Robert Mulligan

Robert Patrick Mulligan

Mulligan on the set of "The Man in the Moon", 1991.
Born Robert Patrick Mulligan
(1925-08-23)August 23, 1925
The Bronx, New York City, New York
Died December 20, 2008(2008-12-20) (aged 83)
Lyme, Connecticut
Occupation Director
Years active 1948–1992

Robert Patrick Mulligan (August 23, 1925 – December 20, 2008) was an American film and television director best known as the director of humanistic American dramas, including To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), Summer of '42 (1971), The Other (1972), Same Time, Next Year (1978) and The Man in the Moon (1991). He was also known in the 1960s for his extensive collaborations with producer Alan J. Pakula. He was the elder brother of actor Richard Mulligan.

Early life and career

Mulligan studied at Fordham University before serving with the United States Marine Corps during World War II. At war's end, he obtained work in the editorial department of The New York Times, but left to pursue a career in television.

Mulligan began his television career as a messenger boy for CBS television. He worked diligently, and by 1948 was directing major dramatic television shows. In 1959 he won an Emmy Award for directing The Moon and Sixpence, a television production that was the American small-screen debut of Laurence Olivier.

Film career: 1950s-1960s

In 1957 Mulligan directed his first motion picture, Fear Strikes Out, starring Anthony Perkins as tormented baseball player Jimmy Piersall. The film was the first feature he would direct alongside longtime collaborator Alan J. Pakula, then a big-time Hollywood producer. Pakula once confessed that "working with Bob set me back in directing several years because I enjoyed working with him, and we were having a good time, and I enjoyed the work."[1] After the release of Fear Strikes Out, Mulligan briefly disbanded with Pakula and made two Tony Curtis vehicles, The Rat Race and The Great Imposter, as well as two Rock Hudson vehicles, Come September and The Spiral Road.

In the early 1960s, Pakula returned to Mulligan with the proposition of directing To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Harper Lee. Mulligan accepted the offer despite the awareness that "the other studios didn't want it because what's it about? It's about a middle-aged lawyer with two kids. There's no romance, no violence (except off-screen). There's no action. What is there? Where's the story?"[2] With the help of a screenplay by Horton Foote as well as the pivotal casting of Gregory Peck in the role of Atticus Finch, the film became a huge hit, and Mulligan was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director.[3]

Mulligan and Pakula followed To Kill a Mockingbird with five more films: Love With the Proper Stranger (1963), starring Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen; Baby the Rain Must Fall (1965), starring McQueen; Inside Daisy Clover (1965), starring Wood; Up the Down Staircase (1967), based on a humorous novel by Bel Kaufman and starring Sandy Dennis as the schoolteacher Ms. Barrett; and The Stalking Moon (1968), based on a Western novel by T.V. Olsen and reuniting Mulligan and Pakula with Peck, this time in the role of Sam Varner, a scout who attempts to escort a white woman (Eva Marie Saint) and her half-Indian son to New Mexico after they are pursued by a bloodthirsty Apache. After this film, Pakula broke ties with Mulligan to pursue his own career in directing. Up the Down Staircase was entered into the 5th Moscow International Film Festival.[4]

1970s

Mulligan began the 1970s with The Pursuit of Happiness (1971), based on the 1968 novel by Thomas Rogers, which had been a finalist for the National Book Award.[5] The film starred Michael Sarrazin as William Popper, a college student (disillusioned with both right-wing and left-wing American politics) whose life is complicated when he accidentally runs over and kills an elderly woman and is quickly sentenced to one year in prison for vehicular manslaughter. He then contemplates breaking out of prison and fleeing the country with his girlfriend (played by Barbara Hershey), since neither feels their lives have made any significant difference in America.

Also in 1971, Mulligan released Summer of '42 (1971), which was based on the coming-of-age novel by Herman Raucher and starred Gary Grimes as a teenage stand-in for Raucher who spends a summer vacation in 1942 on Nantucket Island lusting after a young woman (Jennifer O'Neill) whose husband has shipped off to fight in the war. A box office smash, Summer of '42 went on to gross over $20 million,[6] and Mulligan was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Director.

Summer of '42 was followed by The Other (1972), a horror film scripted by former Hollywood actor Thomas Tryon from his own book. It told the story of two 9-year old boys, Niles and Holland Perry (played by real-life twins Chris and Marty Udvarnoky), who get involved in a series of grisly murders at their home on Peaquot Landing in the 1930s. Although the film was not an immediate success at the box office, it has since gone on to gain a steady cult following.[7]

In the mid-1970s, Mulligan was briefly engaged in talks with producers Julia and Michael Phillips to direct Taxi Driver (1976), with Jeff Bridges to star as the psychotic Travis Bickle. Objections posed by screenwriter Paul Schrader caused the project to be turned over to Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro instead. Schrader later elaborated on his disapproval of Mulligan as the film's director: "I was fighting that off because it didn't make any sense to me. Yet it was a deal, and God knows I wanted to see the film made. To Michael and Julia's credit, they were not keen on this either, but it was something that was around and that could have gone... You can write the most complex character, and if the director isn't a complex man, it won't be a complex character on the screen. Travis Bickle is very complex, full of contradictions. If Mulligan, [Robert] Aldrich or [Mark] Rydell had directed that, it would have been a very simple person; they don't make complex people. If they do, they end up cardboard complex, lacking in passion."[8]

Unable to direct Taxi Driver, Mulligan proceeded by rounding out the 1970s with three films dominated by performances from A-list Hollywood actors: Jason Miller as a Los Angeles locksmith threatened by hitmen in The Nickel Ride (1974); Richard Gere as an Italian-American youth trying to break from his working-class family in Bloodbrothers (1978); and Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn portraying George and Doris, a pair of long-term adulterers, in Same Time Next Year (1978), based on the play by Bernard Slade.

1980s

As the 1980s dawned, Mulligan found work harder to come by, succeeding in directing only two films by the end of the decade. Kiss Me Goodbye (1982), starring Sally Field, James Caan and Jeff Bridges, was an attempt at a comedic remake of the Brazilian film Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands, but was both a critical[9] and commercial failure.[10] Clara's Heart (1987), starring Whoopi Goldberg and a young Neil Patrick Harris, was released five years later to more negative box office numbers[11] and reviews, and was panned on television by Siskel and Ebert.[12] It has, however, received recent praise from film professor Robert Keser.[13]

1990s

In the 1990s, at the age of 66, Mulligan would release his final film, The Man in the Moon (1991), starring a young Reese Witherspoon (in her film debut) as Dani, a 14-year-old girl who develops an attraction to an older boy (Jason London), only to feel betrayed when he falls for her older sister instead. The film was praised by Roger Ebert, who included it at #8 in his Top 10 list of the best films of 1991,[14] declaring, "Nothing else [Mulligan] has done... approaches the purity and perfection of The Man in the Moon. As the film approached its conclusion without having stepped wrong once, I wondered whether he could do it - whether he could maintain the poetic, bittersweet tone, and avoid the sentimentalism and cheap emotion that could have destroyed this story. Would he maintain the integrity of this material? He would, and he does."[15]

Later in March 1992, Mulligan made headlines when he angrily took his name off of airline cuts of The Man in the Moon, after he had learned that the film would be heavily censored by American and Delta flights. In an interview with Ebert, Mulligan explained, "The airlines demanded so many excessive and unreasonable cuts and changes that I took my name off the film... it's the first time I've ever done that."[16]

Before his death in 2008, Mulligan had commissioned playwright Beth Henley to write a screenplay from the novel A Long and Happy Life by Reynolds Price,[17] which Mulligan had bought the rights to with his own money.[18] The film was never made.

Personal life

Mulligan's first wife was Jane Lee Sutherland. Their marriage lasted from 1951 to 1968 and produced three children. His second marriage, to Sandy Mulligan, lasted from 1971 until his death. He was the elder brother of actor Richard Mulligan, whom he cast in Love with the Proper Stranger.[19]

It has been reported that Mulligan battled alcoholism for a period of years.[20] During the making of To Kill a Mockingbird, he and the rest of the crew were also known to be excessive chain-smokers, much to the annoyance of producer Pakula.[21]

Death

Mulligan died of heart disease at his home in Lyme, Connecticut on December 20, 2008, at the age of 83.[22]

Style

Mulligan described his role as a director thusly: “Things have to sift through me. That’s me up there on the screen. The shooting, the editing, the use of music—all that represents my attitude toward the material.”[23] In a 1978 interview with the Village Voice, he insisted, "I don't know anything about 'the Mulligan style.' If you can find it, well, that's your job."[24]

Chicago critic Jonathan Rosenbaum once hailed Mulligan as "one of the only American directors left with a fully achieved style that is commonly (if misleadingly) termed classical... he is a master of carving out dramatic space with liquid camera movements and precise angles, a mastery that’s matched by a special sensitivity in handling adolescents."[25]

Critic and filmmaker François Truffaut also championed the director's work. Truffaut was, in particular, a fan of Fear Strikes Out and was impressed that it was only Mulligan's first feature, writing, "It is rare to see a first film so free of faults and bombast." Summing up Mulligan's talents as a whole, Truffaut concluded, "If there were French directors as lucid as Mulligan, as capable of telling something more than anecdotes, the image of our country on the screen would be a bit less oversimplified."[26] Another filmmaker who admired Mulligan's work was Stanley Kubrick, who featured a clip from Summer of '42 in The Shining (1980).[27]

Of his fellow filmmakers, Mulligan admired Ingmar Bergman for his "wonderful use of that simple, honest technique" of allowing the camera to "rest on a human face quietly, unobtrusively, and let something happen."[28] He championed the films of Satyajit Ray and joined in a protest with Bergman and David Lean when Ray's film, Charulata, was rejected at the 1961 Cannes Film Festival.[29]

Mulligan was also an avid fan of the novels of Charles Dickens, whose work he had devoured in his youth: "I read all of it, I don't know how many times. I'm convinced that if Charles Dickens were alive and well and living in Los Angeles, he'd be the best producer-director-writer of movies ever. I think if anybody really wants to learn how to tell a story in images, they should read Dickens. At least once or twice a year."[30]

Filmography

References

  1. "Alan J. Pakula". google.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  2. Marc Lee (20 June 2008). "Must-have movie: To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)". Telegraph.co.uk. London. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  3. "Mockingbird Director Robert Mulligan Dies at 83". TIME.com. 21 December 2008. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  4. "5th Moscow International Film Festival (1967)". MIFF. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  5. Fox, Margalit (3 April 2007). "The New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  6. http://www.allrovi.com/movies/movie/summer-of-42-v47639?r=allmovie
  7. "The Other (1972)". web.archive.org. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  8. "Paul Schrader/Richard Thompson Interview". filmcomment.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  9. "Kiss Me Goodbye". rottentomatoes.com. 22 December 1982. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  10. "Kiss Me Goodbye (1982) - Box Office Mojo". boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  11. "Clara's Heart (1988) - Box Office Mojo". boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  12. Video on YouTube
  13. "The Film Journal...Passionate and informed film criticism from an auteurist perspective.". thefilmjournal.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  14. "Siskel and Ebert Top Ten Lists (1969-1998)". innermind.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  15. Roger Ebert (4 October 1991). "The Man in the Moon". suntimes.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  16. Roger Ebert. "Director pulls credit after airlines cut film". suntimes.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  17. "Learning a Trade". google.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  18. "The Film Journal...Passionate and informed film criticism from an auteurist perspective.". thefilmjournal.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  19. "Robert Mulligan - Biography - IMDb". imdb.com. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  20. Brian Baxter (23 December 2008). "Obituary: Robert Mulligan". the Guardian. London. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  21. "Mockingbird". google.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  22. Fox, Margalit (23 December 2008). "The New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
  23. "The Film Journal...Passionate and informed film criticism from an auteurist perspective.". thefilmjournal.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  24. "Mockingbird director Robert Mulligan dead at 83". reuters.com. 22 December 2008. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  25. "The Man In The Moon". jonathanrosenbaum.net. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  26. "The Films In My Life". google.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  27. "Summer of '42 (1971)". IMDb. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  28. "Service Unavailable". filmjournal.com. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  29. Ranjan Das Gupta (30 April 2011). "Ray at Cannes". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  30. "Columbia Daily Spectator 9 October 1978 — Columbia Spectator". columbia.edu. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
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