Next month the BFI in
London will stage a season of films ahead of the great actor’s centenary in
December. Geoffrey Macnab looks back on a long and varied career
It is no surprise that Kirk
Douglas (who will be 100 in December) has out-lived almost all his
contemporaries. In his greatest roles on screen, the Hollywood star has always
played survivors. Whether he was cast as a Hollywood producer down on his luck
(The Bad And The Beautiful), an arrogant boxer getting his come-uppance (The
Champion), a seedy journalist looking for one last scoop to save his career
(Ace In The Hole) or the leader of a slaves’ revolt (Spartacus), his characters
have a relentless inner drive. They don’t give up. Look at any still of the
dimple-chinned actor, whether in a western, a melodrama or a gangster movie,
and his expression is always the same. His brow is furrowed. He is staring
defiantly and very fiercely at whatever is in front of him.
Last year, in the movie
Trumbo, about blacklisted Hollywood writer Dalton Trumbo, Douglas was portrayed
on screen as a young man by Dean O’Gorman. It was a skilled piece of mimicry.
O’Gorman looked very like Douglas and had clearly researched his role
exhaustively. What O’Gorman lacked, though, was the saturnine ferocity that
characterised the Hollywood legend and sometimes made him very frightening on
screen.
“I came from abject
poverty: there was nowhere to go but up,” Douglas once commented of his
transformation from ragman’s son to movie star. It was a statement of intent
that he never wavered from. He knew exactly where he was headed. You had the
sense he would trample on anyone who got in his way. At the same time, even
when he was playing heroic types, he was always keen to show us their darker,
more vicious side. Look, for example, at William Wyler’s Detective Story
(1951), in which he plays a New York detective called Jim McLeod. He is
clean-cut, handsome, popular and deeply in love with his young wife (Eleanor
Parker). It’s an overwrought and stagey movie, almost entirely set in the
police station, but has some extraordinary scenes late on after the detective
discovers his wife once had an abortion. The all-American hero turns into a
near psychopath in his rage and disgust at her betrayal. When he talks about
the “dirty pictures”, he sees in his mind, we quickly realise the depths of his
own self-loathing and capacity for violence. “I’d rather go to jail for 20
years than find out my wife was a tramp!” he yells at his most abject moment.
In interviews, Douglas
often talked about being drawn to play dark characters rather than the “nice
fella” on the grounds that “virtue is not photogenic”. Even when he is cast as
principled and heroic figures – for example, when he played the French officer
defending shell-shocked and traumatised soldiers accused of cowardice in
Stanley Kubrick’s First World War drama Paths Of Glory (1957) – he brings a
seething, restless quality to the role.
Douglas was born as Issur
Danielovich in Amsterdam, New York. His parents were immigrants who had fled to
the US from Belarus to escape anti-Jewish pogroms. They changed their name to
Demsky. (Douglas as a kid was known as Izzy Demsky.) The actor’s biography
reads like the typical all-American wish fulfilment fantasy. The ragman’s son
who grew up in dire poverty discovered his knack for acting at high school. He
took countless menial jobs (including a stint as a carnival wrestler) so that
he could afford to get himself into college. From there, he landed a
scholarship at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.
His big break came courtesy
of fellow student Lauren Bacall who (after she was established in Hollywood
herself.) She recommended that producer Hal Wallis check him out. Wallis
watched him on Broadway and promptly signed up Douglas to appear opposite
Barbara Stanwyck in Lewis Milestone’s film noir The Strange Love Of Martha
Ivers (1946). He wasn’t playing the romantic lead. His role was as Stanwyck’s needy,
browbeaten, alcoholic husband but that familiar neurotic energy was already in
evidence. Douglas very quickly landed eye-catching roles in films such as Out
Of The Past and I Walk Alone (the first film in which he appeared on screen
with Burt Lancaster). Within a decade, he was established as a big Hollywood
star and had won Oscar nominations for Champion, Lust For Life and The Bad And
The Beautiful.
As a screen actor, Douglas
straddles two different traditions. He arrived in Hollywood when the old-style
studio system was in its last throes and appeared opposite very glamorous stars
such as Bacall, Linda Darnell, Jane Greer and Ann Sothern. At the same time, he
had a febrile, introspective quality which allied him with the new generation
of Method actors. In one of his most famous roles, as Van Gogh in Vincente
Minnelli’s Lust For Life, he admitted that he “became so immersed in his
tortured life that it was hard to pull back”. His wife grumbled that he was so
obsessed with the part that he “came home in that big red beard of Van Gogh’s,
wearing those big boots, stomping around the house, it was frightening”.
Douglas had his own production company. He stood up against the Hollywood
anti-communist blacklist by hiring Dalton Trumbo to script Spartacus. He worked
with the very best directors of his era, among them Kubrick, Billy Wilder,
Howard Hawks, Minnelli, Joseph L Mankiewicz and Elia Kazan.
I once attended a press
conference Douglas gave when picking up a lifetime achievement award at the
Berlin Film Festival. He seemed very frail. He had survived a helicopter crash
that killed two other passengers. He had had a stroke and his speech had been
affected. Feelings of pity that anyone might have felt for him were very
quickly swept away. Even in late old age, he was as fiery, combative and as
witty as ever – and he knew just how to play an audience. His eyes still had
that same gimlet-eyed ferocity. Just as at the start of his career, he gave the
sense that he knew exactly where he was going and that no one was going to stop
him from getting there.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/kirk-douglas-100th-birthday-what-made-him-such-a-distinctive-star-a7197346.html
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