Robert Ardrey
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Robert Ardrey was that rarity in Hollywood, a writer who beat Hollywood and its producers, moguls, and stars at their own game of amassing power, wealth, and respect. Equally comfortable dealing with literary editors such as Bennett Cerf or moguls like Darryl F. Zanuck, he also retained his credibility in the intellectual realm by authoring texts on anthropology, history, and sociology that remain widely respected decades after their publication. Born in Chicago in 1908, he was the son of Robert Leslie Ardrey, an editor and publisher, and the former Marie Haswell. He showed an interest in writing while still a boy, and in his early teens he worked on his first novel. He studied anthropology and a range of natural and social sciences at the University of Chicago, but with the encouragement of Thornton Wilder, Ardrey pursued writing as a career. He supported himself during the Great Depression of the early '30s by playing piano in various jazz clubs, working as a statistician and staff analyst for the city's personnel bureau, and lecturing on pre-Columbian civilization at the Chicago World's Fair. He also authored what he later described as an embarrassingly bad novel set among Cro-Magnon peoples, and a failed play. Ardrey's first, fleeting taste of success as a writer came in 1934 when his play House on Fire was revised by Jed Harris, Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur, and George Abbott into Star Spangled -- it went to Broadway in a production starring Garson Kanin, George Tobias, and Millard Mitchell, and racked up 23 performances. He saw two of his plays, How to Get Tough About It and Casey Jones, produced in 1937 and 1938, respectively (the latter done by the Group Theatre), for what turned out to be very short runs in New York. Ardrey's Thunder Rock was produced by the Group Theatre in 1939-1940 under the direction of Elia Kazan, with Myron McCormack, Luther Adler, Lee J. Cobb, Morris Carnovsky, and Frances Farmer in the cast. A topical, anti-isolationist drama, Thunder Rock was a failure in New York, closing after 23 performances, but that same year, Ardrey made his first foray to Hollywood, where he made an uncredited contribution to the movie Kitty Foyle (1940), starring Ginger Rogers.Ardrey got his first movie credit for the screenplay of They Knew What They Wanted (1940), made at RKO. Meanwhile, Thunder Rock, which had been such a resounding failure in New York, found a profitable new life when it was transferred to the London stage, enjoying strong reviews and a good run before the German blitz and the resulting blackout crippled theatrical activity in the war-torn city. It was so successful that the rights were acquired by the writer/producer/director sibling combo of John Boulting and Roy Boulting and their Charter Films. They made it into a hugely popular, critically praised film in 1942, starring Michael Redgrave and James Mason. Thanks to its success in England, the play eventually found a new life in regional and semi-professional theater companies in the United States, and became Ardrey's biggest success in theater. By then, Ardrey had found a niche in Hollywood, working on such films as A Lady Takes a Chance (1943) at RKO and later moving to MGM, where he worked on The Green Years (1946), Song of Love (1947), The Three Musketeers (1948), The Secret Garden (1949), Madame Bovary (1949), Quentin Durwood (1955), and The Power and the Prize (1956). He later worked on The Wonderful Country at United Artists, and, in 1962, took on the daunting task of turning the World War I-era novel The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse into relevant entertainment for the early '60s, authoring the screenplay for Vincente Minnelli's gargantuan 1962 all-star release. The widening dates between Ardrey's film projects came as a result of his increasing literary activity, as he began generating screenplays and novels on his own in the early '50s and subsequently returned to his academic training in anthropology and the behavioral sciences. Fro
Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
100% | Khartoum |
|
— | 1966 |
No Score Yet | The 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse |
|
— | 1962 |
No Score Yet | The Wonderful Country |
|
— | 1959 |
No Score Yet | The Power and the Prize |
|
— | 1956 |
No Score Yet | Quentin Durward |
|
— | 1955 |
No Score Yet | Madame Bovary |
|
— | 1949 |
No Score Yet | The Secret Garden |
|
— | 1949 |
80% | The Three Musketeers |
|
— | 1948 |
No Score Yet | Song of Love |
|
— | 1947 |
No Score Yet | The Green Years |
|
— | 1946 |
No Score Yet | A Lady Takes a Chance |
|
— | 1943 |
No Score Yet | Thunder Rock |
|
— | 1942 |
No Score Yet | They Knew What They Wanted |
|
— | 1940 |
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