Elia Kazan: Man on a Tightrope

February 18 to March 4, 2010
Elia Kazan was one of the most admired and controversial directors of American postwar cinema and theatre. As one of the co-founders
of New Yorks Actors Studio Kazan brought a new style of acting to the screen, influenced by the Stanislavsky method. Marlon Brandos vivid and
intense portrayals in Kazans classics, A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) and On the Waterfront (1954), are particularly famous examples of this revolutionary moment in U.S. film history which established
a new generation of American performers.
In between those films the director himself delivered a performance that overshadowed his entire career: in 1952, at the height
of Senator Joe McCarthys anti-communist witch hunts, the influential ex-communist Kazan cooperated with the House Un-American
Activities Committee and named eight colleagues - a betrayal that still fueled resentment in 1999 when Kazan was awarded an
Honorary Oscar. What Id done was correct, he wrote in his autobiography, but was it right? This
issue - the theme of betrayal - shapes many Kazan films after 1952. At the same time, these works bear witness to a growing
cinematic expression, culminating in the lyrical masterpieces Wild River (1960) and Splendor in the Grass (1961), which in their unruly passion can be seen as harbingers of the New Hollywood. With the dark, independently financed
The Visitors (1972, based on his sons screenplay), Kazan returned once more to the subject of betrayal, this time against the backdrop
of the Vietnam War.
Despite his successes, Kazan always felt like an outsider. The son of Anatolian Greeks, Elia Kazancioğlu was born in Istanbul in 1909 and came to New York a few years later with his family. Kazans most personal
film, America, America (1963) presents the emigration of his uncle as the American (Immigrant) Dream. Kazan himself dreamt about film. After his
studies he joined an independent left-wing theatre company in New York, the Group Theater, starting out as an actor but soon turning into a leading Broadway director. His pioneering stage
creations include the original productions of Thornton Wilders Skin of Our Teeth, Arthur Millers Death of a Salesman and Tennessee Williams A Streetcar Named Desire.
1945 brought the long-awaited phone call from Hollywood: Kazan made his film debut with the coming-of-age story, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Underrated for many years, the film today is appreciated as one of his best. This was followed by studio contract work in
between stage triumphs: a few toothless message movies, but also two thrillers in which Kazan was able to film on location for the first time. His film adaptation of A Streetcar Named Desire still strove for a chamber play look, but later on, the atmospheric use of locations would become a key element of his style.
Like the recurring conflicts between generations in his films, the interplay between natural scenery and stage sets is typical
of the ambivalence of Kazans art. This also manifests in the clash between baroque cinematic effects and theatrical
methods - or in the contradiction between his affirmations of the dream factory and his longing for change. This
dichotomy is literally tangible: in his preference for over-the-top hothouse acting, in his penchant for controversial
subjects, and in the cavalcade of fresh faces that would renew cinema - James Dean in East of Eden (1955), Carroll Baker and Eli Wallach in the once-scandalous Baby Doll (1956), Lee Remick in Wild River or Warren Beatty in Splendor in the Grass. With his mix of the old and the new Kazan helped usher out the Hollywood studio system.
Kazans many balancing acts made him a Man on a Tightrope - the title of his 1953 film which can be understood as an attempt to prove his good, anti-communist stance right
after the McCarthy hearings. In a characteristic denial, Kazan later claimed it was Gerd Oswald, and not himself, who directed
the bulk of this film.
The Film Museum will screen a selection of Elia Kazans work, including three short films made in the pre-1945 context
of left-wing artists groups in New York. His screen tests with James Dean and the 1982 documentary, Elia Kazan: An Outsider, will also be shown.
Programme:
- A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945)
- America, America (1963)
- Baby Doll (1956)
- East of Eden (1955)
- Elia Kazan. An Outsider (1982)
- Elia Kazan: Vorher | Nachher
- It's Up to You (1944)
- James Dean Screen Tests (1954-55)
- Man on a Tightrope (1953)
- On the Waterfront (1954)
- People of the Cumberland (1937)
- Pie in the Sky (1935)
- Splendor in the Grass (1961)
- The Visitors (1972)
- Viva Zapata! (1952)
- Wild River (1960)

