Robert Z. Leonard

Robert Z. Leonard

Actor, Director, Producer

Data di nascita: 7 ottobre 1889, luogo di nascita: Chicago, Illinois, USA

Chicago-born Robert Z. Leonard studied law at the University of Colorado, but the legal profession proved not to be his forte and he dropped out in favor of a career in the theatre. When his family moved to Hollywood in 1907 Leonard sought work in the fledgling film industry, starting as an actor with Selig Polyscope. Though he became an established star by 1916, his chief interest lay on the other side of the camera. Turning to directing from 1913, he helmed a brace of short comedy features and got his break when he was assigned a serial, The Master Key (1914), in 1914. From 1915-19 he was under contract at Universal, where he became chiefly associated with the films of his future wife, the ex-Ziegfeld Follies star Mae Murray. In 1919 Leonard and Murray founded Tiffany Productions, specifically as a means of creating suitable star vehicles for her. While the company lingered on as Tiffany-Stahl on the Talisman lot--one of the "Poverty Row" studios turning out cheap westerns and even cheaper "Chimp Comedies"' (yes, the stars were chimps and a lot cheaper to maintain than humans!)--Leonard and Murray moved on to join the newly-established Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1924. Leonard's union with the volatile Murray ended in divorce in 1925. After clashing with MGM chief Louis B. Mayer, Murray left the studio two years later. Leonard married another actress, Gertrude Olmstead, and went on to become one of the studio's most reliable contract directors for the next three decades. Fitting in perfectly with the studio system, he was part of a highly efficient team of top craftsmen under the auspices of producer Hunt Stromberg, turning out scores of musicals and light comedies. Though not generally regarded by film critics as among the top echelon of Hollywood directors, Leonard nevertheless capably handled a variety of A-grade pictures, often starring temperamental personalities. Among his most successful hits for MGM were the backstage musical Dancing Lady (1933); the opulent multi Oscar-winning musical biopic The Great Ziegfeld (1936) (completed on a budget of $2 million); all but two of the popular cycle of Nelson Eddy-Jeanette MacDonald operettas; and the stylish, witty Pride and Prejudice (1940), an adaptation of the famed Jane Austen novel, a production that typified the most lavish of MGM's post-Thalberg costume dramas. It was scripted by no less than Aldous Huxley and starred Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson. While many of his films may be dismissed for lacking artistic merit, the plain truth is that few lost money. Leonard gave the public what it wanted: he excelled at providing escapist entertainment, particularly with glossy, all-star extravaganzas like Ziegfeld Girl (1941) or Week-End at the Waldorf (1945). It was ironic, that, in 1949, he made a rare and unsuccessful foray into the genre of film noir with The Bribe (1949), an endeavor equally untypical of its studio. Starring Robert Taylor, Ava Gardner (at her most ravishing) and Vincent Price as a war surplus racketeer, the picture bombed at the box office. Producer Pandro S. Berman subsequently lamented it as "a heap of junk" that should "never have been made", but in retrospect "The Bribe" is not at all bad. In fact, it has gained something of a cult following over the years. Scenes from it were conspicuously used by Steve Martin for his excellent montage comedy Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982). Leonard left MGM on the studio retirement plan in 1955. He then had a brief sojourn in Italy, where he directed Gina Lollobrigida in Beautiful But Dangerous (1955) before finally making his swan song at Universal with a less-than-memorable family film, Kelly and Me (1956). With his wife Gertrude, Leonard resided in Beverly Hills until his death in August 1968.

I titoli migliori

  • Maytime (1937)
  • The Great Ziegfeld
  • The Divorcee
  • A Tale of Two Cities (1935)
  • Orgoglio e pregiudizio
  • In the Good Old Summertime
  • The Firefly (1937)
  • Dancing Lady
  • Ziegfeld Girl
  • Piccadilly Jim (1936)
  • New Moon
  • The Clown
  • Stand by for Action
  • When Ladies Meet (1941)
  • Abbott and Costello in Hollywood
  • The Girl of the Golden West
  • Let us Be Gay
  • We Were Dancing
  • The Great Diamond Robbery (1954)
  • Marianne

Filmografia

  • 1955
    The King's Thief
  • 1954
    The Great Diamond Robbery (1954)
  • 1953
    The Clown
  • 1949
    In the Good Old Summertime
  • 1945
    Abbott and Costello in Hollywood
  • 1942
    Stand by for Action
  • We Were Dancing
  • 1941
    Ziegfeld Girl
  • When Ladies Meet (1941)
  • 1940
    New Moon
  • Orgoglio e pregiudizio
  • 1939
    Broadway Serenade
  • 1938
    The Girl of the Golden West
  • 1937
    Maytime (1937)
  • The Firefly (1937)
  • 1936
    Piccadilly Jim (1936)
  • The Great Ziegfeld
  • 1935
    A Tale of Two Cities (1935)
  • 1933
    Dancing Lady
  • 1932
    Strange Interlude
  • 1930
    In Gay Madrid
  • Let us Be Gay
  • The Divorcee
  • 1929
    Marianne
  • 1915
    Christmas Memories - 1944 --- The Battle of The Bulge

Connessioni

  • Frank Morgan

    Frank Morgan

  • Nelson Eddy

    Nelson Eddy

  • Greer Garson

    Greer Garson

  • Reginald Owen

    Reginald Owen

  • Mary Boland

    Mary Boland

  • Spring Byington

    Spring Byington

Generi

  • Military & War
  • Action & Adventure
  • Comedy
  • Drama
  • Romance
  • Western
  • Musical