concerned
about people and the limitation of freedom. Its important
to get people to care a little for someone else. Thats why
Im more interested in the failures of this world than the
successes.
He later reiterated this point, saying, I dont
believe in characters in films who havent got any failings.
In his weakest moments this simply became caricature, the avoidance
of any real contact with the outside world. By the limitations
of his understanding of the world around them, he often left his
characters without any cohesive social situation to hold them
together. At his strongest moments, though, he allowed his actors
to produce vivid and sympathetic portrayals of people who do not
quite fit comfortably into society at large.
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