Mark Robson

American director
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Mark Robson (born December 4, 1913, Montreal, Quebec, Canada—died June 20, 1978, London, England) was a Canadian-born American filmmaker who directed the boxing classics Champion (1949) and The Harder They Fall (1956) as well as such commercial blockbusters as Peyton Place (1957) and Valley of the Dolls (1967).

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Early work

After he attended the University of California, Los Angeles, Robson began working in Twentieth Century-Fox’s property department. In the early 1940s he became an assistant editor at RKO, working (uncredited) on Orson Welles’s first two films, Citizen Kane (1941) and The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). Robson’s first solo editor credit was for The Falcon’s Brother (1942). Producer Val Lewton then hired him to edit director Jacques Tourneur’s Cat People (1942), a hugely successful B-grade horror film. After he edited the atmospheric Journey into Fear, another project with Welles (who cowrote and acted in the thriller), Robson worked on I Walked with a Zombie (1943) and The Leopard Man (1943), both of which were directed by Tourneur and produced by Lewton.

Directing

In 1943 Lewton gave Robson his first directorial assignment, The Seventh Victim, an eerie tale of witchcraft set in New York City’s Greenwich Village. Robson made several other horror films for Lewton, including The Ghost Ship (1943), Isle of the Dead (1945), and Bedlam (1946); the latter two starred Boris Karloff. Robson did not direct again until 1949. That year he made two pictures for Stanley Kramer’s production company, Screen Plays Inc.: Champion and Home of the Brave. The former starred Kirk Douglas in an Academy Award-nominated performance as a ruthless boxer. Considered a classic by many, the film, which was based on a Ring Lardner story, helped establish Douglas as a star. Home of the Brave was an adaptation of Arthur Laurents’s play, with James Edwards as an African American soldier who is ostracized and harassed by fellow servicemen. Its unforgiving exploration of racism was daring for its time, and the film garnered critical praise.

Robson returned to RKO for Roughshod, a western that was a showcase for Gloria Grahame, and My Foolish Heart (both 1949), which was adapted from the short story “Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut” by J.D. Salinger; the author was reportedly so displeased with the sentimental romance that he refused to allow his other works to be made into films.

Films of the 1950s

Robson began the decade with Edge of Doom (1950), a grim film noir about religious belief and social inequality that was a commercial disappointment; Farley Granger starred as an unstable man who becomes distraught over the death of his mother and kills a priest who refuses to provide a costly funeral. Granger was better in the Korean War drama I Want You, and the critically acclaimed Bright Victory (both 1951) featured Arthur Kennedy as a blinded soldier adjusting to civilian life. In 1953 Robson directed Return to Paradise, an adaptation of a James Michener novel, with Gary Cooper as a drifter. The following year the director made a rare foray into comedy with Phffft; it starred Jack Lemmon and Judy Holliday as a couple that rue their recent divorce. The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), from a Michener novel, was a popular Korean War tale starring William Holden as a navy bomber pilot recalled to active duty, much to the dismay of his wife (played by Grace Kelly). Robson next made A Prize of Gold (1955), an action drama that featured Richard Widmark as an army sergeant stationed in Berlin who helps steal a shipment of gold to help relocate a group of war orphans.

Robson returned to more socially conscious fare with Trial (1955), a courtroom drama about a Mexican teenager who is accused of raping and killing a white girl; it starred Glenn Ford as a defense attorney and Katy Jurado as the boy’s mother. The caustic The Harder They Fall (1956) was Robson’s acclaimed adaptation of Budd Schulberg’s novel about corruption in boxing; it was based on the life of Primo Carnera. Humphrey Bogart (in his final film) gave a celebrated performance as an unemployed sportswriter who becomes a publicist for a shady promoter (Rod Steiger). Less successful was the romantic comedy The Little Hut (1957), which starred Granger, Ava Gardner, and David Niven as shipwreck survivors who are stranded on a desert island.

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Robson rebounded with Peyton Place (1957), an adaptation of Grace Metalious’s best-selling novel about the scandals in a small New England town. Most of the work’s sensationalistic elements—notably sadomasochism, incest, and abortion—were toned down or eliminated from the film version. Nevertheless, the novel’s many fans flocked to the theaters, making the melodrama one of year’s top-grossing films. In addition, it drew critical praise, earning nine Oscar nominations, including ones for best picture and actress (Lana Turner). Robson also received an Oscar nod for his direction. He shifted gears with Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958), a fact-based drama that starred Ingrid Bergman as an English missionary leading a group of children out of China just before World War II; with it, Robson earned another Academy Award nomination for best director.

Later films

In 1960 Robson directed From the Terrace, an adaptation of John O’Hara’s novel about an businessman (Paul Newman) whose career ambitions wreak havoc on his personal life; Joanne Woodward and Myrna Loy also starred in the film. Next was Nine Hours to Rama (1963), an ambitious drama about the events leading up to Gandhi’s assassination. Robson reteamed with Newman on The Prize (1963), a political thriller adapted from Irving Wallace’s sensationalist best seller. Von Ryan’s Express (1965) was one of Frank Sinatra’s better films, a well-paced World War II adventure about an escape from a POW camp. Robson had less success with Lost Command (1966), a drama about the Algerian War, starring Anthony Quinn, George Segal, and Alain Delon.

Robson next directed Valley of the Dolls (1967), a melodrama based on Jacqueline Susann’s salacious best seller about the personal and professional struggles of three women. Although widely panned, the film was a box-office hit, and it developed a cult following for its campy quality, especially the over-the-top performances by Patty Duke, Barbara Parkins, Sharon Tate, Susan Hayward, and Joey Bishop. Daddy’s Gone a-Hunting (1969), a small suspense film, earned less attention, and Happy Birthday, Wanda June (1971) was a flawed adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s play, with Steiger as a big-game hunter who returns home after having been missing in the Amazon for eight years. The low-budget Limbo (1972) was notable for being among the first films about the Vietnam War to explore its impact on the home front.

Robson returned to more-commercial fare with Earthquake (1974), a disaster film set in Los Angeles. With its Oscar-winning special effects and an all-star cast that included Gardner and Charlton Heston, the film was a huge box-office hit. Robson’s last film was Avalanche Express (1979), a Cold War thriller that starred Lee Marvin and Robert Shaw. During postproduction work on the movie, Robson suffered a fatal heart attack.

Michael Barson