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David Lean

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir David Lean, CBE

Born

Died

Occupation

25 March 1908
Croydon, Surrey, England
16 April 1991 (aged 83)
Limehouse, London, England
Film director, film producer, screenwriter, film
editor

Years active 19421991


Isabel Lean (19301936; divorced)
Kay Walsh (19401949; divorced)
Spouse(s)

Ann Todd (19491957; divorced)


Leila Matkar (19601978; divorced)
Sandra Hotz (19811984; divorced)
Sandra Cooke (19901991; his death)

Children

Sir David Lean, CBE (25 March 1908 16 April 1991) was an English film director,
producer, screenwriter and editor, best remembered for big-screen epics[1] such as The
Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), Lawrence of Arabia (1962) and Doctor Zhivago
(1965). He is also known for the Dickens adaptations of Great Expectations (1946) and
Oliver Twist (1948), as well as the romantic drama Brief Encounter (1945).
Lauded by directors such as Steven Spielberg[2] and Stanley Kubrick,[3] Lean was voted
9th greatest film director of all time in the British Film Institute Sight & Sound
"Directors' Top Directors" poll 2002.[4] Nominated seven times for the Academy Award
for Best Director, for which he won twice for The Bridge on the River Kwai, and
Lawrence of Arabia, he has three films in the top five of the British Film Institute's Top
100 British Films.[5][6] and was awarded the AFI Lifetime Achievement award in 1990.

Contents

1 Early life and education

2 Period as film editor

3 British films

4 International films
o 4.1 For Columbia and Sam Spiegel
o 4.2 For MGM

5 Last years and unfulfilled projects

6 Personal life and honours

7 Reputation and influence

8 Filmography

9 Notes

10 References

11 Further reading

12 External links

Early life and education

Lean was born in Croydon, Surrey (now part of Greater London), to Francis William le
Blount Lean and the former Helena Tangye (niece of Sir Richard Trevithick Tangye).
His parents were Quakers and he was a pupil at the Quaker-founded Leighton Park
School in Reading. His younger brother, Edward Tangye Lean (19111974), founded
the original Inklings literary club when a student at Oxford University. Lean was a halfhearted schoolboy with a dreamy nature who was labeled a "dud"[7] of a student; he left
in his mid-teens[8] and entered his father's chartered accountancy firm as an apprentice. A
more shaping event for his career than his formal education had been an uncle's gift,
when Lean was aged ten, of a Brownie box camera. "You usually didn't give a boy a
camera until he was 16 or 17 in those days. It was a huge compliment and I succeeded
at it.' Lean printed and developed his films, and it was his 'great hobby'.[9] At age 16, his
father deserted the family when he ran off with another woman, and Lean would later
follow a similar path after his own first marriage and child.[7]

Period as film editor


Bored by his work, Lean spent every evening in the cinema, and in 1927, after an aunt
had advised him to find a job he enjoyed doing, he went to Gaumont Studios where his
obvious enthusiasm earned him a month's trial without pay. He was taken on as a
teaboy, promoted to clapperboy, and soon rose to the position of third assistant director.
By 1930 he was working as an editor on newsreels, including those of Gaumont
Pictures and Movietone, while his move to feature films began with Freedom of the
Seas (1934) and Escape Me Never (1935).
He edited Gabriel Pascal's film productions of two George Bernard Shaw plays,
Pygmalion (1938) and Major Barbara (1941). He edited Powell & Pressburger's 49th
Parallel (1941) and One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942). After this last film, Lean
began his directing career, after editing more than two dozen features by 1942. As Tony
Sloman wrote in 1999, "As the varied likes of David Lean, Robert Wise, Terence Fisher
and Dorothy Arzner have proved, the cutting rooms are easily the finest grounding for
film direction."[10] David Lean was given honorary membership of the Guild of British
Film Editors in 1968.

British films
His first work as a director was in collaboration with Nol Coward on In Which We
Serve (1942), and he later adapted several of Coward's plays into successful films.
These films are This Happy Breed (1944), Blithe Spirit (1945) and Brief Encounter
(1945) with Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard as clandestine lovers.
Two celebrated Charles Dickens adaptations followed Great Expectations (1946) and
Oliver Twist (1948). Dasvid Shipman wrote in The Story of Cinema: Volume Two
(1984): "Of the other Dickens films, only Cukor's David Copperfield approaches the
excellence of this pair, partly because his casting, too, was near perfect".[11] These two
films were the first directed by Lean to star Alec Guinness, whom Lean considered his
"good luck charm". The actor's portrayal of Fagin was controversial at the time. The
first screening in Berlin during February 1949 offended the surviving Jewish
community and led to a riot. It caused problems too in New York, and after private
screenings, was condemned by the Anti-Defamation League and the American Board of

Rabbis. "To our surprise it was accused of being anti-Semitic", Lean wrote. "We made
Fagin an outsize and, we hoped, an amusing Jewish villain."[12] The terms of the
production code meant that the film's release in the United States was delayed until July
1951 after cuts amounting to eight minutes.[13]
The next film directed by Lean was The Passionate Friends (1949), an atypical Lean
film, but one which marked his first occasion to work with Claude Rains, who played
the husband of a woman (Todd) torn between him and an old flame (Howard). The
Passionate Friends was the first of three films to feature the actress Ann Todd, who
became his third wife. Madeleine (1950), set in Victorian-era Glasgow is about an 1857
cause clbre with Todd's lead character accused of murdering a former lover. "Once
more", writes film critic David Thomson "Lean settles on the pressing need for
propriety, but not before the film has put its characters and the audience through a
wringer of contradictory feelings."[14] The last of the films with Todd, The Sound Barrier
(1952), has a screenplay by the playwright Terence Rattigan and was the first of his
three films for Sir Alexander Korda's London Films. Hobson's Choice (1954), with
Charles Laughton in the lead, was based on the play by Harold Brighouse.
Thomson, writing about Lean in his New Biographical Dictionary of Film, comments:

From 1952 to 1991, he made eight filmsand in only one of them, I s

International films

Lean in Northern Finland in 1965 while shooting Doctor Zhivago.

Summertime (1955) marked a new departure for Lean. It was partly American financed,
although again made for Korda's London Films. The film features Katharine Hepburn in
the lead role as a middle-aged American woman who has a romance while on holiday in
Venice. It was shot entirely on location there.

For Columbia and Sam Spiegel


Lean's films now began to become infrequent, but much larger in scale, and more
extensively released internationally. The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) was based on
a novel by Pierre Boulle recounting the story of British and American prisoners of war
trying to survive in a Japanese prison camp during World War II. The film stars William
Holden and Alec Guinness and became the highest grossing film of 1957, in the United
States. It won several Academy Awards, including Best Actor, Best Picture and Best
Director.
After extensive location work in the Middle East, North Africa, Spain, and elsewhere,
Lean's Lawrence of Arabia was released in 1962. The first project of Lean's with a
screenplay by playwright Robert Bolt, it recounts the life of T. E. Lawrence, the British
officer who united the peoples of the Arab peninsula to fight in the Great War. The film
turned actor Peter O'Toole into a star and won seven Academy Awards, including Best
Picture and Lean's second win for Best Director. He remains the only British director to
win more than one Oscar for directing.

For MGM[edit]
Lean had his greatest box office success with Doctor Zhivago (1965), a romance set
during the Russian Revolution. The film, based on the novel by Boris Pasternak, tells
the story of a physician and poet (Omar Sharif) who falls in love with an unavailable
woman named Lara (Julie Christie) and struggles to be with her in the chaos of the
revolution and subsequent Russian Civil War. As of 2015, it is the 8th highest grossing
film of all time, adjusted for inflation. In addition, Lean directed some scenes of The
Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) while George Stevens was doing location work in
Nevada.
In 1970, Lean's Ryan's Daughter was finally released after an extended period on
location in Ireland. A doomed romance, it is loosely based on Gustave Flaubert's
Madame Bovary. The film received far fewer positive reviews than the director's
previous work, particularly being savaged by the New York critics, and was not a
success at the international box office, unlike Lean's earlier epics. Some critics felt the
film's massive visual scale and extended running time did not suit its small-scale
romantic narrative. Nonetheless, the film won two Academy Awards the following year,
for cinematographer Freddie Young and supporting actor John Mills. The reception of
the film put Lean off making another film for some years.

Last years and unfulfilled projects


From 1977 until 1980, Lean and Robert Bolt worked on a film adaptation of Captain
Bligh and Mr. Christian, a dramatized account by Richard Hough of the Mutiny on the
Bounty. It was originally to be released as a two-part film, one named The Lawbreakers

that dealt with the voyage out to Tahiti and the subsequent mutiny, and the second
named The Long Arm that studied the journey of the mutineers after the mutiny as well
as the admiralty's response in sending out the frigate HMS Pandora, in which some of
the mutineers were imprisoned. Lean could not find financial backing for both films
after Warner Bros. withdrew from the project; he decided to combine it into one and
looked at a seven-part TV series before getting backing from Italian mogul Dino De
Laurentiis. The project then suffered a further setback when Bolt suffered a serious
stroke and was unable to continue writing; the director felt that Bolt's involvement
would be crucial to the film's success. Melvyn Bragg ended up writing a considerable
portion of the script.
Lean was forced to abandon the project after overseeing casting and the construction of
the $4 million Bounty replica; at the last possible moment, actor Mel Gibson brought in
his friend Roger Donaldson to direct the film, as producer De Laurentiis did not want to
lose the millions he had already put into the project over what he thought was as
insignificant a person as the director dropping out.[16] The film was eventually released
as The Bounty.
After failing to get Mutiny on the Bounty into production, Lean embarked on his last
completed project as director, A Passage to India (1984), with a screenplay adapted
from E. M. Forster's 1924 novel by Lean himself. For this final film, he chose to return
to editing, with the result that his three roles were given precisely equal status in the
film's credits.[17] Unlike Ryan's Daughter, the film opened to positive reviews, and Lean
was nominated for Academy Awards in directing, editing, and writing.
During the last years of his life, Lean was in pre-production of a film version of Joseph
Conrad's Nostromo. He assembled an all-star cast, including Marlon Brando, Paul
Scofield, Anthony Quinn, Peter O'Toole, Christopher Lambert, Isabella Rossellini, and
Dennis Quaid, with Georges Corraface as the title character. Lean also wanted Alec
Guinness to play Doctor Monyghan, but the aged actor turned him down in a letter from
1989: "I believe I would be disastrous casting. The only thing in the part I might have
done well is the crippled crab-like walk." Steven Spielberg came on board as producer
with the backing of Warner Bros., but after several rewrites and disagreements on the
script, he left the project and was replaced by Serge Silberman, a respected producer at
Greenwich Film Productions.
The project involved several writers, including Christopher Hampton and Robert Bolt,
but their work was abandoned. In the end, Lean decided to write the film himself with
the assistance of Maggie Unsworth, with whom he had worked on the scripts for Brief
Encounter, Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, and The Passionate Friends. Originally
Lean considered filming in Mexico but later decided to film in London and Madrid,
partly to secure O'Toole, who had insisted he would take part only if the film was shot
close to home. Nostromo had a total budget of $46 million and was six weeks away
from filming at the time of Lean's death from throat cancer. It was rumoured that fellow
film director John Boorman would take over direction, but the production collapsed.
Nostromo was finally adapted for the small screen with an unrelated BBC television
mini-series in 1997.

Personal life and honours

Lean was a long-term resident of Limehouse, east London. His home on Narrow Street
is still owned by his family. His co-writer and producer Norman Spencer has said that
Lean was a "huge womaniser" and "to my knowledge, he had almost 1,000 women".[18]
He was married six times, had one son, and at least two grandchildrenfrom all of
whom he was completely estranged[19]and was divorced five times. He was survived
by his last wife, art dealer Sandra Cooke, the co-author (with Barry Chattington) of
David Lean: An Intimate Portrait.[7] His six wives were:

Isabel Lean (28 June 1930 1936) (his first cousin); one son, Peter

Kay Walsh (23 November 1940 1949)

Ann Todd (21 May 1949 1957)

Leila Matkar (4 July 1960 1978) (From, Hyderabad, India). Lean's longestlasting marriage.[20][21]

Sandra Hotz (28 October 1981 1984)

Sandra Cooke (15 December 1990 16 April 1991)

Lean was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1973, and
was knighted in 1984.[22] David Lean received the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1990,
being one of only three non-Americans to receive the award.

Reputation and influence


Lean is the most represented director on the BFI Top 100 British films list, having a
total of seven films on the list. As Lean himself pointed out,[23] his films are often
admired by fellow directors as a showcase of the filmmaker's art. Steven Spielberg and
Martin Scorsese in particular are fans of Lean's epic films, and claim him as one of their
primary influences. Spielberg and Scorsese also helped in the 1989 restoration of
Lawrence of Arabia which, after release, greatly revived Lean's reputation.
John Woo once named Lawrence of Arabia among his top three films.[24] More recently,
Joe Wright (Pride & Prejudice, Atonement) has cited Lean's works, particularly Doctor
Zhivago, as an important influence on his work.[25]

Filmography
Main article: David Lean filmography

Notes
1.

Jump up ^ Roland, Bergan (2006). Film. 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL: Doring
Kindersley. p. 321. ISBN 978-1-4053-1280-6.

2.

Jump up ^ Indiana Jones' Influences: Inspirations. TheRaider.net. Retrieved on 201105-29.

3.
4.

Jump up ^ The Kubrick Site FAQ. Visual-memory.co.uk. Retrieved on 2011-05-29.


Jump up ^ The directors top ten directors. Bfi.org.uk (5 September 2006). Retrieved
on 2011-05-29.

5.

Jump up ^ The BFI 100: 110. Bfi.org.uk (6 September 2006). Retrieved on 2011-0529.

6.

Jump up ^ The BFI 100: 1120. Bfi.org.uk (6 September 2006). Retrieved on 2011-0529.

7.

^ Jump up to: a b c Smith, Julia Llewelyn. "Sandra Cooke: 'I always liked asking about
his other women'". London: The Independent. Retrieved 17 September 2011.

8.

Jump up ^ http://davidleancroydon.org.uk/about/croydon/

9.

Jump up ^ the Guardian, April 17 , 1991

10.

Jump up ^ Sloman, Tony (1999). "Obituary: Harold Kress", The Independent, 26


October 1999. Online version retrieved 8 April 2009.

11.

Jump up ^ Shipman, David (1984). The Story of Cinema Volume Two: From Citizen
Kane to the Present. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 775.

12.

Jump up ^ Beyond the Epic: The Life and Films of David Lean, University Press of
Kentucky, 2006, pp.13536

13.

Jump up ^ Phillips, p.139

14.

Jump up ^ Thomson, David (10 May 2008). "Unhealed wounds". The Guardian.
Retrieved 31 December 2015.

15.

Jump up ^ Thomson, David (2002). The New Biographical Dictionary of Film.


London & New York: Little, Brown & Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 5034.

16.

Jump up ^ [1] Archived 31 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine

17.

18.
19.

Jump up ^ Kerr, Walter (1985). "Films are made in the Cutting Room", New York
Times, 17 March 1985. Online version retrieved 15 November 2007.
Jump up ^ "How we made Hobson's Choice". Guardian. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
Jump up ^ Collins, Andrew (4 May 2008). "The epic legacy of David Lean".
Newspaper feature (London: The Observer). Retrieved 17 September 2011.

20.

Jump up ^ "The Hyderabad connection". The Hindu (Chennai, India). 21 May 2008.

21.

Jump up ^ "Brief encounters: How David Lean's sex life shaped his films". London:
The Independent. 29 June 2008.

22.

Jump up ^ David Lean Foundation. David Lean Foundation (18 July 2005). Retrieved
on 2011-05-29.

23.

Jump up ^ Brownlow, p. 483

24.

Jump up ^ Perce Nev, BBC. Retrieved 17 May 2007

25.

Jump up ^ Times Online report Archived 28 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine

References

Alain Silver and James Ursini, David Lean and his Films, Silman-James, 1992.

Kevin Brownlow, David Lean, Faber & Faber, 1997.

Silverman, Stephen M., David Lean, Harry N. Abrams, 1989.

Santas, Constantine, The Epics Films of David Lean, Scarecrow Press, 2011

Turner, Adrian "The Making of David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia" (Dragon's


World, Limpsfield UK, 1994)

Turner, Adrian "Robert Bolt: Scenes from two lives" (Hutchinson, London 1998)

Williams, Melanie, David Lean, [Manchester University Press, 2014]

Morris, L. Robert and Lawrence Raskin, Lawrence of Arabia: the 30th


Anniversary Pictorial History, Anchor Books, Doubleday, 1992

Further reading

"Sir David Lean - Obituary". Daily Telegraph. 17 April 1991. Retrieved 201406-22. Unsigned obituary of Lean.

Lane, Anthony (31 March 2008). "Master and Commander: Remembering


David Lean". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2014-06-22. Lane's appreciation of
Lean on his centennial

Silver, Alain (February 2004). "David Lean". Senses of Cinema (30). Retrieved
2014-06-22. Silver's essay on Lean's career compiled as part of the Senses of
Cinema Great Directors series.

Thomson, David (9 May 2008). "Unhealed wounds". Retrieved 2014-06-22.


Thomson's appreciation of Lean on the occasion of his centennial.

External links

David Lean at the Internet Movie Database

David Lean Archive on the BAFTA website

David Lean at the British Film Institute's Screenonline

Biography at British Film Institute

Mean Lean Filmmaking Machine, by Armond White, New York Press 3


September 2008

Honours from the Queen

David Lean Foundation. Charity which makes grants to restore Lean's films, and
to film studies students.

Literature on David Lean

Preceded b
Richard Attenboro

Authority control

WorldCat

VIAF: 112356433

LCCN: n80109902

ISNI: 0000 0001 0936 4538

GND: 118779087

SELIBR: 302009

SUDOC: 029467926

BNF: cb12108950k (data)

ULAN: 500336322

NLA: 35228877

NDL: 01135625

NKC: mzk2004240025

BNE: XX936888

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?


title=David_Lean&oldid=697646598"
Categories:

1908 births

1991 deaths

BAFTA fellows

Best Directing Academy Award winners

Best Director Golden Globe winners

British film directors

British film editors

British film producers

British Quakers

Burials at Putney Vale Cemetery

Cancer deaths in England

Commanders of the Order of the British Empire

David di Donatello winners

Deaths from esophageal cancer

Knights Bachelor

People from Croydon

People educated at Leighton Park School

People from Tower Hamlets (London borough)

Directors Guild of America Award winners

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lean
More: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000180/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bridge_on_the_River_Kwai
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0050212/
https://youtu.be/RlC7XBayj0s

https://youtu.be/t5hZ4Xv5VjE
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Passage_to_India_(film)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087892/
https://youtu.be/SYWbvJ-hsGg
More (II):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lean#Last_years_and_unfulfilled_project
s
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan%27s_Daughter
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_Zhivago_(film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_of_Arabia_(film)

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