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Biography for Ida Lupino

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The Trouble With Angels (1966)
as Director
The Bigamist (1953)
as Director
The Hitch-Hiker (1953)
as Director
Hard, Fast and Beautiful (1951)
as Director
Mother of a Champion (1951)
Director
Never Fear (1950)
as Director
Outrage (1950)
as Director
American Lifestyles (1987)
as Actor ("Show Business At War" - "Show Business: The War Years")
Deadhead Miles (1982)
as Actor
My Boys Are Good Boys (1978)
as Actor
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 IDA LUPINO
Born: 1918-02-04
Birth place: London, England, GB
Death: 1995-08-03
Death cause: complications from a stroke and colon cancer
Nationality: United Kingdom
Profession: composer, actor, producer, screenwriter, director
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Biography

This extremely talented, intense, British-born artist hailed from a family with theatrical credits going back to the Renaissance. Lupino got her start in films when her youthful-looking mother auditioned for an ingenue role but director Allan Dwan took greater interest in the woman who accompanied her that day--her daughter. Looking slightly older than her almost-15 years, Lupino got the job, dyed her hair platinum blonde (which it would remain for much of the 1930s) and made her debut in "Her First Affaire" (1932), promoted as "the English Jean Harlow".

Moving to Hollywood the following year and eliminating all but slight traces of her British accent, Lupino appeared for the rest of the decade in a series of modest ingenue roles, several of which ("Peter Ibbetson" 1935, "Anything Goes" 1936) gave her at least a slight chance to sparkle. It was not until 1939, though, that she really attracted critical attention as Ronald Colman's tormented Cockney painter's model in "The Light That Failed", a showy supporting role Lupino snagged after vigorously campaigning for the role and auditioning for director William Wellman. Dusky-voiced and dark-haired, with large eyes and a small, slightly angular face, Lupino came into her own playing headstrong, grasping women in a string of Warner Bros. melodramas through the 1940s. Especially memorable roles include a scheming waitress who cracks up in court on the witness stand in "They Drive By Night" (1940); John Garfield's and Humphrey Bogart's romantic interest in, respectively, "The Sea Wolf" and "High Sierra" (both 1941); the austere housekeeper turned murderess in "Ladies in Retirement" (1941, her favorite role); the ambitious "stage-sister" determined to make her sibling a star in "The Hard Way" (1943); the world-weary nightclub singer in the wonderful sudser "The Man I Love" (1946); and the shy, stuttering woman who shelters an escaped convict in the touching "Deep Valley" (1947).

Combining the nervous energy and, to a lesser extent, the clipped speech patterns of Bette Davis with a toughness characteristic of Barbara Stanwyck, Lupino managed to score an impressive lineup of characterizations at Warners despite the fact that she, Ann Sheridan and other stars were often left to dicker for the roles Davis turned down. Free-lancing after 1947, she continued to shine in melodramas including such worthy entries as "Lust for Gold" (1949), "On Dangerous Ground" (1952), "The Big Knife" (1955) and "While the City Sleeps" (1956). The restless actress began to tire of performing in the same types of melodrama she had done for years, though, and, caring more about "develop(ing) talent in others ... than in my own", Lupino formed a series of production companies and began developing projects. After managing to get several modest films off the ground as producer, she took to directing one herself, the skillfully told story of an unwed mother, "Not Wanted" (1949), when credited director Elmer Clifton had a heart attack after three days shooting. She made her credited directorial debut soon after with "Never Fear" (1949), a semi-documentary styled look at a dancer stricken with polio, an affliction Lupino herself had known as a child.

One of the few women directors to succeed in a male-dominated field, Lupino's seven low-budget feature films have generally attracted less critical attention than fellow director Dorothy Arzner's dozen-plus, partly because Lupino's work, often showing the victimization of women, seemed to some to be "feminist films made from an unfeminist viewpoint". More recent critics dissent, however, finding in her oeuvre compelling portraits of both victims and aggressors wandering through artfully delineated back-street milieus of postwar America. Although perhaps none of her features is an unsung masterpiece, her work is technically very competent (her editing skills being especially notable) and, long before the advent of the TV-movie, dealt with timely, controversial social issues in an intimate, measured manner. Her work includes such films as "Outrage" (1950), an early study of the effects of rape on a young woman, "Hard, Fast and Beautiful" (1951), an entertaining melodrama about an ambitious stage mother in the world of professional tennis, "The Hitchhiker" (1953), a gripping suspense noir, and "The Bigamist" (1953), a deftly handled melodrama which avoids placing the blame too simply on either a man or his two wives.

Reputed to be the young medium's first female helmer, Lupino did most of her subsequent directing for TV, much of it featuring a brand of skillful camerawork that typed her in action drama rather than in the drawing room. She turned out over 100 episodes of such series as "The Untouchables", "The Twilight Zone", "Have Gun, Will Travel", "The Fugitive" and her own show, "Mr. Adams and Eve". During the 60s and 70s, she made occasional TV and feature film acting appearances in "guest star" types of roles. On TV Lupino was the villainous Dr. Cassandra on "Batman". Most notably she was Steve McQueen's oddly youthful mother in Sam Peckinpah's gentle, low-key "Junior Bonner" (1972). Lupino's final acting job was a guest shot on "Charlie's Angels". She was married to actor Louis Hayward (1938-45), executive Collier Young (1948-50), who executive produced "Mr. Adams and Eve" in the late 50s, and actor Howard Duff (1951-73), her co-star in "Mr. Adams and Eve".



Family

GRANDFATHER: George Lupino. Actor, dancer.

FATHER: Stanley Lupino. Comedian, actor. Born in London on May 15, 1893; died in 1942.

MOTHER: Connie Emerald. Actor.

GODFATHER: Ivor Novello. Actor, playwright, composer. Born on January 15, 1893; died in 1951.

UNCLE: Lupino Lane. Comedian, actor, director. Born on June 6, 1892; died in 1959; starred in many popular comedy shorts in Hollywood in the 1920s and in such feature films as "The Love Parade" (1929).

UNCLE: Wallace Lupino. Actor.

UNCLE: Barry Lupino. Actor.

UNCLE: Mark Lupino.

SISTER: Rita Lupino. Actor. Appeared in several films directed by Lupino.

DAUGHTER: Bridgett Mirella Duff. Born on April 23, 1952; father, Howard Duff; nominal inspiration for TV production company for series "Mr. Adams and Eve" (1957-58), starring Lupino and Howard Duff.



Companion

HUSBAND: Louis Hayward. Actor. Born on March 19, 1909; married in 1938; divorced in 1945; acted opposite Lupino in "Ladies in Retirement" (1941); died on February 21, 1985.

HUSBAND: Collier Young. Executive, producer. Married in 1948; divorced in 1950; met Lupino while working as Harry Cohn's executive assistant at Columbia; formed Filmakers, Inc. production company together; co-owned company with Lupino until 1980.

HUSBAND: Howard Duff. Actor. Born on August 24, 1913; married in October 1951; divorced in 1983; had been living apart for the last 11 years of their marriage; acted together in such films as "Woman in Hiding" (1950), "Jennifer" (1953), "Private Hell 36" (1954) and "While the City Sleeps" (1956), as well as the TV series, "Mr. Adams and Eve" (1957-58); father of Lupino's daughter Bridgett; died on July 8, 1990.



Milestone

1918: Born in London during a German zeppelin bombing

Wrote and produced her first play, "Mademoiselle", at age seven

Suffered from polio as a child

Joined a touring theater company

1932: First film appearance (a bit) in "The Love Race", directed by her uncle, Lupino Lane

1932: Official film acting debut at age 14 in "Her First Affaire", promoted as "the English Jean Harlow"

1933: Went to US under contract to Paramount; tested (unsuccessfully) for "Alice in Wonderland"

1934: US film debut in "Search for Beauty"

1937 - 1938: Left film acting for about a year after the failure of "Fight for Your Lady"; spent time writing and composing music, including the score for one of her father's shows and a piece, "Aladdin Suite", performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic

1939: Achieved star status with "The Light That Failed"

1940: Signed contract with Warner Bros.

1941: Reported in "Picturegoer" magazine that "she gave up a contract at $1700 a week rather than play in unsuitable stories"

1946: First film as producer (uncredited co-producer), "Young Widow"

1947: Left Warner Bros.

1947: Formed Arcadia Productions with Benedict Bogeaus; no films produced

1948: First film credited as producer (also first film for own company, Emerald Productions, Inc. which she co-founded with Collier Young and Anson Bond and named after her mother), "The Judge"

1948: Performed her own songs, including "One for My Baby (and One More for the Road)", for her role as a nightclub singer in the film noir, "Road House"

1949: Took over directing "Not Wanted" for an ailing Elmer Clifton; uncredited

1949: Credited feature film directing and co-writing debut, "Never Fear"

1950: Changed name of production company to The Filmakers; took on writer Marvin Wald as another partner

1951: Joined with David Niven, Dick Powell and Charles Boyer to form Four Star Productions

1951: Reportedly helmed portions of the feature "On Dangerous Ground" while director Nicholas Ray was ill

Appeared on a rotating basis (with David Niven, Charles Boyer and Dick Powell) on "Four Star Playhouse", a CBS-TV dramatic anthology series

Formed Bridget Productions (named after her daughter by Howard Duff)

1956: Acted in last feature films for 13 years, "While the City Sleeps" and "Strange Intruder"

Directed episodes of TV series such as "Have Gun--Will Travel" (the episode "Lady With a Gun" 1959), "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" (ep. "Sybilla" 1960), "The Untouchables" (ep. "Man in the Cooler" 1963) and "The Fugitive" (ep. "The Glass Tightrope" 1963)

Produced, co-starred (opposite then-husband Howard Duff) and directed episodes of the CBS sitcom, "Mr. Adams and Eve"

1966: Directed last feature film, "The Trouble with Angels"

1969: Returned to acting in feature films in "Backtrack"

1982: Appeared in cameo role in only film of the 1980s, "Deadhead Miles"

Health declined; moved to Motion Picture Home

1987: Featured in footage used in "American Lifestyles", a six-part compilation film using material from the "March of Time" newsreels from 1939 to 1950



Education

Clarence House Preparatory and Boarding School Royal Academy of Dramatic Art - 1931 - entered at age 13


Bibliography

"Queen of the B's: Ida Lupino Behind the Camera" Annette Kuhn 1995

"Ida Lupino" Jerry Vermilye

"Ida Lupino: A Biography" William Donati 1996



Citizenship

United Kingdom
United States


Notes

Lupino's birth year is open to question: other dates given are 1914, 1916 and 1919.

"'My father once said to me, 'You're born to be bad,' she recalled. 'And it was true. I made eight films in England before I came to America, and I played a tramp or a slut in all of them.'" --From TThe Hollywood Reporter, August 7, 1995.

"Although she won a best actress award from the New York Film Critics in 1943 for her role as a domineering sister in The Hard Way", she came to view her Hollywood acting career a failure and once referred to herself as 'the poor man's Bette Davis.'" --From The Hollywood Reporter, August 7, 1995.

"Her films [as a director] display the obsessions and consistencies of a true auteur. ... What is most interesting about her films are not her stories of unwed motherhood or the tribulation of career women, but the way in which she uses male actors: particulary in "The Bigamist" and "The Hitchhiker" (both 1953), Lupino was able to reduce the male to the same sort of dangerous, irrational force that women represented in most male-directed examples of Hollywood film noir." --Richard Koszarski in "Hollywood Directors 1914-40" (Oxford University Press, 1976)

"She regarded her own directorial career as an unconventional choice for a woman, and had remarked in an interview that she'd rather be cooking her man's dinner. However, the content and technical virtuosity of her work belie this statement and point to a very wily director who knows the uses of conventionality as a tool." --Barbara Scharres in The Film Center Gazette (The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, February 1987).


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