Sir David Lean, KBE (March 25, 1908 – April 16, 1991) was a British film director, best remembered for big-screen epics such as Lawrence of Arabia, The Bridge on the River Kwai and Doctor Zhivago . He was voted 9th best director of all time in the BFI "Directors Top Directors" poll 2002.
He was born in Croydon, Surrey to Francis William le Blount Lean and the former Helena Tangye. His parents were Quakers and he was a pupil at the Quaker-founded Leighton Park School in Reading.
Lean started at the bottom, as a clapperboard assistant. By 1930 he was working as an editor on newsreels, including Gaumont Pictures and Movietone. His career in feature films began with Escape Me Never in 1935.
He went on to edit Gabriel Pascal's film productions of two George Bernard Shaw plays, Pygmalion (1938) and Major Barbara (1941), and Powell & Pressburger's Forty-Ninth Parallel (1941) and One of our Aircraft is Missing (1942).
His first work as a director was in partnership with Noel Coward on In Which We Serve (1942), and he went on to adapt several of Coward's plays into successful films. These included This Happy Breed (1944), Blithe Spirit (1945) and Brief Encounter (1945). These were followed by two celebrated Charles Dickens adaptations of Great Expectations (1946) and Oliver Twist (1948), as well as The Sound Barrier (1952) a collaboration with the playwright Terence Rattigan, and Hobson's Choice (1954) a stylish comic update of King Lear set in Victorian Manchester, and based on the play by Harold Brighouse.
Summertime (1955), marked a new direction in for Lean. Filmed in colour, it was shot entirely on ___location in Venice. U.S.-financed, the film starred Katharine Hepburn as a middle-aged American woman who has a romance while on holiday in Venice.
In the following years, Lean went on to make the blockbusters for which he is best known: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), for which he won an Academy Award, followed by another for Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Doctor Zhivago (1965) was another major hit, but after the moderately successful Ryan's Daughter in 1970, he did not direct another film until A Passage to India (1984), which would be his last. He was knighted in 1984.
He was in the midst of planning an epic production of Joseph Conrad's Nostromo when he died from cancer, aged 83. Marlon Brando, Paul Scofield and Dennis Quaid were set to star in the film before Lean's death. The director was Quaid's favorite of all time.
Nostromo would eventually be made as a BBC mini-series.
Lean was married six times, and divorced five — his last wife survived him:
Trivia
- Peter O'Toole's performance as an eccentric filmmaker in 1980's The Stunt Man was loosely based on Lean, who directed him in Lawrence of Arabia.
- Lean was a long-term resident of Limehouse, East London. His home on Narrow Street is still owned by his family.
- Often cited John Ford as one of his favorite directors, and used that director's The Searchers (1956) in particular as a reference point while shooting his epic films (e.g. Lawrence and Zhivago).
- A favorite director of Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, George Lucas, and innumerable others. Lucas has referenced his films (Lawrence in particular) throughout his Star Wars film series.
Filmography
- In Which We Serve (1942)
- This Happy Breed (1944)
- Blithe Spirit (1945)
- Brief Encounter (1945)
- Great Expectations (1946)
- Oliver Twist (1948)
- The Passionate Friends (1949)
- Madelein (1950)
- The Sound Barrier (1952)
- Hobson's Choice (1954)
- Summertime (1955)
- The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
- Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
- Doctor Zhivago (1965)
- Ryan's Daughter (1970)
- A Passage to India (1984)
Quotation
"I wouldn't take the advice of a lot of so-called critics on how to shoot a close-up of a teapot."
References
- Kevin Brownlow, David Lean, Faber & Faber, 1997.