Thursday, January 05, 2017

Stars Under Dore Schary at MGM

I became interested in the Dore Schary era at MGM when researching my book on Rod Taylor - he signed to the studio in late 1955, towards the end of Schary's regime. Schary's reputation as a studio exec is mixed to say the least - when people think about him, that is. He doesn't seem to polarise buffs the way say Leo B Mayer did. He's not regarded as one of the great moguls. He famously replaced Mayer in 1951 but was given the boot himself a few years later.

Schary's credits do demand he be taken seriously as a filmmaker - some okay ones as writer, but very good ones as producer. He championed some difficult subjects as studio head: Battleground, They Live By Night, Bad Day at Black Rock. These are movies to be proud of - and the world is a better place for them being in it.

However when it came to stars, Schary was a clear second-rater. Maybe a third rater, even. This was particularly noticeable because of the studio he ran.

Before Schary's arrival, MGM was renowned for it's stars - it had the biggest, the brightest, etc. They had everything: crusty old farts (Wallace Beery, Lionel Barrymore), charismatic tough guys (Clark Gable), pretty boys (Robert Taylor), novelty acts (Esther Williams), comediennes (Jean Harlow), plucky teens (Mickey Rooney), boys next door (James Stewart, Van Johnson, Robert Walker, Robert Young), kids (Freddie Bartholomew, Margaret O'Brien, Claude Jarman Jnr), old bags (Marie Dressler, Marjorie Main), wacky girls (Lucille Ball), posh girls (Greer Garson, Deborah Kerr), comics (Red Skelton, Marx Brothers), sexpots (Joan Crawford, Ava Gardner, Lana Turner), classy dames (Myrna Loy, Katherine Hepburn), stunning musical talent (Judy Garland), foreign imports (Greta Garbo, Hedy Lamar, Greer Garson), Frenchmen (Jean Pierre Aumont), actors who had failed at other studios (Spencer Tracy, William Powell, Lew Ayres), opera singers (Mario Lanza, Jane Powell, Nelson Eddy, Jeanette MacDonald), even blacks (Lena Horne) and Chinese (Keye Luke).

Louis B Mayer had a genius for discovering and managing stars that still isn't fully appreciated today. Absolutely Eddie Mannix and Howard Strickling played their part too but they at the studio after Mayer left - and the studio lost its ability to create stars.

Let's look the big MGM stars during Schary's time at the studio and Schary's involvement in their careers:

* June Allyson - the girl next door star of musicals, very much a Pasternak/Mayer kind of star, when Schart took over she was at her peak (The Three Musketeers, Little Women, The Stratton Story) - her career declined under his watch - Too Young to Kiss, The Girl in White, Remains to Be Seen (though to be fair they did put her in Battle Circus and Executive Suite). Maybe this decline would have happened anywhere but it's interesting that Allyson's career was revitalised in the mid 50s with a series of "perfect wife" roles outside MGM (The Glenn Miller Story, Strategic Air Command) that saw her back in the top ten stars. MGM responded by putting her in The Opposite Sex, a flop musical remake of The Women.  I think Allyson was not a typical Schary kind of star - suited for saccharine roles in musicals and dramas - and he didn't know how to handle her.

* Pier Angeli - became a star in Teresa and Schary must have been convinced he found his own Garbo. But he failed to build on the momentum: The Light Touch, Devil Makes Three, Story of Three Loves, The Flame and the Flesh.

* Leslie Caron - one of the biggest stars of Schary's time at the studio, she was a star in An American in Paris and brought them in in Lili (and later Gigi) but also a lot of money losers (The Man in a Cloak, Glory Alley, Gaby, The Glass Slipper). A mixed success.

* Cyd Charisse - a Mayer discovery who never really made a mark outside of musicals, but lasted at the studio a long time. Schary didn't know what to do with her outside musicals, not really.

* Glenn Ford - already a star at Columbia, but it was at MGM he really came into his own. His man next door looks and slightly tormented air suited the Eisenhower era, with it's secretly PTSD men in suits smoking cigarettes and having domestic dramas. He suited Schary style movies such as Trial and The Blackboard Jungle and went well in comedies such as Teahouse of the August Moon. I think Ford's elevation from B to A star owes something to Schary. 

*Clark Gable - the King of Hollywood, he wasn't handled with particular skill by Schary who seemed uncomfortable with Gable movies. In fairness, Gable was on the slide - but he was capable of bringing them in, as Mogambo (and his post MGM movies) showed. Schary should have been able to handle him better.

* Ava Gardner - a reluctant MGM discovery (came up via marriage to Mickey Rooney) they actually did well by her with choices parts such as Showboat, Loan Star and Mogambo. Schary didn't "get" female stars but he "got" the noir-ish Gardner.

* Stewart Granger - a good MGM star from 1950-56, although he was already a star in Britain before he joined the studio, and mostly thrived in remakes while there (King Solomon's Mines, Prisoner of Zenda, Scaramouche). Nonetheless, while Granger whinged a lot about Schary he whinged about everyone and made a hash of his career post MGM; I think Schary did okay by Granger.

* Howard Keel - decent musical star who appeared in several classics of that genre whose career declined with the musical. Made some classics under Schary (notably Seven Brides for Seven Brothers). Could he have done more under Mayer? Maybe... maybe not... Keel did lack a little individuality.

*Gene Kelly - a tremendous talent who blossomed in the Schary era but it was really in musicals made under Mayer ally Arthur Freed that he became a legend.

* Grace Kelly - she became a star in the Schary era, but her great films were made at other studios (especially Paramount with Hitchcock). Schary tried to take some credit for her success, and he did sign her up, but he also cast her in her only critical flop, Green Fire, and her one commercial flop, The Swan. (Every film she starred in outside the studio was a critical and commercial hit. Every single one.)

*Deborah Kerr - a back up Greer Garson who eventually came into her own in the 1950s but not really in MGM films. Like many Schary era MGM stars (eg Grace Kelly, Elizabeth Taylor), she did better outside MGM.

*Mario Lanza - a triumph of Mayer's star making abilities... and Schary's lack of them. Lanza was a major talent who was nurtured carefully by the studio, rewarded them with some minor hits then a massive one with The Great Caruso. He wound up leaving MGM. I can't imagine Mayer struggling to handle Lanza, he was so skilled dealing with high maintenance stars... Schary did struggle.

* Ricardo Montalban - the dancing Latin, who came in as a support to Esther Williams. He had good roles in some very Schary-leaning productions: Battleground, Mystery Street, Right Cross... Schary probably had dreams of turning Montalban into the first big Mexican Hollywood star. But ultimately it didn't work. Too many dud Schary films. (And to be fair I don't think Montalban had the individuality to be a great movie star... he was a TV man.)

* Eleanor Parker - not remembered as a big name, she was a solid MGM star in the 1950s, even though it was Warners who established her. She had some good years at Metro under Schary as their kind of back up Ava Gardner - Scaramouche, Interrupted Melody - but could never move into the first rank, having some big flops (eg The Painted Veil). Still, probably deserves to be remembered better and Schary gave her plenty of chances. She was probably too much of a character actor and not individual enough to be a great star - as she admitted.

* Walter Pidgeon - gentlemanly actor who found his niche as a leading man for Greer Garson. By the time Schary came along his great days were over; he drifted into support roles which I think would've been inevitable. Schary did give Pidgeon one of his best roles with Forbidden Planet. I think Schary "got" Pigdeon - he could play authoritative types. 

*Jane Powell - pretty, pert discovery of Joe Pasternak who spluttered along under Schary then faded as musicals went out of fashion. Schary didn't do that well by her but it's hard to imagine Mayer at his peak doing much more.

* Debbie Reynolds - people think of Reynolds as a bigger star in the early 1950s than she was because of Eddie Fisher and Singing in the Rain but she played a lot of support roles in unsuccessful musicals for MGM - Hit the Deck, Athena, The Affairs of Dobie Gillis, Give a Girl a Break - and the odd successful comedy (The Tender Trap). It's a tribute to Schary's lack of star making nous that she only really became a genuine star once she left the studio for Tammy; she returned to MGM once Schary left and did well for them (eg The Main Game). Schary simply didn't use her well.

* Elizabeth Taylor - discovered during the Mayer regime, she flowered in the 1950s... but her big films were at other studios (eg A Place in the Sun) until the late 1950s, when MGM gave her something to bite into (Raintree County, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof).

* Robert Taylor - handsome lunk who spent the early part of his career on the arm of leading ladies, but who had a long, strong career. MGM did well by him when he came back from the war, and although very much a Mayer type star he did unexpectedly well under Schary, finding an unexpected niche as the star of swashbucklers (Quo Vadis, Ivanhoe) and more expectedly Westerns.

* Spencer Tracy - the resuscitation of Tracy's career at MGM was a triumph of Mayer and Thalberg (they took a well regarded but not particularly popular star and turned him into a legend). Schary loved Tracy and did very well by him, unlike most of the legendary MGM names: Father of the Bride, Bad Day at Black Rock, Adam's Rib, etc. Schary didn't break new ground with Tracy but their films together are definitely in Schary's credit column.

*Lana Turner - stunningly pretty, couldn't act, but was a star... the sort of star Schary simply didn't know how to handle. The Schary regime is notable for its mishandling of Turner's career (Diane, The Prodigal) with the exception of The Bad and the Beautiful. There was still life in her career, too, as proved by her success after leaving Metro - Peyton Place, Imitation of Life, Portrait in Black... MGM under Schary just didn't know how to do it, whereas Jerry Wald and Ross Hunter did. Maybe if Schary had used her in more harder-edged films things could have been different; he clearly didn't "get" glossy entertainments.

*Michael Wilding - had a four year contract with the studio while married to Elizabeth Taylor. MGM never really seemed to know how to use him (miscast in The Glass Slipper) - he may never have found a home in Hollywood but his career never recovered from the years at MGM.

*Esther Williams - Williams was the story of star who probably only could have been developed and exploited by Mayer. Her films were a joke at the time but they were enormously successful - far more profitable than the classic Freed musicals - and they have held up well, mainly because they have such integrity. They came under the ambit of Joe Pasternak so Dore Schary couldn't do too much damage to them... but eventually he did put her in Jupiter's Darling, her biggest flop, and she left the studio. Williams later bitched about Schary in her memoirs... though she bitched about everyone. In fairness even Mayer would've been challenged to extend Williams' career as she aged and musicals declined in popularity - but he would've done a better job than Schary.

Most of the above were developed by people other than Schary. Below is a list of people who came up under his tutelage.

*Richard Anderson - handsome young man who was around for a long time in support parts but never looked like evolving to a star. A TV name at best, which is what he became.

*Don Burnett - handsome young actor in the Richard Anderson mold who never really rose better than his role in the TV series of North West Passage.

*John Cassevetes - briefly under contract to MGM in the late 50s; they used him in Edge of the City and Saddle the Wind. So MGM's ability to spot talent was in... they just didn't always know how to use the actors they had.

*Vic Damone - handsome guy with a terrific voice and married to an actor (Pier Angeli) but was curiously lifeless in his film appearances: Athena, Kismet, Hit the Deck. Another flop Schary star.

*Nancy Davis - whatever you say about her politics, Nancy was a bland middle of the road actor who got a surprisingly large amount of lead roles at MGM, almost all of which lost money. Had no business being a star - a dull support act at best.

*Sandra Descher - MGM child star who underwhelmed in The Last Time I Saw Paris, The Cobweb, The Prodigal.

*Robert Dix - son of Richard Dix, he was signed to MGM from 1954-56 and mostly had bit parts plus a decent ish role in Forbidden Planet. Had an interesting career, making some memorable exploitation films (for Al Adamson, among others), but a long, long way from a star.

*Jim Drury - handsome young man who MGM contracted and put in some minor roles eg Diane, The Tender Trap. They let him go and he had success on TV playing The Virginian. That was about all he did but it wasn't a bad "spot" from MGM.

*Tania Elg - beautiful, leggy Finnish dancer, it was her misfortune to be signed as MGM's output of musicals was in decline. She was given some non musical chances (The 39 Steps, Watusi) but lacked the individuality which might have given her more of a career.

*John Ericson - handsome man who was launched to kind-of stardom in Teresa but never seemed to make a big impression despite several chances at the studio: Rhapsody, The Student Prince, Green Fire, Bad Day at Black Rock.

*Steve Forrest - handsome man who never graduated beyond "handsome man" roles at MGM. Later had more success on TV.

*Anne Francis - pretty but bland leading lady who actually appeared in a few classic films during her time at the studio (The Blackboard Jungle, Forbidden Planet, Bad Day at Black Rock) but is hard to remember.

*Anthony Franciosa - an interesting talent, he signed towards the end of the Schary regime (This Could be the Night) and had a good career, but he never made the top rank.

*Ronald Green - contractee whose best known MGM performance was as The Dauphin in Diane and who had bit parts in The King's Thief, The Glass Slipper and The Scarlet Coat. Did not go on to have much of a career.

*Dolores Grey - top notch stage star, winner of several Tonys, who signed to the studio and made several films for them - Designing Woman, The Opposite Sex, It's Always Fair Weather, Kismet - but failed to make too much of an impression. Another example of Schary being unable to exploit a genuine proven talent.

*Dean Jones - amiable boy next door type in the Jack Lemmon mode who later found great popularity as a leading man in several Disney films. He started his film career as a contract player for MGM with small parts in The Rack, Tea and Sympathy and The Opposite Sex. His career didn't really get going until he left the studio but I think MGM do get some points for spotting him.

*Judi Jordan - had small roles in Raintree County and Ransom! and... that's all I can find on her.

*Anna Kashfi - Indian-American actress best known for her marriage to Marlon Brando. Was under contract to MGM but I'm not sure she made any films for them.

*John Kerr - a Broadway sensation in Tea and Sympathy, Kerr at one stage was so "hot" he turned down The Spirit of St Louis and Friendly Persuasion. MGM used him for The Cobweb, Tea and Sympathy and Gaby - the latter two leads. A very underwhelming talent, and indicative of Schary's failure to spot male stars.

*Janet Lake - un-memorable starlet once married to Robert Dix. Small roles in films like The Fastest Gun Alive and These Wilder Years.

*Barbara Lang - blonde sexy Marilyn Monroe type under contract to MGM who had small parts in films like Hot Summer Nights, Party Girl and House of Numbers. Had some okay TV appearances.

*Luana Lee - MGM glamour girl who never moved beyond small parts in films like Raintree County, The Opposite Sex, The Fastest Gun Alive.

*Jarma Lewis - starlet in the Luana Lee and Tania Elg mould, and became about as successful despite roles in The Tender Trap, The Cobweb and Raintree County. She married well though - to a bowling alley tycoon.

*Dewey Martin- one of those actors who got chances (The Big Sky, Land of the Pharaohs) but never seemed to become a star. Made a few MGM films, including Tennessee Champ but failed to become a star.

*Liliane Montevecchi - ballerina who MGM seemed to have on their books as a back up Leslie Caron, appearing in The Glass Slipper, Moonfleet and Meet Me in Las Vegas. They failed to turn her into a star.

*Roger Moore - handsome cardigan model with a fantastic voice and became a much beloved star via The Saint and James Bond. His MGM experience was less happy - to be frank he was pretty bad in a series of films; the studio did give him chances but he blew them (Diana, The King's Thief, Interrupted Melody).

*Elizabeth Mueller - European star who was tried by MGM in The Power and the Prize but didn't take off.

*Leslie Nielsen - another bland handsome face who was highly unimpressive in his MGM films (ef Forbidden Planet) then settled into TV... and who then had a surprising late in life renaissance as a comedy actor. Like Roger Moore, a talent that MGM/Schary spotted but did not use well (though in fairness, was Nielsen a great lost star?).

*Irene Papas - yes, Irene Papas of Guns of Navarone, Z and Zorba the Greek fame really was under contract to MGM during the Schary era - appearing in Tribute to a Bad Man. She didn't have her big success until after she left the studio but Schary and MGM deserve some points for trying.

*Edmund Purdom - a handsome lunk from England who was doing bits then launched to overnight fame in The Student Prince. Schary thought MGM had a new star - especially after Fox borrowed him for The Egyptian - but returns for The Prodigal, The King's Thief and Athena proved their eye was out again. In his memoirs Schary makes it seem as though he turfed Purdom after the latter asked for more money, which may have been true - but Schary doesn't mention he also cast Purdom in three vehicles, which all flopped.

*Jeff Richards - Schary era discovery, a baseball player who became an actor, but he proved to be no Kurt Russell. One memorable part was in Seven Brides to Seven Brothers. And that was about it.

*Gena Rowlands - a surprisingly far-sighted signing from MGM, who nabbed her after her stage success in Middle of the Night. She only made one film - The High Cost of Loving. A great talent that they didn't know how to use.

*Willard Sage - small time actor, a character actor type, who was under contract to MGM but never did much more than bits in films like Gaby and The Tender Trap. Didn't have a spectacular career once he left the studio either.

*Elaine Stewart - Schary's attempt at creating a sex bomb. Stewart shone in small roles in The Bad and the Beautiful and Brigadoon then was promoted in Take the High Ground, A Slight Case of Larcency and Code Two, without making much of an impact. 

*Russ Tamblyn - child actor who turned into a great dancer and a decent-ish actor with a strong boy next door quality; Schary had him pegged as a next big thing (maybe he was dreaming of creating his own Mickey Rooney) and gave him lots of chances. Although Tamblyn had his moments (Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, High School Confidential, Tom Thumb) he never quite broke through. MGM put him in a lot of movies where he looked plain odd (The Last Hunt, Cimarron). Overall though he was one of Schary's more successful actors.

*Rod Taylor - a big name in Aussie radio, was given two good chances by Schary, The Catered Affair and Raintree County. He didn't particularly shine in either but his later career demonstrated Schary had some success with talent development. He made a lot of good films for MGM post Schary: The Time Machine, The VIPs, Young Cassidy. 

*Bill Travers - handsome lunk from England who was signed by MGM off the back of his success in Geordie but failed to light the public's fire in Bhowani Junction, The Seventh Veil or The Barretts of Wimpole Street. Another Schary-era dud star.

*Ralph Vitti - young actor who was contracted to MGM and given small roles in Somebody Up There Likes Me and Raintree County. Was dropped by the studio, later went to Warners, and had an okay career as "Michael Dante". 

*James Whitmore - a Spencer Tracy lookalike who seemed to get a lot of the roles Tracy didn't want to do at MGM (Battleground, The Next Voice You Hear, Because You're Mind). A capable, sturdy actor, not a star.

In fairness it was a tricky time to create stars - but let's look at how other studios did during the 1950s...
  
Universal developed Jeff Chandler, Rock Hudson, Audie Murphy, Yvonne de Carlo and Tony Curtis. Later there was Sandra Dee. This is a pretty strong record.

Warner Bros had Paul Newman, Dennis Hopper, James Dean, James Garner, Troy Donahue, Tab Hunter and Natalie Wood. An excellent result.

Columbia had John Derek, Aldo Ray, James Darren, Kim Novak, Judy Holliday, Jack Lemon. Very good.

20th Century Fox had Robert Wagner, Jeffrey Hunter, Sheree North, Pat Boone and Jayne Mansfield. In the late 1950s Buddy Adler went on a star building rampage: Stuart Whitman, Gary Crosby, David Hedison, Jill St John, Fabian.

So MGM didn't just do badly in comparison to their past they did in comparison to their competitors.

Which is life. But what prompted me to write this article is that Schary had the gall to write pieces on how to make stars, such as "Then It's Up to the Public: Dore Schary Tells How to Create a Film Star" in Los Angeles Times 9 January 1955 p D1.

In actual fact Schary would consistently misuse the stars he had (Grace Kelly, Elizabeth Taylor), be unable to handle stars (Mario Lanza), not know what he had under his nose (Roger Moore, Debbie Reynolds), or promote duds (Edmund Purdom, Jeff Richards, James Whitmore). He helped kill the careers of Esther Williams and Jane Powell. He did treat some stars well, such as Walter Pidgeon and Spencer Tracy, and was an early promoter of people like Rod Taylor. But overall it's a shoddy record.

Executives can be miscast just like actors and Dore Schary was miscast to run MGM.

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