Orson Welles filmography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is the filmography of Orson Welles.[1]
Director
Feature films
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1941 | Citizen Kane | Winner of the 1941 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Repeatedly named as "The Greatest Film of All Time", for example, by Sight and Sound and the American Film Institute. |
1942 | The Magnificent Ambersons | |
1946 | The Stranger | |
1947 | The Lady from Shanghai | |
1948 | Macbeth | |
1952 | Othello | Winner of the Palme d'Or at the 1952 Cannes Film Festival. |
1955 | Mr. Arkadin | |
1958 | Touch of Evil | Winner of "Best Film" at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair Film Festival. |
1962 | The Trial | Winner of the "Best Film" award of the French Syndicate of Cinema Critics in 1964. |
1965 | Chimes at Midnight | Winner of the 20th Anniversary Prize and the Technical Grand Prize at the 1966 Cannes Film Festival. |
1968 | The Immortal Story | Film made for French television, but released theatrically. English and French versions simultaneously shot. |
1974 | F for Fake | Documentary/Essay film |
1978 | Filming Othello | Documentary / Essay film / Film made for German television, but released theatrically |
Shorts
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1933 | Twelfth Night | Short film, in colour. Edited highlights (filmed by Welles) of the dress rehearsal of a Welles-directed stage production at the Todd School for Boys, produced in May 1933 for the Chicago Drama Festival. Silent, with narration by Welles provided on record. |
1934 | The Hearts of Age | Short film. Often mistakenly identified as Welles's first film (see Twelfth Night above). |
1938 | Too Much Johnson | Short two-part film intended for use at the beginning and interval of a stage play - was believed lost until 2013, when it was discovered in Italy.[2] |
1939 | The Green Goddess | Short film for use in stage play - now a lost film. |
1941 | Citizen Kane trailer | Short film. Instead of a conventional trailer, Welles shot a completely original four-minute "making of" feature as a trailer, which does not feature a second from the actual film itself. |
1946 | Around the World | Short film for use in stage musical - now a lost film. |
1950 | The Miracle of St. Anne | Short film for use in stage play - now a lost film, barring some very short clips. |
1953 | Magic Trick | Short film. |
1960 | Orson Welles in Dublin | Short film. |
1970 | An Evening with Orson Welles | Series of short films: Six 30-minute recitations including The Golden Honeymoon, The Happy Prince, and writings by G. K. Chesterton, P. G. Wodehouse, Socrates and Clarence Darrow. Only The Golden Honeymoon survives - the other five segments are considered lost films.[3] |
1976 | F for Fake trailer | Short film. Instead of a conventional trailer, Welles shot a self-contained, original nine-minute mockumentary to publicise the film's American release, containing only a few seconds from F for Fake itself. |
1978 | Orson Welles's Jeremiah | Short film. |
1978 | Unsung Heroes | Short film. |
1984 | The Spirit of Charles Lindbergh | Short film. |
Television
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1955 | Orson Welles' Sketch Book | Television series - 6 episodes. |
1955 | Around the World with Orson Welles | Television series - 6 completed episodes. (1 further incomplete episode, posthumously completed in 2000.) |
1956 | Orson Welles and People | Short film / Television pilot (unsold). Now a lost film. |
1958 | The Fountain of Youth | Short film / Television pilot (unsold). Filmed in 1956, but not broadcast until 1958. Winner of the Peabody Award. |
1958 | Portrait of Gina | Short film / Television pilot (unsold). Master tape lost, then found over 20 years later. Only broadcast once, on German television in the 1990s, before an injunction prevented any repeat airings. |
1964 | In the Land of Don Quixote | Italian-language television series - 9 episodes. 1 episode only released posthumously. Filmed in 1961, but not broadcast until 1964. |
1979 | The Orson Welles Show | Television pilot (unsold). Welles directed under the pseudonym of G.O. Spelvin. |
Incomplete films
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1942 | It's All True | Partially and posthumously completed in 1991 as a reconstruction/documentary. |
1955 | The Dominici Affair | Television episode from BBC series "Around the World with Orson Welles". Posthumously completed in 2000 as a reconstruction and documentary. |
1955 | Moby Dick—Rehearsed | Film version of the London stage play written, produced, directed by and starring Welles. Filming never completed, and now a lost film. |
1957-1972 | Don Quixote | Several versions attempted, with footage reused as the concept changed several times. One version was on the brink of completion in the late 1960s ("Just one or two short scenes need adding", said Welles in 1967), but was destroyed by him when the 1969 moon landings made obsolete the film's ending with Don Quixote and Sancho Panza heading to the moon. A further, drastically revised version was almost completed in 1970, but never released. Attempts from the late 1970s onwards to recycle some footage for a documentary-essay on Spain were never completed. A posthumous 1992 edit of footage by Jesus Franco remains universally panned due to Franco's incoherent editing. |
1967 | The Heroine | Only one day of filming completed. Now a lost film. |
1967-1970 | The Deep | Filming mostly completed, but one crucial underwater fight scene was left unfilmed when its star died in 1972, and most of the film lacks a soundtrack. |
1968 | Vienna | Short film. Originally a segment for the unfinished "Orson's Bag" TV special. Posthumously completed in 2000. |
1968-71 | One Man Band[4][5][6] | Short film also known as Orson Welles' London. Originally a segment for the unfinished "Orson's Bag" TV special. Posthumously completed in 2000. |
1969 | The Merchant of Venice | Short 40-minute film. Originally a segment for the unfinished "Orson's Bag" TV special. Technically not an unfinished film, it was completed in 1969, but after just one private preview screening in Rome for Oja Kodar and her mother, the soundtrack for the last two of the film's three reels was stolen, and remains missing. |
1970-1976 | The Other Side of the Wind | Although close to completion in 1976, a combination of copyright disputes, embezzlement of part of the film's budget by one of its producers, questionable decisions in seeking funding from the Shah of Iran's regime, the impounding of the negative by Ayatollah Khomeini's government, disputes between Welles's heirs over the rights, and literally decades of litigation, have all delayed its release. Filming was completed, and rough cut workprints exist, but only 40 minutes was properly edited by Welles in his lifetime. The original negative remains preserved in a locked Paris vault, tied up in legal disputes. |
1981 | Filming The Trial | Welles recorded a Q&A session on his 1962 film "The Trial", intending to integrate it into a "making of" documentary. The documentary was never made, but in 2000 the rushes were assembled into an 82 minute film. |
1982 | The Dreamers | While Welles never began principal photography, two 10-minute "test" scenes were filmed, one in colour, the other in black and white. |
1976-1985 | Orson Welles' Magic Show | A long-term project filmed on-and-off from 1976 until Welles's death, this was planned as a TV special. Although unfinished, a 27-minute cut was posthumously completed in 2000. |
1985 | King Lear | Black and white test scenes for a version of the Shakespeare play, to be mostly filmed in close-up |
Actor
Films
Year | Film | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1940 | Swiss Family Robinson | Narrator | Edward Ludwig | Uncredited |
1941 | Citizen Kane | Charles Foster Kane | Orson Welles | Also has an uncredited cameo as a journalist in the projection room scene. Also co-writer, producer & director (see above). |
1943 | Journey into Fear | Colonel Haki | Norman Foster | Welles co-director (uncredited) |
1943 | Jane Eyre | Edward Rochester | Robert Stevenson | Welles producer (uncredited) |
1944 | Follow the Boys | Himself | Edward Sutherland | Welles directed his own scenes (uncredited) |
1946 | Duel in the Sun | Narrator | King Vidor | |
1946 | Tomorrow Is Forever | John MacDonald, Erich Kessler | Irving Pichel | |
1946 | The Stranger | Franz Kindler/ Professor Charles Rankin | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1947 | The Lady From Shanghai | Michael O'Hara | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1948 | Macbeth | Macbeth | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1949 | Black Magic | Cagliostro | Gregory Ratoff | Welles directed his own scenes (uncredited) |
1949 | The Third Man | Harry Lime | Carol Reed | Welles wrote a small portion of his own dialogue ("Cuckoo clock" speech) |
1949 | Prince of Foxes | Cesare Borgia | Henry King | |
1950 | The Black Rose | Bayan | Henry Hathaway | |
1951 | Return to Glennascaul | Narrator/Himself | Hilton Edwards | Includes scenes of Welles directing his own Othello |
1951 | Le Petit Monde de Don Camillo | Narrator | Julien Duvivier | English-language version only |
1952 | Trent's Last Case | Sigsbee Manderson | Herbert Wilcox | |
1952 | Othello | Othello | Orson Welles | Also writer, producer, director (see above). |
1953 | L'Uomo, la bestia e la virtù | Captain Perella, the Beast | Steno | |
1953 | Si Versailles M'Etait Conté | Benjamin Franklin | Sacha Guitry | |
1954 | Trouble in the Glen | Sanin Cejadory Mengues | Herbert Wilcox | |
1955 | Three Cases of Murder | Lord Mountdrago | George More O'Ferrall ("Lord Mountdrago" segment) |
Welles directed his own scenes (uncredited)[7] |
1955 | Mr. Arkadin | Grigory Arkadin | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1955 | Orson Welles' Sketch Book | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, director (see above). |
1955 | Around the World with Orson Welles | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, director (see above). |
1955 | Napoléon | Hudson Lowe | Sacha Guitry | |
1956 | Moby Dick | Father Mapple | John Huston | |
1955 | Orson Welles and People | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, director (see above). |
1957 | Man in the Shadow | Virgil Renchler | Jack Arnold | |
1958 | The Fountain of Youth | Himself/ Narrator | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, director (see above). |
1958 | Portrait of Gina | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, director (see above). |
1958 | The Long, Hot Summer | Will Varner | Martin Ritt | |
1958 | Touch of Evil | Hank Quinlan | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1958 | The Vikings | Narrator | Richard Fleischer | Uncredited |
1958 | South Seas Adventure | Narrator | Various directors | Uncredited |
1958 | The Roots of Heaven | Cy Sedgewick | John Huston | |
1959 | High Journey | Narrator | Peter Baylis | |
1959 | Les Seigneurs de la forêt | Narrator | Henry Brandt, Heinz Sielmann | English-language version only |
1959 | Compulsion | Jonathan Wilk | Richard Fleischer | |
1959 | Ferry to Hong Kong | Captain Hart | Lewis Gilbert | |
1960 | David and Goliath | King Saul | Ferdinando Baldi, Richard Pottier | Welles directed his own scenes (uncredited) |
1960 | Crack in the Mirror | Hagolin, Lamerciere | Richard Fleischer | |
1960 | The Battle of Austerlitz | Robert Fulton | Abel Gance | |
1961 | La Fayette | Benjamin Franklin | Jean Dréville | |
1961 | King of Kings | Narrator | Nicholas Ray | Uncredited |
1961 | I Tartari | Burundai | Ferdinando Baldi, Richard Thorpe | |
1962 | The Trial | The Advocate | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). Welles also provided the opening narration, which he said was in character as the Advocate, but this is not made explicit in the film. |
1962 | Ro.Go.Pa.G. | Film Director | Pier Paolo Pasolini | La Ricotta segment |
1963 | The V.I.P.s | Max Buda | Anthony Asquith | |
1964 | In the Land of Don Quixote | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also director (see above). |
1964 | The Finest Hours | Narrator | Peter Baylis | |
1965 | A King's Story | Narrator | Harry Booth | |
1965 | La Fabuleuse aventure de Marco Polo | Akerman, Marco's Tutor | Denys de La Patellière, Raoul Lévy | |
1965 | Chimes at Midnight | Sir John Falstaff | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1966 | Is Paris Burning? | Consul Raoul Nordling | René Clément | |
1966 | A Man for All Seasons | Cardinal Wolsey | Fred Zinnemann | |
1967 | Le Désordre à vingt ans | Himself | Jacques Baratier | |
1967 | Casino Royale | Le Chiffre | Various directors | |
1967 | The Sailor from Gibraltar | Louis de Mozambique | Tony Richardson | |
1967 | I'll Never Forget What's'isname | Jonathan Lute | Michael Winner | |
1968 | The Immortal Story | Mr. Clay | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1968 | Oedipus the King | Tiresias | Philip Saville | |
1968 | Tepepa | Colonel Cascorro | Giulio Petroni | |
1968 | Around the World of Mike Todd | Narrator | Saul Swimmer | |
1968 | House of Cards | Leschenhaut | John Guillermin | |
1968 | Kampf um Rom I | Emperor Justinian | Robert Siodmak | |
1969 | Kampf um Rom II - Der Verrat | Emperor Justinian | Robert Siodmak | |
1969 | The Southern Star | Plankett | Sidney Hayers | Welles directed the opening scenes (uncredited) |
1969 | Bitka na Neretvi | Chetnik senator | Veljko Bulajic | |
1969 | 12 + 1 | Markan | Nicolas Gessner, Luciano Lucignani | |
1970 | Is It Always Right to Be Right? | Narrator | Lee Mishkin | Animated short |
1970 | A Horse Called Nijinsky | Narrator | Jo Durden-Smith | |
1970 | The Kremlin Letter | Bresnavitch | John Huston | |
1970 | Start the Revolution Without Me | The Narrator | Bud Yorkin | |
1970 | Catch-22 | General Dreedle | Mike Nichols | |
1970 | Salvador Dalí | Narrator | Jean-Christophe Averty | |
1970 | Waterloo | Louis XVIII | Sergei Bondarchuk | |
1971 | Malpertuis | Cassavius | Harry Kümel | |
1971 | Freedom River | Narrator | Sam Weiss | |
1971 | Sentinels of Silence | Narrator | Robert Amram | |
1971 | A Safe Place | The Magician | Henry Jaglom | |
1971 | Directed by John Ford | Narrator | Peter Bogdanovich | |
1971 | Ten Days' Wonder | Theo Van Horn | Claude Chabrol | |
1972 | Future Shock | Narrator | Alexander Grasshoff | |
1972 | Get to Know Your Rabbit | Mr. Delasandro | Brian De Palma | |
1972 | Treasure Island | Long John Silver | John Hough | |
1972 | Necromancy | Mr. Cato | Bert I. Gordon | |
1972 | The Man Who Came to Dinner | Sheridan Whiteside | Buzz Kulik | TV (Hallmark Hall of Fame) |
1974 | F for Fake | Himself | Orson Welles | Also writer, director (see above). |
1974 | Ten Little Indians | Voice of Tape | Peter Collinson | Voice only |
1974 | The Challenge... A Tribute to Modern Art | Himself | Herbert Kline | |
1975 | Who's Out There? | Narrator | ||
1975 | Bugs Bunny Superstar | Narrator | Larry Jackson | |
1975 | Rikki-Tikki-Tavi | Narrator, Nag, Chuchundra | Chuck Jones | Animated short |
1976 | Voyage of the Damned | Estedes | Stuart Rosenberg | |
1977 | Some Call It Greed | Narrator | Tim Forbes | |
1977 | Rime of the Ancient Mariner | Narrator | Larry Jordan | |
1977 | The Lions of Capitalism | Narrator | Tim Forbes | |
1977 | Hot Tomorrows | Parklawn Mortuary (voice) | Tim Forbes | |
1978 | Mysterious Castles of Clay | Narrator | Alan Root | |
1978 | The Greatest Battle | Narrator | Umberto Lenzi | |
1978 | Filming Othello | Himself/ Othello (in archive footage) | Orson Welles | Also writer, producer, director (see above). |
1979 | The Orson Welles Show | Himself | Orson Welles | TV. Also writer, producer, director (see above). |
1979 | The Late Great Planet Earth | Himself, narrator. | Robert Amram, Rolf Forsberg | |
1979 | The Muppet Movie | Lew Lord | James Frawley | |
1979 | The Double McGuffin | Narrator | Joe Camp | |
1980 | Shōgun (TV miniseries) | Narrator | Jerry London | TV miniseries |
1980 | Step Away | Narrator | Roberto Ponce, Marcos Zurinaga | |
1980 | The Greenstone | Narrator | Kevin Irvine | |
1980 | The Secret of Nikola Tesla | J.P. Morgan | Krsto Papic | |
1981 | Search for the Titanic | Himself | Michael Harris | |
1981 | The Man Who Saw Tomorrow | Presenter, narrator | Robert Guenette | |
1981 | History of the World: Part I | Narrator | Mel Brooks | |
1982 | Butterfly | Judge Rauch | Matt Cimber | |
1982 | Genocide | Narrator | Arnold Schwartzman | |
1982 | Slapstick of Another Kind | Father of the Aliens (voice) | Steven Paul | |
1983 | Where Is Parsifal? | Klingsor | Henri Helman | |
1983 | Hot Money | Sheriff Paisley | Zale Magder | |
1984 | The Road to Bresson | Himself | Leo De Boer, Jurriën Rood | |
1984 | The Enchanted Journey | Pippo | Yakikoto Higuchi | English-language version |
1984 | In Our Hands | Himself | Robert Richter, Stanley Warnow | |
1985 | Almonds and Raisins | Narrator | David Elstein, Russ Karel | |
1986 | The Transformers: The Movie | Unicron (voice) | Nelson Shin | Produced in 1985; final role filmed, in September 1985. |
1987 | Someone to Love | Himself | Henry Jaglom | Filmed in August 1985. |
Incomplete films
Year | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1942 | It's All True | Due to be the narrator, but narration never recorded. |
1955 | The Dominici Affair | Presenter |
1955 | Moby Dick—Rehearsed | An Actor-Manager/Father Mapple/Captain Ahab |
1957-1972 | Don Quixote | Himself/Narrator/Voice of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza (dubbed over other actors) |
1967-1970 | The Deep | Russ Brewster |
1968 | Vienna | Himself |
1968-1971 | Orson Welles' London AKA One Man Band | Himself/One Man Band/Police constable/Old lady in window/Old sailor/Woman selling flowers and dirty postcards/Chinese strip club owner/Morris dancer/Winston Churchill/Lord Plumfield/Four English gentlemen |
1969 | The Merchant of Venice | Shylock |
1970-1976 | The Other Side of the Wind | Due to be the narrator, but narration never recorded. |
1981 | Filming The Trial | Himself |
1982 | The Dreamers | Marcus Kleek |
1976-1985 | Orson Welles' Magic Show | Himself |
1985 | King Lear | King Lear |
Notes
- ↑ "Orson Welles Filmography". the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 7 July 2009.
- ↑ Kehr, Dave (2013-08-07), "Early Film by Orson Welles Is Rediscovered", New York Times
- ↑ Graver, Gary, with Andrew J. Rausch, Making Movies with Orson Welles; A Memoir. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-8108-6140-4 page 166. Only The Golden Honeymoon is known to exist; discovered footage was supplemented by audio from the 1946 radio play.
- ↑ Orson Welles' London on IMDB
- ↑ Orson Welles' London on British Film Institute
- ↑ The Goodies Clarion & Globe Issue 93: ORSON-LY RARE GOODIES on Goodiesruleok.com
- ↑ Welles, Orson, and Peter Bogdanovich, This is Orson Welles. New York: HarperCollins Publishers 1992 ISBN 0-06-016616-9 page 416
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