The Daily Telegraph

Norman Jewison

Canadian-born director whose films included In the Heat of the Night, Moonstruck and Rollerball

-

NORMAN JEWISON, who has died aged 97, was a Canadian-born Hollywood film-maker of eclectic taste who was as comfortabl­e with comedy as with musicals and melodrama.

His most popular films were the Oscarwinni­ng racial drama In the Heat of the Night

(1967) and the romantic comedy Moonstruck

(1987) – which also won a slew of Academy Awards, for Cher, Olympia Dukakis and its scriptwrit­er John Patrick Shanley. Jewison himself, however, never won an Oscar, losing out in 1967 to Mike Nichols (The Graduate) and, 20 years later, to Bernardo Bertolucci (The Last Emperor).

Jewison was regarded as a dependable technician who, like Clarence Brown in Hollywood’s golden age, could turn his hand to almost anything. But audiences (and Academy voters) never looked to him to surprise. It was bad luck that when his best films opened, his contributi­on was overshadow­ed by flashier work from the new wonderkids Nichols and Bertolucci.

As an artist, he set his sights high: “Even though I know it is a futile and impossible task,” he said, “I still want to change the world. Well, a little bit.” But except for In the Heat of the Night – in which Rod Steiger’s bigoted Southern sheriff reaches a kind of respect for the black detective (Sidney Poitier) he initially mistakes for a killer – these aspiration­s were never fully reflected in Jewison’s films.

Taking his work as a whole, it was an artisan’s portfolio – some good, some indifferen­t, but mostly anonymous. Despite the credits to so many of his movies, “A Norman Jewison film” was hard to identify. Which is perhaps why In the Heat of the Night was named best film in the Oscar stakes and Rod Steiger best actor, but Jewison was passed over.

He was born on July 21 1926 in Toronto, the son of a third-generation Canadian shopkeeper and his English wife. Norman showed early promise as a child actor, and from the age of six was reciting all 11 verses of The Shooting of Dan Mcgrew at Masonic lodge meetings. He was educated at the Malvern Collegiate Institute and, after brief service in the Canadian navy towards the end of the war, completed his studies at Victoria College, part of the University of Toronto, from which he graduated in 1949.

That was when he first discovered “that I wanted to change the world”. “Since no one else was particular­ly interested,” he added, “I began driving a cab in Toronto.” He tried for a job in Canadian television, but was advised by CBC that he would stand a better chance in Britain. So he cashed in his savings of $140 and booked a passage on a Greek freighter bound for London.

For two years he lived as an actor-writer in an unheated flat in Bayswater, picking up occasional work from the BBC. This London interlude added a few lines to his CV which stood him in good stead back in Canada and in 1952 CBC offered him a traineeshi­p.

He made his mark swiftly within CBC, producing variety shows, and was soon signed to a three-year contract. Transferre­d to New York, his greatest success was in rejuvenati­ng a once popular show, Your Hit Parade. By rethinking the production he recaptured its old audience, causing it to top the ratings once more. Over the next four years, Jewison mounted TV specials dedicated to a personalit­y – Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra, Danny Kaye, Harry Belafonte and others – and staged elaborate variety shows such as The Fabulous Fifties and The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe. Several of these were nominated for Emmy awards; in 1960, he won for The Fabulous Fifties.

His growing reputation caught Hollywood’s eye and in 1961 he signed a seven-year contract with Universal. He made only four films for them – all inconseque­ntial though commercial­ly successful. The first was 40 Pounds of Trouble (1962), a version of the Damon Runyon story Little Miss Marker with Tony Curtis, followed by two Doris Day comedies, The Thrill of It All (1963) and Send Me No Flowers (1964), opposite James Garner and Rock Hudson. The Art of Love (1964) had Garner persuading his painter friend Dick Van Dyke to play dead to acquire posthumous fame. Instead, Garner is charged with murder.

Escaping from the Universal contract, Jewison went freelance. His first job was to take over The Cincinnati Kid (1965) at MGM from Sam Peckinpah. Set in the Depression era, it was influenced by Robert Rossen’s The Hustler, culminatin­g in a tense poker game between the up-and-coming Steve Mcqueen and the veteran Edward G Robinson, similar to the pool contest between Paul Newman and Jackie Gleason in Rossen’s film.

Switching to United Artists, he made another comedy in 1966, The Russians Are Coming , The Russians Are Coming. Filmed at the height of the Cold War, the satire imagined what might happen if a Russian submarine lost its bearings and fetched up on a beach in New England. A full-scale Soviet invasion is suspected. Both the US Senate and the Russian newspaper Pravda endorsed its message that Americans and Russians are the same under the skin – a sure sign that it was ruffling no feathers.

In the Heat of the Night, the next year, was Jewison’s best film. The conflict between Poitier’s dapper Tibbs and the gum-chewing Steiger crackles with a mixture of antipathy and curiosity; the film looked wonderful, and had a sultry soundtrack by Quincy Jones.

Jewison never capitalise­d on the kudos it brought him, however. In Hollywood, an overnight success can, for a time, make whatever he wants, but Jewison made The Thomas Crown Affair (1968), an empty caper movie with Steve Mcqueen and Faye Dunaway, shot in a flashy split-screen format that once seemed chic but is now dated. Gaily, Gaily (1969), based on an autobiogra­phical novel by Ben Hecht about his early years as a journalist in Chicago, was followed by two film versions of Broadway musicals – Fiddler on the Roof (1971), which Pauline Kael called “absolutely smashing”, and Jesus Christ Superstar (1973).

After 129 minutes of Rollerball (1975), starring James Caan, few were any the wiser about the rules of the game – a gladiatori­al contest with steel balls and motorcycle­s – but the matches were filmed in visceral style, making the bloody spectacle so engrossing that sports promoters contacted Jewison with proposals for a real-life league. This disturbed him, as he had intended the film as a dystopian vision of a corporate society where the taking of human life had become entertainm­ent. But he could not help wanting to please an audience.

Jewison’s work in later decades included a 1978 trade union melodrama, inspired by Jimmy Hoffa’s Teamsters, called F.I.S.T. (Federation of Interstate Truckers); a legal melodrama with Al Pacino (And Justice for All, 1979); and a study of racial prejudice, A Soldier’s Story (1984).

The neo-noir Agnes of God (1985) was based on a play about a nun (Meg Tilly) who believes that she has undergone a miraculous conception like the Virgin Mary. On screen it seemed over-schematic, with Anne Bancroft’s knowing Mother Superior pitted against Jane Fonda’s chain-smoking, agnostic journalist.

Moonstruck (1987) came out of the blue, a soufflé that Jewison had not achieved before. A romantic comedy, with Nicolas Cage as a one-armed, Puccini-loving Italian-american baker smitten by his brother’s fiancée (Cher), it struck chords that made it one of the most popular films of its year. The toughest hearts were melted. “Jewison doesn’t go for charm,” wrote Pauline Kael. “He goes for dizzy charm.” Oscars showered upon it, but not on its director. A 1994 attempt to repeat the formula, Only You, with Marisa Tomei, proved woefully inadequate.

In Country (1989) paid tribute to American lives lost in Vietnam, but despite praising Emily Lloyd, critics found much of the script toe-curling, notably the scenes in which her teenage character discovers her dead father’s letters home: “You missed ET; you missed the Bruce Springstee­n concerts; you missed everything.” In 1999 he made The Hurricane

starring Denzel Washington, gripping as Rubin Carter, the boxer wrongly convicted of murder.

The last film Jewison directed, in 2003, was The Statement, scripted by Ronald Harwood from a novel by Brian Moore, with Michael Caine as a Vichy France Nazi collaborat­or pursued decades after the war.

Norman Jewison married, first, in 1953, the model Margaret Ann Dixon, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. She died in 2004 and in 2010 he married Lynne St David.

Norman Jewison, born July 21 1926, died January 20 2024

 ?? ?? The Thomas Crown Affair Dependable: Jewison, and, below, with Steve Mcqueen on the set of
The Thomas Crown Affair Dependable: Jewison, and, below, with Steve Mcqueen on the set of
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom