[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Andrew L. Stone, producer-director, 98



Tuesday December 12 4:44 AM ET

Silent film director dead at 98 

By Kevin Brownlow

HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - Producer-director Andrew L. Stone, one of the last
silent filmmakers, died in June 1999; his death was not chronicled until a
report surfaced recently on the sale of his house. He was 98 at the time
of his death.

His first film was made in 1926, and he was still going strong 50 years
later. One of his best-remembered pictures is ``Stormy Weather''
(1943) with Lena Horne.

Stone's earlier contributions have been overshadowed by his lavishly
mounted musical epics such as ``Song of Norway'' (1970). But in his heyday
he wrote, produced and directed a series of thrillers, all shot on
location using natural sounds and the minimum of lighting.

He considered studio shooting outdated and wasteful; a pioneer of
hand-lamps and radio mics, he was 50 years ahead of the modern Danish
Dogma aesthetic.

Stone was a film enthusiast from early childhood. In 1914, the Oakland
native built a movie theater in his backyard, with two projectors and
seats for 50 kids. Films were bought at a dollar a reel. While still in
high school, he got a job working for the Universal exchange after school
and on Sundays. ``I wanted anything I could get to do with films --
rewinding, slicing, projecting,'' he once said.

In the mid-'20s, he moved to Hollywood and worked in a laboratory and in
Universal's prop department. In 1926, he financed his own first
directorial effort, a two-reeler called ``The Elegy'' (1926); it was an
attempt to distill the emotional punch of films like ``Humoresque'' and
``The Miracle Man,'' and proved a bigger hit than the feature film it
accompanied. He made his first full-length feature, ``Dreary House,'' in
1928.

During the '30s, he made a habit of employing the silent players he had
admired so much as a boy (in 1943 he even directed Pola Negri). In the
mid-1930s, he was offered an MGM contract that would have given him a vest
salary. ``But I'd have had to pacify the stars and keep them happy -- like
a priest who doesn't believe a word of what he says. Then there was a
Paramount contract -- no big stars, but freedom. That's the one I went
for. It didn't take me long to see I'd never make a nickel, but I didn't
give a damn.''

Stone nonetheless ran into creative differences at the studio. He thought
the best way to get a scene of shoppers in a big store was to shoot
shoppers in a big store. When the studio insisted on taking over a store
one Sunday and filling it with extras and big lights as well as adding a
few zeroes to the budget, Stone walked out.

As a maverick, he was scornful of the power of the cameramen. ``Cameramen
have the biggest racket next to producers,'' he said. ``Studio heads don't
seem to worry, which seems fantastic. I insist on naturalistic lighting --
not the sort where a room is uniformly lit by enormous lights in
gantries. If a guy moves, the whole lot needs realigning -- it takes
hours, and the result is lousy. We could shoot by matchlight if we wanted
to -- yet cameramen are using the same number of lights they used in the
days when stock was so slow.''

He rejected back projection, process work and even post-synching
(dubbing). The technique paid off because whereas most studio pictures
averaged eight setups a day, Stone routinely shot 20, shooting all night
if he thought it would help the picture.

Films had retreated into studios since the coming of sound because it was
easier to work on a set than to cope with the extraneous noises and
distractions of a location. Stone thought this was ridiculous. Every scene
for ``Cry Terror,'' for instance, was shot on location; Stone even took
his crew into the New York subway, requiring James Mason to clamber down
the inside of a real elevator shaft.

On ``Ring of Fire'' (1961), Stone planned to wreck a train on a burning
bridge. ``We had this location in a lonely part of the Oregon mountains --
there must have been 500 people from the press, TV and newsreels to watch
this big shot. ... But then, the most terrible thing happened: As it hit
the water, a curtain of steam rose up, obscuring our view of what was
happening to the cars. ... The most vital part of the scene had been
missed by all five cameras. The TV networks had the shot all over the
country -- in black and white. So had the newsreels. And we hadn't got
it.'' Luckily, one of the bystanders caught the crash on 16mm.

Stone was educated in the University of California system.

Stone was later partnered by his wife Virginia, a first-rate film editor
who, in 1945, at the age of 19, began her career at United Artists as a
music cutter. They married in 1946; she acted as co-producer and editor on
the films they made together. He is survived by two children.

Reuters/Variety REUTERS 



* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
This mailing list is brought to you by Slick.ORG at http://www.slick.org
to remove yourself from the list, send e-mail to majordomo@slick.org
and include the words "unsubscribe deathwatch" in the message (not in the
subject).  For web-based help, go to:

http://www.slick.org/cgi-bin/majordomo

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *