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Carl
- A 'Fifth' Catholic -

Ireland
11546 Posts

Posted - 09/15/2005 :  11:12:50  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
http://www.imdb.com/news/flash/

15 September 2005
Director Robert Wise Dies at 91


Director Robert Wise, who won two Academy Awards for directing two of the most successful movie musicals of all time, West Side Story and The Sound of Music, died of heart failure yesterday; he was 91. Wise, who had just celebrated his birthday on Saturday, was rushed to the UCLA Medical Center after suddenly falling ill. Recently, the filmmaker had reportedly been in good health, and his wife, Millicent, was out of the country at the San Sebastian Film Festival, participating in a retrospective of her husband's work. An extremely versatile director whose films ranged from drama to horror to sci-fi to musicals, Wise got his start at RKO Studios as an assistant editor, a job he got thanks to his brother, who was in the studio's accounting department. Working his way up the ladder to full editor, Wise edited such films as The Hunchback of Notre Dame and My Favorite Wife before nabbing an Academy Award nomination for editing the legendary Citizen Kane. He also worked with filmmaker Orson Welles on The Magnificent Ambersons, and was involved in that movie's drastic re-editing, which was requested by RKO while Welles was out of the country; the missing footage from Ambersons, and Wise's falling-out with Welles over the final product, later became the stuff of legend.

Two years after Ambersons, Wise was given his first job directing The Curse of the Cat People, which he co-directed with Gunther von Fritsch. Working on B pictures for RKO through the 40s, including the Boris Karloff vehicle The Body Snatcher, Wise came to the attention of critics with his prizefighter film The Set-Up (1949), which took place in real time. His films in the 50s were notably more high profile, starting with the sci-fi classic The Day the Earth Stood Still; he also helmed So Big, Somebody Up There Likes Me, and I Want to Live, which won him his first Oscar nomination and a Best Actress award for Susan Hayward. In 1961, Wise attempted his first musical, an adaptation of the Broadway hit West Side Story, on which he worked (and reportedly clashed) with choreographer and co-director Jerome Robbins. The film, starring Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer (neither of whom did their own singing), was a massive hit and won ten Academy Awards, including Best Picture and directing honors for Wise and Robbins - neither thanked the other in their acceptance speeches. After making the creepily effective black-and-white thriller The Haunting (1963), Wise went back to musical territory with The Sound of Music (1965), the small story of a governess (Julie Andrews) in Austria that turned into a very, very big hit. Critically lambasted but a fervent, almost rabid favorite with audiences, it went on to become the highest-grossing movie ever released at that time, saved 20th Century Fox from imminent bankruptcy in the wake of Cleopatra, and won Wise his second Oscar in addition to Best Picture.

Wise's output after The Sound of Music was scattershot in quality, and as he grew older he worked less frequently, but he helmed a number of notable pictures in the 60s and 70s: The Sand Pebbles, his last Best Picture nominee; the ill-fated Julie Andrews vehicle Star!; modernistic sci-fi thriller The Andromeda Strain; possession horror flick Audrey Rose; and the first Star Trek movie, appropriately titled Star Trek: The Motion Picture. The director's last feature film was Rooftops (1989), an attempt at a contemporary urban musical. Wise went on to become the president of both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and the Directors Guild of America, and found a devoted fan in filmmaker Martin Scorsese, who was said to be instrumental in getting Wise the American Film Institute's lifetime achievement award in 1998. Wise is survived by his wife, Millicent, and a son from a previous marriage. --Prepared by IMDb staff


TRANSMARINE
* Dog in the Sand *

USA
2002 Posts

Posted - 09/15/2005 :  11:32:13  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
I just read this a few minutes ago and was very saddened. I loved Robert Wise, and have always thought that for such a variety of projects and accomplishments, he seemed to be rather unsung. Running the gamut of musicals, drama, comedy, science fiction, horror, war, and cult, Wise rarely faltered. The only film I didn't feel was his best work was Audrey Rose...and yet 12 years earlier he scared the bejeesus out of everyone with the original The Haunting...still one of the best screen horror movies. I love the crazily campy I Want To Live and almost all intelligent science fiction films was born from The Day the Earth Stood Still. From the performance he illicited from McQueen (his best performance) in The Sand Pebbles, to the sterile terror he instilled with The Andromeda Strain, Wise has entertained and enlightened via brave material. I would definately consider Robert Wise to be one of America's finest and fairest directors in history. I once read his work ethic was immaculate and precisioned, and yet he would change the script at the drop of a hat if anyone, including grips and go-fers, came up with a creative suggestion to better a problem encountered in a scene. He was a listener, and never once lost his temper. He collaborated on a number of films with composer Jerry Goldsmith who was also a favorite of mine, and who also died a little over a year ago. Goodby Mr. Wise, and thanks!

I was alone...in my BIG BED

-bRIAN
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jediroller
* Dog in the Sand *

France
1718 Posts

Posted - 09/15/2005 :  13:41:01  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Thank you Brian.


I jumped on the Frank Black Bandwagon/'Cause Pixies are so 2004
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HeywoodJablome
* Dog in the Sand *

USA
1485 Posts

Posted - 09/15/2005 :  17:28:27  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
The hills are alive, with the sound of Griswald.
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