Orson Welles' pioneering, influential cinema was imaginative, ambitious and technically daring. His baroque cinematic style created a dense moral universe in which every action had tangled--and usually tragic--human repercussions. Before his dramatic arrival in Hollywood, Welles had carved a considerable reputation in theater and radio. At 18 he was a successful actor at the experimental Gate Theatre in Ireland; at 19, he made his Broadway debut as Tybalt in "Romeo and Juliet." A series of collaborations with director/producer John Houseman led to their participation in the New York Federal Theatre Project. Their first great success was Welles' staging of an all-black 'voodoo' "Macbeth," which demonstrated Welles' penchant for stretching existing forms beyond established limits. Welles and Houseman eventually formed their own repertory company, the Mercury Theatre, enjoying success with their 1937 production of "Julius Caesar," which Welles rewrote and set in contemporary Fascist Italy.
Soon Welles was also directing the Mercury players in weekly, hour-long radio dramas for CBS. Once again he stretched the medium, exploiting radio's intimacy to heighten narrative immediacy, most notoriously with the Halloween 1938 broadcast of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds." Concocted news bulletins and eyewitness accounts were so authentic in "reporting" the landing of hostile Martians in New Jersey that the broadcast caused a panic among unsuspecting listeners. Seeking to capitalize on Welles' notoriety, RKO brought him to Hollywood to produce, direct, write and act in two films for $225,000 plus total creative freedom and a percentage of the profits. It was the most generous offer a Hollywood studio had ever made to an untested filmmaker.
After several projects (among them an adaptation of Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness") came to naught, the 25 year-old Welles made what is generally described as the most stunning debut in the history of film. Initially called "American" and later retitled "Citizen Kane," Welles' film was a bold, brash and inspired tour-de-force that told its story from several different perspectives, recounting the rise and corruption of an American tycoon, Charles Foster Kane (modeled on publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst). With the brashness of someone new to Hollywood, Welles pushed existing filmmaking techniques as far as they would go, creating a new and distinctive film aesthetic.
Among the innovative elements of Welles' style exhibited in "Citizen Kane" were: 1. composition in depth: the use of extreme deep focus cinematography to connect distant figures in space; 2. complex "mise-en-scene," in which the frame overflowed with action and detail; 3. low-angle shots that revealed ceilings and made characters, especially Kane, seem simultaneously dominant and trapped; 4. long takes; 5. a fluid, moving camera that expanded the action beyond the frame and increased the importance of off-screen space; and 6. the creative use of sound as a transition device (Thatcher wishes a young Charles "Merry Christmas ..." and completes the phrase " ... and a Happy New Year" to a grown Charles years later) and to create visual metaphors (as in the opera montage where the image of the flickering backstage lamp combined with Susan Kane's faint singing and a whirring noise to symbolize her imminent breakdown and subsequent suicide attempt).
Although well received by the critics, "Citizen Kane" faced distribution and exhibition problems exacerbated by Hearst's negative campaign, and it fared poorly at the box office. Welles' second film for RKO, an adaptation of Booth Tarkington's "The Magnificent Ambersons" (1942), was a more conventional, less flamboyant film that utilized many of the same techniques Welles had developed for "Kane" to evoke a richly textured recollection of turn-of-the-century America. But with Welles off to South America to shoot a semi-documentary (the never-completed "It's All True") jointly sponsored by RKO and the US government, the studio severely edited the film, deleting 43 minutes. Even in its truncated form, "Ambersons" remains a dark, compelling look at nature of wealth, class and progress in America. Before he left for South America, Welles supervised the filming of "Journey Into Fear" (1942), whose direction is credited to Norman Foster. Welles co-starred and co-wrote the screenplay with Joseph Cotten; the result was an intriguing but muddled thriller. When "Ambersons" proved a commercial failure, it was a blow from which Welles' reputation would never recover. Welles and the Mercury Players were dismissed from RKO. "The Stranger" (1946), produced by independent Sam Spiegel, had Welles directing himself as a Nazi war criminal hiding in a small town, but it was devoid of the characteristic Welles touch. He regained his filmmaking flair with "The Lady From Shanghai" (1948), a stunning film noir in which Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth co-starred. (Already separated before the collaboration began, she filed for divorce once filming was completed.) The hall-of-mirrors finale is a superb example of Welles' gift for the audacious visual image.
Welles' next film proved to be the first of an informal, impressive Shakespeare trilogy, an eccentric, atmospheric version of "Macbeth" (1948) in which the actors were encouraged to speak with thick Scottish burrs. Its centerpiece--a sequence that begins with Macbeth's decision to kill the king, includes the murder and ends with the discovery of the crime by Macduff--was captured in a single ten-minute take. The film, however, was not successful and was dismissed at the Venice Film Festival. Four years later, he answered his critics with a striking version of "Othello" (1952), which won the Grand Prix at Cannes. The final film in the trilogy was the triumphant "Chimes at Midnight/Falstaff" (1966) which Welles, who by this time was of the correct girth to play Falstaff, fashioned from five of Shakespeare's historical plays. As a separate narrative, Falstaff's tale is a bitter one of deteriorating friendship passing from privilege to neglect. It ranks among Welles' greatest achievements.
After the failure of "Macbeth," Welles began a self-imposed, ten-year exile from Hollywood. His follow-up to "Othello," "Mr. Arkadin/Confidential Report" (1955), was an acerbic profile of a powerful man that showed signs of the brilliance that marked "Kane," but was hindered by an episodic narrative and spotty acting. Welles returned to Hollywood to act in and direct "Touch of Evil" (1958), a film noir masterpiece. From its stunning long-take opening of a car bombing to its tragic denouement, it reiterated his overarching vision of the world as an exacting moral network where each human act has endless and unforeseen moral consequences. His adaptation of Kafka's "The Trial" (1962), a nightmarish extension of that vision, depicted a society completely devoid of a moral sense, where empty procedure replaced principle. "The Immortal Story" (1968) was a satisfying, minor work made for French television, an adaptation of an Isak Dinesen story. His final completed film, "F For Fake" (1973), a diverting collage of documentary and staged footage that investigated the line separating reality and illusion, celebrated all tricksters--including its director, who sometimes stated that if he had not become a director, he would have been a magician.
At the time of his death, "The Other Side of the Wind," a project he had begun filming in the 1970s, remained unfinished. Obviously autobiographical, it was the story of a famous filmmaker (played by Welles' good friend, John Huston) struggling to find financing for his film, just as Welles was forced to do many times. As an unseen fragment, it was a sad and ironic end for a filmmaking maverick who set the standards for the modern narrative film and the man who was, in the words of Martin Scorsese, "responsible for inspiring more people to be film directors than anyone else in history of the cinema."
Family
FATHER: Richard Head Welles. Manufacturer, inventor, hotel owner. Born in Missouri in 1872; died on December 28, 1930 in Chicago of heart and kidney failure at age 58; made money as manufacturer of bicycle and auto lamps in Kinosha Wisconsin; sold business so as not to have to change from the popular carbide lamp he had invented to electrical model; invented glider attached to steam-driven engine.
MOTHER: Beatrice Welles. Amateur concert pianist, composer. Born in Springfield, Ohio c. 1879, died on May 10, 1924 of acute yellow atrophy of the liver at age 43.
GUARDIAN: Maurice Bernstein. Doctor. Discovered Orson Welles to be a prodigy at 18 months of age; gave Welles artistic gifts; named Welles' legal guardian after father's death in 1930; nicknamed "Dadda" by Welles.
BROTHER: Richard Ives Welles. Ten years Orson's senior; expelled from Todd School; institutionalized in mental homes during the early 1930s.
DAUGHTER: Christopher Feder. Born 1937; mother Virginia Nicholson; appeared as MacDuff's son in "Chimes at Midnight".
DAUGHTER: Rebecca Welles. Born in 1944; mother, Rita Hayworth.
DAUGHTER: Beatrice Welles-Smith. Cosmetics company owner. Born in November 1955; mother, Paola Mori; named after Welles' mother; played a page in father's movie "Chimes at Midnight" (1966); owns Beatrice Welles, a cosmetics company; married to Christoper Smith (a supplier of in-room movies to Las Vegas hotels); lives in Welles' Las Vegas home.
Companion
WIFE: Virginia Nicholson. Actor. Married on November 14, 1934 in secret ceremony; remarried formally in West Orange New Jersey; formally spearated in December 1939; divorced decree granted in Reno on February 1, 1940; born in 1916; met at Todd School summer festival that Welles coordinated in 1934 while she was student at Miss Hare's University for girls; married screenwriter Charles Lederer (nephew of Marion Davies) c. 1940 after divorce from Welles.
COMPANION: Dolores Del Rio. Actor. Married to Cedric Gibbons at time of relationship c. 1939-42; older than Welles; popular Hollywood film star of the 1920s and 30s who returned to her native Mexico in the mid-40s and enjoyed considerable success onstage and in film there; acted in "Journey Into Fear" (1942), set up by and also starring Welles.
WIFE: Rita Hayworth. Actor, dancer. Married in 1943; divorced in 1947; popular film star of the 1940s and 50s in such films as "You Were Never Lovelier" (1942), "Gilda" (1952) and "Miss Sadie Thompson" (1953); worked once with Welles, on "The Lady from Shanghai" (1948).
WIFE: Paola Mori. Actor. Met c. 1954; married on May 8, 1955; divorced; born c. 1931; died in a car crash in August 1986; Welles starred her as his daughter in "Mr. Arkadin" (1955); mother of Beatrice Welles.
COMPANION: Oja Kodar. Actor, screenwriter, director. Welles' companion in his later years; survived him.
Milestone
Born with anomalies of the spine which caused Welles pain throughout his life
Moved to Chicago as a child
First stage appearance, a walk-on bit in the Chicago Opera's production of "Samson and Delilah" at age five; then played "Madame Butterfly"'s child "Trouble"
Parents separated when Welles was six; traveled after divorce
1927: Became ward of Chicago doctor, Maurice Bernstein, at age 12 (date approximate)
1931: Began tour of Ireland
1931: First leading stage role at Dublin's Gate Theater in "Jew Suss"
1932: Returned to USA
1934: Broadway acting debut (as Tybalt) in "Romeo and Juliet"
1934: Co-directed and acted in short film, "The Hearts of Age"
1934: Radio acting debut
1936: First major stage success as director, "Macbeth" (for Federal Theater Project, Harlem); featured an all-black cast which later went to Broadway and toured the country; often referred to as the "voodoo Macbeth" due to the Haitian setting and African-influenced witchcraft theme
1937: Formed Mercury Theater with John Houseman
1937 - 1938: During one Broadway season, helmed four major successes for the Mercury Theatre, beginning with a modern-dress "Julius Caesar"; generally hailed as one of the great stage talents of the day
1938: Made national headlines with CBS radio broadcast (for "Mercury Theatre of the Air") of H.G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds" (the night of October 30)
1938: First short film as solo director, "Too Much Johnson" (also co-producer; writer); was to be incorporated into play of same name which never made it to Broadway; sole extant print allegedly lost in fire in 1970
Signed by RKO; given carte blanche; originally planned several other films, including an adaptation of "Heart of Darkness," before settling on the less ambitious "Citizen Kane"
1940: Was voice-over narrator of RKO's "Swiss Family Robinson"
1941: Feature film directing, producing, acting and co-writing (with Herman Mankiewicz) debut, "Citizen Kane"
1942: Just before completion of shooting of second film, "The Magnificent Ambersons," was sent by RKO (through a Nelson Rockefeller-run government office) as cultural ambassador to South America to keep positive relations with USA; shot footage for omnibus film "It's All True"; due to wartime flying restrictions unable to directly supervise editing of "Ambersons" from Brazil; film subsequently taken out of his hands and edited by Robert Wise with new footage added; after new ownership at RKO, Welles' contract ended
1943: With romantic leading role as Rochester in "Jane Eyre" began acting in films directed by others
Rejected by draft board (due to asthma and flat feet); during remaining war years had various radio shows and worked as a journalist, often praising his friend, President Roosevelt
1946: Directed and starred in (for producer Sam Spiegel/Sam S Eagle) only commercially successful directorial effort, "The Stranger"
Self-imposed exile in Europe; had trouble with back taxes
1953: TV acting debut in Peter Brook's "King Lear"
1954: Hosted BBC series, "The Orson Welles Sketchbook" (date approximate)
1955: Wrote and starred in the stage play "Moby Dick--Rehearsed"; performed in London
Returned to USA for starring role on Broadway in own production of "King Lear"; hired first as actor, then director, of Charlton Heston screen vehicle "Touch of Evil"
Moved back to Europe
Returned to USA in 1970s
Regularly seen in TV commercials for Paul Masson wines in 1980s
1993: Reconstruction of substantial parts of "It's All True" publicly premiered at New York Film Festival
1998: Restored version of "Touch of Evil" using Welles' 17-page memo as guideline premiered
Education
Todd School - Woodstock, Illinois
Todd School - Woodstock, Illinois - 1931
Bibliography
"The Fabulous Orson Welles" Peter Noble 1956
"The Cinema of Orson Welles" Peter Bogdanovich 1961
"The Films of Orson Welles" Charles Higham 1970
"The Panic Broadcast: Portrait of an Event" Howard Koch 1970
"A Ribbon of Dreams: The Cinema of Orson Welles" Peter Cowie 1973
"Focus on Orson Welles" Ronald Gottesman (editor) 1976
"American Visions: The Films of Chaplin, Ford, Capra and Welles, 1936-1941" Charles J. Maland 1977
"Orson Welles: A Critical View" Andre Bazin; Jonathan Rosenbaum (translator) 1978
"Orson Welles" Joseph McBride 1972
"Orson Welles: The Rise and Fall of an American Genius" Charles Higham 1985
"The Making of Citizen Kane" Robert L. Carringer 1985
"Orson Welles: A Biography" Barbara Leaming 1985
"Citizen Welles: A Biography of Orson Welles" Frank Brady 1989
"Orson Welles: A Bio-Bibliography" Bret Wood 1990
"The Complete Films of Orson Welles" James Howard 1991
"This Is Orson Welles" Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanovich; Jonathan Rosenbaum (editor) 1992
"The Magnificent Ambersons: A Reconstruction" Robert L. Carringer 1993
"Orson Welles: The Road to Xanadu" Simon Callow 1995
"Rosebud: The Story of Orson Welles" David Thomson 1996
"Orson Welles, Shakespeare and Popular Culture" Michael A. Anderegg 1999
Cheryl
Where is Jane Eyre (spelling may be off)
Why doesn't Orson Welles' biography on TCM.com not detail his performance in the making of Jane Eyre? Unusual....has the ...
More>>
Steve
Orson Welles
I just caught back up with The Magnificent Ambersons that you were showing the other night. Can you please tell ...
More>>