Orson Welles, in full George Orson Welles, (born May 6, 1915, Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S.—died October 10, 1985, Los Angeles, California), American motion-picture actor, director, producer, and writer. His innovative narrative techniques and use of photography, dramatic lighting, and music to further the dramatic line and to create mood made his Citizen Kane (1941)—which he wrote, directed, produced, and acted in—one of the most-influential films in the history of the art.
Early work
Welles was born to a mother, Beatrice Ives, who was a concert pianist and a crack rifle shot, and a father, Richard Welles, who was an inventor and a businessman. Welles was a child prodigy, adept at the piano and violin, acting, drawing, painting, and writing verse; he also entertained his friends by performing magic tricks and staging mini productions of William Shakespeare’s plays.
Welles’s parents separated when he was four years old, and his mother died when he was nine. In 1926 Welles entered the exclusive Todd School in Woodstock, Illinois. There his gifts found fertile ground, and he dazzled the teachers and students with stagings of both modern and classical plays. His father died in 1930, and Welles became the ward of a family friend, Chicago doctor Maurice Bernstein. In 1931 he graduated from Todd, but, instead of attending college, he studied briefly at the Art Institute of Chicago before traveling to Dublin, where he successfully auditioned at the Gate Theatre for the part of the Duke of Württemberg in a stage adaptation of Lion Feuchtwanger’s novel Jew Süss.
Welles remained in Ireland for a year, acting with the company at the Abbey Theatre as well as at the Gate; he also designed sets, wrote a newspaper column, and began directing plays. In 1932 Welles left Dublin and tried to get work on the stages of London and New York; unsuccessful, he instead traveled for a year in Morocco and Spain. In 1933 in the United States, he was introduced to actress Katharine Cornell by author Thornton Wilder and was hired to act in Cornell’s road company, playing Mercutio in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Marchbanks in George Bernard Shaw’s Candida, and Octavius Barrett in Rudolf Besier’s The Barretts of Wimpole Street. In 1934 Welles organized a summer drama festival at the Todd School, where he played Svengali in an adaptation of George du Maurier’s Trilby and Claudius in Hamlet. At the end of the festival, he made his first film, the short The Hearts of Age. With Todd School headmaster Roger Hill, he prepared Everybody’s Shakespeare (1934), editions for performance of Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice, and Julius Caesar, with introductions by Hill and Welles and illustrations by Welles. He made his New York debut as Tybalt in Cornell’s production of Romeo and Juliet in December 1934.
When Welles was performing in Romeo and Juliet, he met producer John Houseman, who immediately cast him as the lead in Archibald MacLeish’s verse play Panic, which premiered in 1935 for Houseman’s Phoenix Theatre Group. They then moved on in 1936 to mounting productions for the Works Progress Administration’s (WPA’s) Federal Theatre Project. Their first effort, for the Federal Theatre’s Negro Division, was Macbeth, with an all African American cast and the setting changed from Scotland to Haiti. They began 1937 with Christopher Marlowe’s The Tragicall History of Doctor Faustus (starring Welles). Their most (in)famous effort was Marc Blitzstein’s proletarian musical play The Cradle Will Rock. WPA guards shut down the theatre the night before its opening. (The shutdown was ostensibly for budgetary reasons; however, the political nature of the play was considered too radical.) Welles and Houseman quickly rented another theatre, and on opening night the play was presented with the actors performing their roles from seats in the audience. That same year they formed the Mercury Theatre, which presented a renowned modern-dress version of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. In 1938 the Mercury Theatre presented William Gillette’s comedy Too Much Johnson. Welles shot three short silent films to precede each act of the play; however, the films were never finished. (The Too Much Johnson footage was believed to have been destroyed by fire in 1970; however, it was rediscovered, restored, and premiered in 2013.)
At the same time, Welles was making inroads in radio. His radio career began early in 1934 with an excerpt from Panic. In 1935 he began appearing regularly on The March of Time news series, and subsequent radio roles included the part of Lamont Cranston in the mystery series The Shadow. In 1938 the Mercury players undertook a series of radio dramas adapted from famous novels. They attained national notoriety with a program based on H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds; the performance on October 30, using the format of a simulated news broadcast narrated by Welles, announced an attack on New Jersey by invaders from Mars. (However, contemporary reports that the program caused a nationwide panic were exaggerated.)
The national coverage that resulted from his theatre and radio work brought Welles’s name before Hollywood. In 1939 he signed an extraordinary contract with RKO that guaranteed him near-total autonomy and final cut on any film he made. For his first film, Welles chose Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, which was to be filmed entirely from the point of view of the narrator Marlow. However, despite months of preparation, the film never got off the ground. Welles narrated Swiss Family Robinson (1940) while waiting for another project to evolve.
Citizen Kane (1941) is arguably the greatest movie ever to come out of Hollywood, and it is surely one of the most-impressive debuts by any director. Welles also produced and coscripted the film with Herman J. Mankiewicz. Welles submitted a joyfully energetic performance as Charles Foster Kane, the newspaper magnate (clearly based on newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst) who rises from a poor background to amass uncountable millions—none of which he is able to enjoy, thanks to his epic ambitions.
Citizen Kane featured an ensemble cast in support of Welles, composed mostly of Mercury actors, and included Joseph Cotten, Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, Paul Stewart, and Ruth Warrick. Shot with an array of classic and experimental techniques by Gregg Toland, evocatively scored by Bernard Herrmann, and edited brilliantly by Robert Wise, Citizen Kane was a masterpiece of moviemaking. It was also the last time Welles made a Hollywood movie that reached the screen intact.
Although it initially received rave reviews, Citizen Kane was not a financial success. RKO found the film—with its complex flashback structure and lack of an appealing protagonist—difficult to market, and its box office was also hindered by the Hearst newspapers’ using their power to hamstring its commercial prospects. Nevertheless, Citizen Kane received nine Academy Award nominations, of which Welles received three (best actor, director, and original screenplay), but only the screenplay won an Oscar.
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) was produced, written, and directed by Welles, and to some critics it represents the peak of his artistry—even though it was taken out of his hands by RKO after poor test screenings. It was heavily reedited by Wise (44 minutes were cut), and a new ending was tacked on. The Magnificent Ambersons was adapted from Booth Tarkington’s novel about the declining fortunes of a wealthy 19th-century Indianapolis family whose smugness (and inability to comprehend the significance of industrialization and the automobile) leads to their downfall. The ensemble cast featured Tim Holt as the spoiled scion whose arrogance finally earns him a well-deserved comeuppance that nonetheless carries the weight of tragedy. Mercury actors (and Citizen Kane veterans) Cotten, Moorehead, and Ray Collins all delivered fine performances, and former silent star Dolores Costello and young Anne Baxter demonstrated Welles’s attention to his female actors. Photographed brilliantly by Stanley Cortez, The Magnificent Ambersons was nominated for a best picture Oscar.
Even while Wise was cutting The Magnificent Ambersons, Welles was in South America filming his quasi-documentary It’s All True, an anthology of three short films: “The Story of Samba (Carnaval),” about Rio de Janeiro’s annual Carnival; “My Friend Bonito,” about bullfighting; and “Four Men on a Raft,” about four humble fishermen who become national heroes after a daring voyage. RKO canceled the project midway, leaving Welles stranded in Rio. (The legendary project, never released, resurfaced when the mostly extant footage from “Four Men on a Raft” was assembled by Richard Wilson, Bill Krohn, and Myron Meisel as part of the documentary It’s All True: Based on an Unfinished Film by Orson Welles [1993].)
Welles had started work on Journey into Fear (1943) before leaving for Brazil, and he returned to find that RKO had begun meddling with it, as it had with The Magnificent Ambersons. This time, though, Welles was able to intercede and restore at least some of the brutal editing, but it was released at 69 minutes, having been cut down from 91. Journey into Fear was officially credited to Norman Foster, a director who also assisted Welles on It’s All True, but it was produced, coscripted, and acted in by Welles, who played the supporting part of Colonel Haki of Turkish intelligence. The hand of Welles is clearly evident, although Welles later said that he “designed the film but can’t properly be called its director.” A gripping (if sometimes confusing) adaptation of Eric Ambler’s thriller about espionage and munitions smuggling, Journey into Fear starred Welles’s then paramour, Dolores Del Rio, as the mysterious Josette, and Citizen Kane veterans Cotten (who cowrote the screenplay), Warrick, Moorehead, and Sloane enhanced the production. However, RKO was unimpressed, and its new executives kicked Welles and his Mercury Productions off the lot.
Welles spent the rest of 1943 making two radio series, entertaining American troops fighting in World War II with a touring magic show with the assistance of Rita Hayworth (whom he married), Marlene Dietrich, Cotten, and Moorehead, giving speeches on behalf of the war effort, and even substituting for Jack Benny on his radio show. He also played the mysterious Rochester in Robert Stevenson’s Jane Eyre (1943) opposite Joan Fontaine. But none of the studios was rushing to sign him as a director. He starred opposite Claudette Colbert in Irving Pichel’s melodrama Tomorrow Is Forever (1946) before finally being given a chance by producer Sam Spiegel.
The Stranger (1946) was a thriller about a Nazi, Franz Kindler (Welles), who is hiding out as a schoolteacher in a small New England town. His impending nuptials with a fellow teacher (Loretta Young) are interrupted when a war-crimes investigator (Edward G. Robinson) tracks him down and then waits for Kindler to give himself away. Welles was not happy with his work—he was trying to adhere to a strict schedule and budget to repair his reputation and so could ill afford any of his trademark flourishes—and The Stranger was thus his most-conventional film.
Heavily in debt from the failure of a colossal stage version of Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days, Welles began shooting the film noir The Lady from Shanghai in 1946 for Columbia Pictures. The story, based on a potboiler by Sherwood King, was reimagined by Welles as a feverishly intricate meditation on the nature of evil, with Welles as the philosophic protagonist, sailor Michael O’Hara. Hayworth (temporarily reunited with Welles after having been separated for a year) was the treacherous Elsa Bannister, and Mercury veteran Sloane played her crippled but poisonous husband, the corrupt lawyer Arthur Bannister. It was released in 1948.
In a typical display of mordant humour, Welles had Hayworth shorn of her trademark red tresses and dyed a platinum blond, one of many points of contention between Welles and Columbia’s president, Harry Cohn. The expensive (and rather complex) picture, shot in a variety of colourful Mexican locations, was a box-office failure. Today The Lady from Shanghai is regarded as one of Welles’s masterpieces, a triumph of style especially in its climactic shoot-out in a hall of mirrors, even though Welles was unable to oversee its final, heavily truncated cut.
In 1947 Welles then made a loose but strikingly original film adaptation, Macbeth (1948), which he shot in 23 days at genre factory Republic Pictures. He had prepared for the low-budget shoot by directing a stage production in Salt Lake City, Utah, with most of the cast. Welles summarized his low-budget achievement by describing it as “a kind of violently sketched charcoal drawing of a great play.” He used stylized sets and long takes to support his vision. (Although it was originally released at 107 minutes, the film was for many years seen only in an 86-minute version with the cast’s original Scottish accents redubbed.)
After finishing shooting Macbeth, Welles went to Italy, where he acted as the 18th-century charlatan and magician Cagliostro (and directed a few scenes) in Gregory Ratoff’s Black Magic (1949). He starred in other films, including Henry King’s Prince of Foxes (1949), as a colourful Cesare Borgia, and most famously Carol Reed’s classic thriller The Third Man (1949), as the amoral Harry Lime. Welles would spend much of the next 25 years in Europe.
Films of the 1950s: Othello, Mr. Arkadin, and Touch of Evil
Orson Welles (Othello) and Suzanne Cloutier (Desdemona) in Welles's Othello (1952).
Welles next played a 13th-century warlord in Henry Hathaway’s The Black Rose (1950). He had begun shooting Othello in 1948 in Venice. Over the next three years, Welles fitfully continued filming it on location in Italy and Morocco and in a Rome studio, stopping whenever funds ran low to take on another acting assignment. Since the actors were not always all available, some scenes of conversations were edited together out of close-ups shot years apart. The result was finally shown at Cannes in 1952, winning the top prize. The nearly unknown cast—aside from Welles as Othello, it starred Canadian actress Suzanne Cloutier as Desdemona and Irish actor Micheál MacLiammóir (whom Welles had known since his time at the Gate Theatre) as Iago—ensured that its commercial prospects would remain modest. However, the film contains some of Welles’s greatest camerawork and is regarded by some as one of his greatest achievements.
Mr. Arkadin (1955; also called Confidential Report) was based on an original story by Welles and was financed by European investors, who removed him from the film during editing. It is a Citizen Kane-like story with a different but equally tragic ending: the wealthy and powerful Arkadin (Welles) hires a shady young American (Robert Arden) to reassemble his past history, which the tycoon claims to have forgotten but actually fears will be so rife with scandal that his beloved daughter (Paolo Mori) will turn away from him in horror. During Welles’s lifetime the film circulated in at least three versions, each with slightly different material, and it was not until 2006 that a “comprehensive version” was assembled. As with so many of Welles’s later works, the picture’s merits wrestle fiercely with its production deficiencies.
In 1955 Welles also began shooting Don Quixote, a contemporary reworking of the Miguel de Cervantes tale that he also produced, narrated, and coscripted. He worked on and off on Don Quixote until his death. At one point he even said the film would be called When Are You Going to Finish Don Quixote. The film was never completed. A fragmentary form of Don Quixote was assembled by Spanish filmmakers Patxi Irigoyen and Jesús Franco in 1992, but it was disparaged by film critics.
Welles accepted many film acting assignments in England, France, and Italy. He made two series of short documentaries for British television, Orson Welles’ Sketch Book and Around the World with Orson Welles (both 1955), and that same year he also produced Moby Dick—Rehearsed for the London stage, an adaptation of Herman Melville’s novel in which he appeared as Captain Ahab and Father Mapple. American audiences saw him as Father Mapple in John Huston’s Moby Dick (1956) and as the imposing Varner in Martin Ritt’s The Long, Hot Summer (1958). He then returned to Hollywood for the first time in 10 years to make what is considered one of his finest, and most personal, films.
Touch of Evil (1958) was based on a detective novel by Whit Masterson. Welles took its plot about a crooked police chief and embroidered it with themes close to his heart—guilt and redemption, situational ethics versus absolute morality, relative versus utter evil—and some of his most-dazzling camera work. (The picture’s opening tracking shot is one of Welles’s most famous.) Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh starred as a Mexican police officer and his American wife caught in a maze of corruption just over the Mexican border, but it is really Welles as the crooked police chief Hank Quinlan and Dietrich as a hard-boiled madam who steal the show. Welles delivered a rough cut to Universal and then went to Mexico to shoot some scenes for Don Quixote. When he returned, Universal had added some footage and cut it down to 93 minutes. Welles wrote an extensive memo detailing his preferred changes. He was ignored, but in 1998 Universal released a 111-minute cut following Welles’s memo. Touch of Evil was Welles’s last Hollywood film.
Later films: Chimes at Midnight, The Other Side of the Wind, and F for Fake
Welles acted in such films as Huston’s The Roots of Heaven (1958) and Richard Fleischer’s Compulsion (1959). He also used his famous mellifluous baritone in narrating films, such as Fleischer’s The Vikings (1958) and Nicholas Ray’s King of Kings (1961). He made The Trial (1962) in Europe. Franz Kafka’s novel of existential dread was a good match for Welles’s baroque pessimism, and, indeed, Welles considered it one of his best. Anthony Perkins (convincingly anguished as Joseph K.), Welles (formidable as Hastler, the advocate), Jeanne Moreau, and Romy Schneider made for an exceptional cast.
Casting himself as Shakespeare’s buffoon Sir John Falstaff and borrowing elements from Henry IV, Part 1, Henry IV, Part 2, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Henry V, and Richard II, Welles assembled an impressionistic and often moving tribute to the grandeur of Shakespeare in Chimes at Midnight (1965; also called Falstaff). Welles struggled against budgetary and technical limitations—much of the picture was poorly dubbed—but he skillfully used Spanish locations and an excellent cast that included John Gielgud, Margaret Rutherford, Moreau, and Fernando Rey. The Battle of Shrewsbury sequence toward the end of the film has been lauded as one of Welles’s best. But it is Welles’s shambling, stumbling Falstaff who is rightly the film’s centerpiece, and justice is done to his tragic fate.
After roles in René Clément’s Is Paris Burning? (1966), Fred Zinnemann’s A Man for All Seasons (1966), and the James Bond spoof Casino Royale (1967), Welles made Histoire immortelle (1968; The Immortal Story), an hour-long film for French television based on an Isak Dinesen novella. He also shot the thriller The Deep between 1967 and 1969; however, the film was never completed. Many more acting appearances followed, including roles in Huston’s The Kremlin Letter (1970), Mike Nichols’s Catch-22 (1970, as General Dreedle), and Brian De Palma’s Get to Know Your Rabbit (1972).
From 1970 to 1976 Welles also shot and partially edited The Other Side of the Wind, a satire about the movie business set on the last night of the life of director Jake Hannaford (played by Huston), a renowned filmmaker struggling to find his place in the New Hollywood of the 1970s. Hannaford’s latest production, The Other Side of the Wind (shot by Welles as a parody of European art cinema), is running out of money, and its lead actor has disappeared. Much of the film is set at Hannaford’s 70th birthday party, where he confronts his obsolescence. Welles shot the party in a variety of film stocks and cast many young directors as themselves. However, money ran out before postproduction was completed, and the film was caught in a legal battle that lasted long after Welles’s death. A version of the movie was released in 2018 using Welles’s edited footage and notes.
F for Fake (1973) was an “essay film” (as Welles called it) about the nature of truth in art. The film had its basis in documentary footage shot by François-Arnold Reichenbach of art forger Elmyr de Hory and his biographer Clifford Irving. As Welles started working on Reichenbach’s footage, Irving himself was unmasked as the forger of a fake autobiography of reclusive businessman Howard Hughes. Welles supplemented Reichenbach’s footage with much new additional material, drawing on his own fakes, such as the The War of the Worlds broadcast and his love of magic. F for Fake was probably his most-intricate film and required one year of editing to complete.
Welles returned to the United States in 1975. His final completed film was Filming “Othello” (1979), made for West German television about the making of his Othello. In addition to acting in and providing voice-over narration for many films and television programs, in his final years Welles shot footage for several projects, including Filming “The Trial,” about the making of that film; The Dreamers, based on two short stories by Dinesen; Orson Welles Solo, an autobiographical film; and The Magic Show, with Welles performing magic tricks.
Courtesy - Michael Barson
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
- Orson Welles