Joseph Walton Losey III (; January 14, 1909 – June 22, 1984) was an American film and theatre director, producer, and screenwriter. Born in Wisconsin, he studied in Germany with Bertolt Brecht and then returned to the United States. Blacklisted by Hollywood in the 1950s, he moved to Europe where he made the remainder of his films, mostly in the United Kingdom.
Among the most critically and commercially successful were the three films with screenplays by Harold Pinter: The Servant (1963), Accident (1967), and The Go-Between (1971).Sanjek, 2002: “The artistry and effort illustrated in particular by the trilogy that Losey produced along with Harold Pinter – Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1970) in addition to The Servant (1963)".Maras, 2012: “His three films with Pinter, and The Servant in particular, are aesthetically assured and unsettling works and well worth watching.” His 1976 film Monsieur Klein won the César Awards for Best Film and Best Director. Other notable films included The Boy with Green Hair (1948), Eva (1962), King & Country (1964), Modesty Blaise (1966), Figures in a Landscape (1970), A Doll's House (1973), Galileo (1975), and Don Giovanni (1979). Though drubbed by critics and a box office failure, Boom! (1968) was sometimes cited by Losey as his personal favorite,Hirsch, 1980, p. 167 and Tennessee Willams considered it the best movie adaptation of one of his plays. The film starred Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, both of whom worked with Losey again, Taylor in Secret Ceremony (1968) and Burton in The Assassination of Trotsky (1972).
He was also a four-time nominee for both the italic=no (winning once) and the Golden Lion, and a two-time BAFTA nominee.
Losey became a major figure in New York City political theatre, first directing the controversial failure Little Old Boy in 1933. He declined to direct a staged version of Dodsworth by Sinclair Lewis, which led Lewis to offer him his first work written for the stage, Jayhawker. Losey directed the show, which had a brief run. Bosley Crowther in The New York Times noted that "The play, being increasingly wordy, presents staging problems that Joe Losey's direction does not always solve. It is hard to tell who is responsible for the obscure parts in the story."
He visited the Soviet Union for several months in 1935, to study the Russian stage. In Moscow he participated in a seminar on film taught by Sergei Eisenstein.See Michel Ciment: Conversations with Losey. London New York: Methuen, 1985, p. 37. He also met Bertolt Brecht and the composer Hanns Eisler, who were visiting Moscow at the time.See Robert Cohen: "Bertolt Brecht, Joseph Losey, and Brechtian Cinema", in "Escape to Life": German Intellectuals in New York: A Compendium on Exile after 1933. Eckart Goebel and Sigrid Weigel (eds.). De Gruyter, 2012. 142–161, here p. 144 ff.
In 1936, he directed Triple-A Plowed Under on Broadway theatre, a production of the Works Progress Administration's Federal Theatre Project. He then directed the second Living Newspaper presentation, Injunction Granted.
Losey served in the U.S. military during World War II and was discharged in 1945. Joseph Losey, American movie director, dies United Press International. Retrieved October 27, 2021. From 1946 to 1947, Losey worked with Bertolt Brecht—who was living in exile in Los Angeles—and Charles Laughton on the preparations for the staging of Brecht's play Galileo ( Life of Galileo) which he and Brecht eventually co-directed with Laughton in the title role, and with music by Eisler. The play premiered on July 30, 1947, at the Coronet Theatre in Beverly Hills.See Cohen, "Bertolt Brecht, Joseph Losey", p. 149. On October 30, 1947, Losey accompanied Brecht to Washington D.C. for Brecht's appearance before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Brecht left the US the following day. Losey went on to stage Galileo, again with Laughton in the title role, in New York City where it opened on December 7, 1947, at the Maxine Elliott Theatre. More than 25 years later Losey, in exile in England, directed a film version of Brecht's play Galileo (1975).
Losey's first feature film was a political allegory titled The Boy with Green Hair (1947), starring Dean Stockwell as Peter, a war orphan who is subject to ridicule after he awakens one morning to find his hair mysteriously turned green.
Seymour Nebenzal, the producer of Fritz Lang's classic M (1931), hired Losey to direct a remake set in Los Angeles rather than Berlin. In the new version, released in 1951, the killer's name was changed from Hans Beckert to Martin W. Harrow. Nebenzal's son Harold was associate producer of this version.
Losey had also worked on the Federal Theatre Project, long a target of HUAC. Losey directed the play Triple-A Plowed Under, which been denounced by HUAC's antecedent, the Dies Committee, as communist propaganda. His Hollywood collaborators included a long list of other HUAC targets, including Dalton Trumbo and Ring Lardner Jr.
Losey's first wife Elizabeth Hawes worked with a wide range of communists and anticommunist liberals at the radical newspaper PM. After their divorce in 1944, she wrote about working as a union organizer just after World War II, where "one preferred the Communists to the Red-Baiters." At some point, probably early in the 1940s, the FBI maintained dossiers on both Losey and Hawes, and that of Losey charged that he was a agent as of 1945.
In 1946, Losey joined the Communist Party USA. He later explained to a French interviewer:
Losey was under a long-term contract with Dore Schary at RKO when Howard Hughes purchased the company in 1948 and began purging it of leftists. Losey later explained how Hughes tested employees to determine whether they had communist sympathies:
Hughes responded by holding Losey to his contract without assigning him any work. In mid-1949, Schary persuaded Hughes to release Losey, who soon began working as an independent on The Lawless for Paramount Pictures. Soon he was working on a three-picture contract with Stanley Kramer. His name was mentioned by two witnesses before HUAC in the spring of 1951. Losey's attorney suggested arranging a deal with the committee for testimony in secret. Instead, Losey abandoned his work editing The Big Night and left for Europe while his ex-wife Louise departed for Mexico a few days later. HUAC took weeks to try unsuccessfully to serve them with a subpoena compelling their testimony.
After more than a year working on Stranger on the Prowl in Italy, Losey returned to the U.S. on October 12, 1952. He found himself unemployable:
He returned briefly to Rome and settled in London on January 4, 1953.
His films covered a wide range from the British Regency melodrama The Gypsy and the Gentleman (1958) to the gangster film for Cohen, The Criminal (1960).
Losey was also originally slated to direct the Hammer Films production X the Unknown (1956), but after a few days' work the star Dean Jagger refused to work with a supposed Communist sympathiser and Losey was removed from the project. An alternative version is that Losey was replaced due to illness. Losey was later hired by Hammer Films to direct The Damned, a 1962 British science fiction film based on H.L. Lawrence's novel "The Children of Light".
In the 1960s, Losey began working with playwright Harold Pinter, in what became a long friendship and initiated a successful screenwriting career for Pinter. Losey directed three enduring classics based on Pinter's screenplays: The Servant (1963), Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1971).Maras, 2012: “ His most acclaimed and influential films—The Servant, Accident and The Go-Between—were made in the 1960s and early 1970s in collaboration with British playwright Harold Pinter.”
The Servant won three British Academy Film Awards. Accident won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury award at the 1967 Cannes Film Festival. The Go-Between won the Golden Palm Award at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival, four prizes at the 1972 BAFTA awards, and Best British Screenplay at the 1972 Writers' Guild of Great Britain awards."IMDb: Awards for The Go-Between"
Although Losey's films are generally naturalistic, The Servants hybridisation of Losey's signature Baroque style, film noir, naturalism and expressionism, and both Accidents and The Go-Betweens radical cinematography, use of montage, voice over and musical score, amount to a sophisticated construction of cinematic time and narrative perspective that edges this work in the direction of neorealist cinema. All three films are marked by Pinter's sparse, elliptical and enigmatically subtextual dialogue, something Losey often develops a visual correlate for (and occasionally even works against) by means of dense and cluttered mise-en-scène and peripatetic camera work.
In 1966, Losey directed Modesty Blaise, a comedy spy-fi film produced in the United Kingdom and released worldwide in 1966. Sometimes considered a James Bond parody, it was based loosely on the popular comic strip Modesty Blaise by Peter O'Donnell.'
Losey directed Robert Shaw and Malcolm McDowell in the British action film Figures in a Landscape (1970), adapted by Shaw from the novel by Barry England. The film was shot in various locations in Spain.
Losey also worked with Pinter on The Proust Screenplay (1972), an adaptation of A la recherche du temps perdu by Marcel Proust. Losey died before the project's financing could be assembled.
In 1975, Losey realized a long-planned film adaptation of Brecht's Galileo released as Life of Galileo starring Chaim Topol. Galileo was produced as part of the subscription film series of the American Film Theatre, but shot in the UK. In the context of this production, Losey also made a half-hour film based on Galileo's life.
Losey's Monsieur Klein (1976) examined the day in Occupied France when Jews in and around Paris were arrested for deportation. He said he so completely rejected naturalism in film that in this case he divided his shooting schedule into three "visual categories": Unreality, Reality and Abstract. He demonstrated a facility for working in the French language and Monsieur Klein (1976) gave Alain Delon as star and producer one of French cinema's earliest chances to highlight the background to the infamous Vel' d'Hiv Roundup of French Jews in July 1942.
In 1979, Losey filmed Mozart's opera Don Giovanni, shot in Villa La Rotonda and the Veneto region of Italy; this film was nominated for several César Awards in 1980, including Best Director.
Dartmouth College, his alma mater, awarded Losey an honorary degree in 1973. In 1983, the University of Wisconsin–Madison did the same.
Losey married four times and divorced thrice. He married Elizabeth Hawes on July 24, 1937. They had a son, Gavrik Losey, in 1938, but divorced in 1944. Gavrik helped with the production on some of his father's films. Gavrik's two sons are film directors Marek Losey and Luke Losey.
Later in 1944, Losey married Louise Stuart; they divorced in 1953. From 1956 to 1963, Losey was married to British actress Dorothy Bromiley. They had a son, Joshua Losey, born on July 16, 1957, who became an actor. On September 29, 1970, Losey married Patricia Mohan in King's Lynn, Norfolk, shortly after finishing shooting The Go-Between.See David Caute: Joseph Losey: A Revenge on Life. London: Faber and Faber, 1994, p. 248. Patricia Losey went on to adapt Lorenzo Da Ponte's opera libretto for Losey's Don Giovanni and Nell Dunn's play for Steaming.
He died from cancer at his home in Chelsea, London, on June 22, 1984, aged 75, four weeks after completing his last film.
In Guilty by Suspicion, Irwin Winkler's 1991 film about the Hollywood blacklist, McCarthyism, and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee, Martin Scorsese plays an American filmmaker named "Joe Lesser" who leaves Hollywood for England rather than face HUAC investigations. The fictional director played by Scorsese is based on Joseph Losey.
Feature films
Politics and exile
Career in Europe
/ref> Each of the three films examines the politics of class and sexuality in England at the end of the 19th century ( The Go-Between) and in the 1960s. In The Servant, a manservant facilitates the moral and psychological degradation of his privileged and rich employer. Accident explores male lust, hypocrisy and ennui among the educated middle class as two Oxford University tutors competitively objectify a student against the backdrop of their seemingly idyllic lives. In The Go-Between, a young middle-class boy, the summer guest of an upper-class family, becomes the messenger for an affair between a working-class farmer and the daughter of his hosts.
Personal life
Filmography
1939 Pete Roleum and His CousinsWhile Losey has been credited as the director of Pete Roleum and his Cousins , Helen van Dongen wrote that he was its producer, and that she had directed and edited the film. See 1941 Youth Gets a Break A Child Went Forth Also producer and writer 1945 A Gun in His Hand 1947 Leben des Galilei 1955 A Man on the Beach 1959 First on the Road Promotional short for the launch of the Ford Anglia 1948 The Boy with Green Hair Feature directorial debut 1950 The Lawless 1951 M The Prowler The Big Night 1952 Stranger on the Prowl First non-American film 1954 The Sleeping Tiger 1956 The Intimate Stranger 1957 Time Without Pity 1958 The Gypsy and the Gentleman 1959 Blind Date 1960 The Criminal 1962 Eva The Damned 1963 The Servant 1964 King & Country 1966 Modesty Blaise 1967 Accident 1968 Boom Secret Ceremony 1970 Figures in a Landscape 1971 The Go-Between 1972 The Assassination of Trotsky 1973 A Doll's House 1975 The Romantic Englishwoman Galileo 1976 Monsieur Klein 1978 Roads to the South 1979 Don Giovanni 1982 La Truite 1985 Steaming
Theatre credits
1933 Little Ol' Boy Playhouse Theatre, New York 1934 A Bride for the Unicorn Brattleboro Theater, Cambridge Jayhawker National Theatre, Washington, D.C. Garrick Theatre, Philadelphia Cort Theatre Gods of the Lightning Peabody Theater, Boston 1935 Waiting for Lefty Moscow 1936 Hymn to the Rising Sun Fourteenth Street Theatre, New York Conjur Man Dies Lafayette Theatre, New York Triple-A Plowed Under Biltmore Theatre, New York Federal Theatre Project production Who Fights This Battle? Delaney Hotel, Hoosick 1938 Sunup to Sundown Hudson Theatre, New York 1947 The Great Campaign Princess Theatre, New York 1947-48 Life of Galileo Maxine Elliott's Theatre, New York 1954 The Wooden Dish Phoenix Theatre, London 1955 The Night of the Ball Noël Coward Theatre, London 1975 Waiting for Lefty Hopkins Center for the Arts, Hanover 1980 Boris Godunov Paris Opera
Other productions
Awards and nominations
British Academy Film Award 1968 Outstanding British Film Accident 1972 Best Direction The Go-Between Cahiers du Cinéma 1964 Top 10 Films of the Year The Servant Cannes Film Festival 1962 italic=no Eva 1966 Modesty Blaise 1967 Accident 1971 The Go-Between 1976 Monsieur Klein César Awards 1977 Best Film Best Director 1980 Best Film Don Giovanni Best Director Nastro d'Argento 1966 Best Foreign Director King & Country The Servant 1972 The Go-Between New York Film Critics Circle 1964 Best Director The Servant San Sebastián International Film Festival 1954 Golden Shell The Sleeping Tiger Sant Jordi Awards 1972 Best Foreign Film The Go-Between Taormina Film Fest 1978 Golden Charybdis Roads to the South Venice Film Festival 1962 Golden Lion Eva 1963 The Servant 1964 King & Country 1982 La Truite
Footnotes
Sources
Accessed 12 October, 2024.
Accessed 10 October, 2024.
Further reading
External links
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