Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, on February 11, 1909, Joseph Leo
Mankiewicz first worked for the movies as a translator of intertitles,
employed by Paramount in Berlin, the UFA's American distributor at the
time (1928). He became a dialoguist, then a screenwriter on numerous
Paramount productions in Hollywood, most of them Jack Oakie vehicles.
Still in his 20s, he produced first-class MGM films, including The Philadelphia Story (1940).
Having left Metro after a dispute with studio chief Louis B. Mayer over
Judy Garland, he then worked for Darryl F. Zanuck at 20th Century-Fox, producing
The Keys of the Kingdom (1944), when Ernst Lubitsch's illness first brought him to the director's
chair for Canavar Yatağı (1946). Mankiewicz directed 20 films in a 26-year period,
successfully attempted every kind of movie from Shakespeare adaptation
to western, from urban sociological drama to musical, from epic film
with thousands of extras to a two-character picture. 3 Kadına Bir Mektup (1949) and
Perde Açılıyor (1950) brought him wide recognition along with two Academy Awards for
each as a writer and a director, seven years after his elder brother
Herman J. Mankiewicz won Best Screenplay for Yurttaş Kane (1941). His more intimate films like
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947), Çıplak ayaklı kontes (1954)--his only original screenplay--and Bal kutusu (1967) are major
artistic achievements as well, showing Mankiewicz as a witty
dialoguist, a master in the use of flashback and a talented actors'
director (he favored English actors and had in Rex Harrison a kind of
alter-ego on the screen).
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