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Press Release | Reviews
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"When the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences decided to give
Kazan (1909–2003) an honorary Oscar in 1999, it rekindled the lingering
resentment over his testimony before the House Un-American Activities
Committee nearly 50 years earlier. Schickel, who produced a short film
for the Academy's presentation and covered the controversy in his role
as Time's movie critic, has virtually no sympathy for Kazan's
detractors, arguing that HUAC was "a harsh and permanent fact of
American life" in the early Cold War era and, more importantly, that
Kazan was testifying against Stalinists, not innocent liberals. He also
observes that Kazan's early efforts at self-defense may ironically have
worked against him, sealing his image in the public eye. The
biography's main goal, however, is to restore Kazan's artistic
achievements to their rightful prominence in his life story. Working
with the director's extensive production notes, Schickel traces Kazan's
rise from a fledgling actor in the Method-touting ensemble the Group
Theatre to his creative pinnacle presenting Tennessee Williams on
Broadway while making films like 1954's On the Waterfront. Despite
Schickel's friendship with his subject, this analysis is unsparingly
thorough, to the point where Schickel's forceful, personalized
criticism becomes as attention grabbing as Kazan's body of work."
-- Publishers Weekly
"From the end of World War II to the early 1960s, director Elia Kazan
(1909-2003) had an unparalleled string of triumphs on the Broadway
stage and in Hollywood. A former actor, he worked with some of
America's most gifted playwrights--Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams,
and William Inge--and showcased the talents of Marlon Brando, James
Dean, and Montgomery Clift. Kazan also reluctantly named names before
the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1952--an act that
earned him the enmity of his colleagues and later started a firestorm
of controversy when he was awarded a lifetime achievement Oscar in
1998. Drawing on years of friendship with Kazan, as well as access to
the director's thoughtful, meticulous production notes, esteemed movie
critic and film scholar Schickel (D.W. Griffith: An American Life )
perceptively weighs each Kazan production, reserving the most space for
key works like the stage productions of Death of a Salesman and A
Streetcar Named Desire and overlooked or forgotten films like Viva
Zapata! and Wild River . Kazan's lifelong attachment to his identity as
a first-generation immigrant, his views on the theater's role in
promoting social change, and, of course, the still relevant argument of
whether Kazan should have cooperated with HUAC are also addressed. This
masterly meditation on a complex, conflicted, and underappreciated
director deserves a place on the shelf beside Kazan's autobiography,
Elia Kazan: A Life . One of the year's best biographies; highly
recommended for all collections on stage and screen history."
-- The Library Journal
"Both effusive and enigmatic, brazen and insecure, legendary director
Elia Kazan is best known for bringing the emotional realism of
mid-twentieth-century New York theater to the silver screen. But, in
1999, the accomplishments of the Greek immigrant and founding member of
the Actors Studio were overshadowed by the controversy surrounding his
Honorary Academy Award. (In 1952, some 15 years after abandoning the
Communist Party, Kazan "named names" before the House Committee on
Un-American Activities.) In this sympathetic, scrupulously researched
biography, film scholar and Time critic Schickel examines the career of
the directorial tour de force whose dossier includes Tony Award winner
Death of a Salesman, On the Waterfront (for which he earned the Best
Director Oscar), and stage and screen versions of A Streetcar Named
Desire. Kazan's purpose, said playwright and best friend Arthur Miller,
was always "to hit the audience in the belly because he knows all
people are alike in the belly, no matter what their social position or
education." Though Schickel's book focuses on the professional opus of
Kazan (who died in 2003), the author also vividly conveys the
director's potent personality: his exuberance, relentless work ethic,
and frank assessments of the fleeting nature of fame. "
-- Booklist
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