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Joseph L. Mankiewicz

AKA: Joseph Leo Mankiewicz
Birthday: 1909-02-11
Died: 1993-02-05
Birthplace: Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, USA


Joseph Leo Mankiewicz (/ˈmæŋkəwɪts/ MANG-kə-wits; February 11, 1909 – February 5, 1993) was an American filmmaker. A four-time Academy Award winner, he is best known for his witty and literate dialogue and his preference for voice-over narration and narrative flashbacks. Also known as an actor's director, Mankiewicz directed several prominent actors, including Bette Davis, Humphrey Bogart and Elizabeth Taylor, to several of their memorable onscreen performances. Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Mankiewicz studied at Columbia University and graduated in 1928. He moved overseas to Europe, where he worked as a foreign correspondent for the Chicago Tribune and translated German intertitles into English for UFA. On the advice of his screenwriter brother Herman, Mankiewicz moved back to the United States, and was hired by Paramount Pictures as a dialogue writer. He then became a screenwriter, writing for numerous films starring Jack Oakie. He next moved to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), where he served as a producer for several films, including The Philadelphia Story (1940) and Woman of the Year (1942). Mankiewicz left MGM after a dispute with Louis B. Mayer. In 1944, Mankiewicz began working for Twentieth Century-Fox, where he produced The Keys of the Kingdom (1944). He made his directorial debut with Dragonwyck (1946) after Ernst Lubitsch had dropped out due to illness. Mankiewicz remained at Fox, directing a broad range of genre films. Consecutively, in 1950 and 1951, he won two Academy Awards each for writing and directing A Letter to Three Wives (1949) and All About Eve (1950). In 1953, Mankiewicz formed his own production company Figaro, where he independently produced, as well as wrote and directed, The Barefoot Contessa (1954) and The Quiet American (1958). In 1961, Mankiewicz took over direction from Rouben Mamoulian for Cleopatra (1963). Production was beset with numerous difficulties, including a heavily publicized extramarital affair between stars Taylor and Richard Burton. Relatively late into production, Darryl F. Zanuck reassumed control of Fox as studio president and briefly fired Mankiewicz for excessive overruns. Released in 1963, Cleopatra became the year's highest-grossing film and earned mixed reviews from critics. Mankiewicz's reputation suffered, and he did not return to direct another film until The Honey Pot (1967). Mankiewicz then directed There Was a Crooked Man... (1970) and the documentary King: A Filmed Record... Montgomery to Memphis (1972), sharing credit with Sidney Lumet on the latter. His final film Sleuth (1972), starring Michael Caine and Laurence Olivier, earned Mankiewicz his fourth and final Oscar nomination as Best Director. In 1993, Mankiewicz died in Bedford, New York, at the age of 83.

Filmography

W.C. Fields: Straight Up
Character: Self
Backstory: 'All About Eve'
Character: Self (archive footage)
Woman Trap
Character: Reporter (as Joseph Mankiewicz)

Hello Actors Studio
Character: Self
Night of 100 Stars III
Character: Self

The Screen Director
Character: Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
All About Mankiewicz
Character: Self


Stardust: The Bette Davis Story
Character: Self (archive footage)
The Philadelphia Story
Job: Producer
Sleuth
Job: Director

All About Eve
Job: Director
All About Eve
Job: Screenplay
House of Strangers
Job: Director

Guys and Dolls
Job: Director
Guys and Dolls
Job: Screenplay
Woman of the Year
Job: Producer

Double Wedding
Job: Producer
People Will Talk
Job: Director

People Will Talk
Job: Writer
Cleopatra
Job: Director
Cleopatra
Job: Screenplay

Alice in Wonderland
Job: Screenplay
Dragonwyck
Job: Director
Dragonwyck
Job: Writer

The Barefoot Contessa
Job: Director
No Way Out
Job: Director

No Way Out
Job: Writer
Manhattan Melodrama
Job: Screenplay
Escape
Job: Director

Fury
Job: Producer
Suddenly, Last Summer
Job: Director
The Honey Pot
Job: Director

A Letter to Three Wives
Job: Screenplay
The Keys of the Kingdom
Job: Screenplay

The Feminine Touch
Job: Producer
The Quiet American
Job: Director
The Quiet American
Job: Writer

The Quiet American
Job: Producer
5 Fingers
Job: Director

Paramount on Parade
Job: Screenplay
Forsaking All Others
Job: Screenplay
The Bride Wore Red
Job: Producer

Only Saps Work
Job: Screenplay
Three Godfathers
Job: Producer
The Saturday Night Kid
Job: Title Graphics

The Late George Apley
Job: Director
The Honey Pot
Job: Screenplay
I Live My Life
Job: Screenplay

Somewhere in the Night
Job: Director
Somewhere in the Night
Job: Screenplay

Diplomaniacs
Job: Writer
Finn and Hattie
Job: Writer
Too Much Harmony
Job: Story

Love on the Run
Job: Producer
Julius Caesar
Job: Director
This Reckless Age
Job: Screenplay

Three Godfathers
Job: Writer
The Gorgeous Hussy
Job: Producer

The Shopworn Angel
Job: Producer
Mannequin
Job: Producer

Newly Rich
Job: Writer
Emergency Call
Job: Screenplay

Strange Cargo
Job: Producer
Slightly Scarlet
Job: Screenplay

A Christmas Carol
Job: Producer
The Pirate
Job: Additional Writing
Three Comrades
Job: Producer

The Shining Hour
Job: Producer
Night After Night
Job: Writer

If I Had a Million
Job: Writer
If I Had a Million
Job: Adaptation
If I Had a Million
Job: Story

The River of Romance
Job: Screenplay
The Gang Buster
Job: Dialogue
June Moon
Job: Screenplay

The Bride Wore Red
Job: Additional Writing
Our Daily Bread
Job: Dialogue

The Shining Hour
Job: Screenplay
Mannequin
Job: Additional Writing

Reunion in France
Job: Producer
Fast Company
Job: Screenplay
The Social Lion
Job: Screenplay

Sky Bride
Job: Screenplay
Skippy
Job: Writer
Sooky
Job: Writer

Pleins feux
Job: Original Film Writer
Pleins feux
Job: Original Film Writer
A Letter to Three Wives
Job: Original Film Writer

The Bride Wore Red
Job: Story
Diplomaniacs
Job: Original Story

This Reckless Age
Job: Story
Sooky
Job: Story
June Moon
Job: Story

Only Saps Work
Job: Adaptation
Cairo
Job: Producer
The Wild Man of Borneo
Job: Producer

Julius Caesar
Job: Screenplay