Alexander Mackendrick

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Alexander Mackendrick (September 8, 1912 - December 22, 1993) was a Scottish-American film director.

Alexander MacKendrick was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He was the only child of Francis Robert MacKendrick and Martha MacKendrick. They had emigrated to the United States from Glasgow in 1911. His father was a ship builder and a civil engineer. When MacKendrick was six, his father fell victim to the influenza pandemic that swept the world just after World War I. His mother, in desperate need of work, decided to be a dress designer. In order to pursue that decision, it was necessary for Martha MacKendrick to hand her only son over to his grandfather, who took young MacKendrick back to Scotland when he was seven years old. The boy never saw or heard from his mother again.

Young Alexander MacKendrick had a very sad and lonely childhood. He attended Hillhead High School from 1919 to 1926 and then went on to spend three years at the Glasgow School of Art. In the early 1930’s, MacKendrick moved to London to work as an art director for the ad firm J. Walter Thompson. Between 1936 and 1938, MacKendrick scripted five cinema commercials. He later reflected that his work in the advertising industry was invaluable, in spite of his extreme dislike of the industry itself. In 1937 MacKendrick wrote his first film script, Midnight Menace, with his cousin and close friend, Roger MacDougall. It was later bought by Associated British.

At the start of the Second World War, MacKendrick was employed by the Minister of Information making British propaganda films. In 1942 he went to Algiers and then to Italy, working with the Psychological Warfare Division. He then shot newsreels, documentaries, made leaflets, and did radio news. In 1943, he became the director of the film unit and approved the production of the classic Rossellini film, Rome, Open City.

After the war, MacKendrick and his cousin Roger MacDougall set up Merlin Productions, where they produced documentaries for the Ministry of Information. Merlin Productions soon proved to be a poor investment, so in 1946 MacKendrick joined Ealing Studios where he worked for 9 years. Starting working on storyboards, he eventually worked his way up to writing and directing his own feature films. Among those films were Whisky Galore (1949), The Man in the White Suit (1951), and The Ladykillers (1955). In 1955 MacKendrick left Britain for Hollywood. The rest of his professional life was spent commuting between London and Los Angeles.

MacKendrick began directing the Hecht-Hill-Lancaster (HHL) film Sweet Smell of Success in 1957. It was a commercial success about a press agent played by Tony Curtis who is wrapped up in a powerful newspaper columnist’s (Burt Lancaster) plot to end the relationship between his younger sister and a jazz musician. MacKendrick got along poorly with the producers of the film because they felt that he was too much of a perfectionist. After The Sweet Smell of Success, MacKendrick went back to England to make his second HHL film, The Devil’s Disciple in 1959, but he was fired only a month into production due to lingering tension from their first project together. MacKendrick was devastated.

After his disappointment with HHL, MacKendrick directed several television commercials in Europe for Horlicks. He also made a handful of films during the early sixties including Sammy Going South (1963), A High Wind in Jamaica (1965), and Don’t Make Waves (1967).

In 1969, he finally returned to the United States, where he was made Dean of the film school of the California Institute of the Arts. He gave up the position in 1978 to become a professor at the school. It is not difficult to understand why Mackedrick quit directing to become a teacher. "He found himself spending more energy on making deals than on making films"[1]. When Ealing studios was sold, Mackendrick was cut loose to pursue a career as a freelance director, something he was never prepared to do:

"At Ealing ... I was tremendously spoiled with all the logistical and financial troubles lifted off my shoulders, even if I had to do the films they told me to do. The reason why I have discovered myself so much happier teaching is that when I arrived here after the collapse of the world I had known as Ealing, I found that in order to make movies in Hollywood, you have to be a great deal-maker ... I have no talent for that ... I realised I was in the wrong business and got out." [2].

Due to severe emphysema, MacKendrick was unable to go home to Europe during much of his time at the college. He stayed with the school until he died of pneumonia in 1993.

Contents

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Director

[edit] Qoutes

  • "Process, not product"
  • "Though it will be only a couple of weeks before you are familiar with the basic mechanics of filmmaking, it will take a lifetime of hard work to master them"

[edit] References

  1. ^ Patricia Goldstone, 1960
  2. ^ Alexander Mackendrick quoted in Paul Cronin (ed), On Filmmaking, 2004

[edit] External links

In other languages