DGA Magazine VOL 29-2 - July 2004 - click here to return to Table of Contents
DGA Magazine VOL 28-3: September 2003
–by Jerry Roberts
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Legendary director Elia Kazan. - click image for larger view.
To hear his filmmaker son tell it, the late, great Elia Kazan had uncommon lifelong appreciation for three of his own special projects: the iconic labor-union hymn On the Waterfront (1954), the acute indictment of television-bred fame featuring Andy Griffith as A Face in the Crowd (1957) and the director's highly personal reflection of the immigrant experience, America, America (1963).

"Those three movies, he watched every week," Nicolas Kazan told the April 21 gathering in Theater 1 of the Directors Guild of America to commemorate the work of the DGA's Special Projects Committee. " 'Stick around,' he would say. 'Tomorrow, we're running A Face in the Crowd.' ... Of A Streetcar Named Desire, he said, 'Too much talking — I could have told this story in 20 minutes.' "

One concept to which the elder Kazan never gave short shrift was that of the Special Projects Committee, which he invented and nurtured during the stewardship of former DGA President Robert Wise in the early 1970s. "This very idea of Special Projects was the inspiration of Elia Kazan," the committee's current chair, Jeremy Kagan, told the gathering prior to a screening of A Face in the Crowd.

DGA Special Projects Committee Chair Jeremy Kagan. - photo by Joe Coomber - click image for larger view.
Kagan then quoted from Kazan's much anthologized 1973 talk "On What Makes a Director," inventorying the vocations and attributes that blend into the creative force and nature of directing on a film or television set. Kazan's words, channeled through Kagan, reiterated the specialties: "...a poet of the camera ... an outfielder for his legs ... the cunning of a trader in a Baghdad bazaar ... animal trainer ... great host ... the kindness of an old-fashioned mother who forgives all .... a jewel thief ... the blarney of a PR man ... A very thick skin. A very sensitive soul. Simultaneously. ... fortitude of a saint ... pure doggedness ... above all — courage... One final thing. The ability to say, 'I am wrong...'"

The fact of the matter was that Kazan had to have been right most of the time when it came to making movies. He won the DGA Award for Best Feature Film Directing for On the Waterfront and Academy Awards for directing it and Gentlemen's Agreement (1947).

He also won an honorary Oscar in 1999 and the DGA's Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987. Kazan won over the critics too. Among them is Guild member Richard Schickel, whose forthcoming book and documentary projects are on Kazan.

Richard Schickel, and Elia's son Nicolas Kazan. - photo by Joe Coomber - click image for larger view.
"[Kazan] took the work seriously, but never took himself all that seriously," Schickel said, and added that America, America was Kazan's favorite film, because it was "full of the promise of America," a concept that "influenced everything he did." Schickel emphasized that Kazan never lost the conviction that an immigrant kid like himself could rise to prominence.

Kazan had influence beyond filmmaking per se in several ways. One of which was co-founding the Actors Studio in 1948 with Robert Lewis, which led to the changing of approach to acting techniques on a worldwide basis and the rise of Method performing, particularly via Marlon Brando and James Dean in Kazan films.

The Special Projects Committee is another influential innovation. As the "film generation" of the 1960s evolved, Kazan envisioned art-house programming brought under the umbrella activities of the Guild to showcase its members' talents and accomplishments. The thorny auteur theory — that the director is, for all intents and purposes, any film's central creator — was crystallizing in critical quarters, and new attention was being bestowed on such Hollywood masters as John Ford, Howard Hawks, Orson Welles, George Stevens, Frank Capra and others.

"It seems to me that the Guild is essentially an organization of artists," Kazan said during the formulation of Special Projects. "It has an obligation to inspire its every member to better work.... The Guild keeps the pride of its members alive, and that pride is the pride in their craft and their work, in their profession."

Richard Schickel, Nicolas Kazan and Jeremy Kagan. - photo by Joe Coomber - click image for larger view.
One of the functions of Special Projects has always been the obligation to keep alive the memories of directors' perhaps lesser heralded stepchildren. Kazan has been widely praised for his roundly regarded great films, including Viva Zapata! (1952), East of Eden (1955) and Splendor in the Grass (1961). But one of his later pictures that revisionist critics champion as among his best, even though it was not a great hit in its time, is A Face in the Crowd.

"This is an enormously prescient film," said DGA director member Schickel, also a longtime film critic of Time magazine. "Television had reached critical mass in this country. One of the reasons that Kazan loved this film so much was that it had as its central figure this attractive, wonderful figure who had never been known as an actor. Andy Griffith had been a singer of pop songs and yet to be sheriff of Mayberry. One of the characteristics of Elia Kazan was this belief that anybody could act. It was just a matter of inspiring them and letting them rip."

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click on links for more information about the directors in this story courtesy of IMDB.com


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