The Scotsman

Lewis Gilbert

Filmmaker behind Educating Rita and three Bond movies

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Lewis Gilbert, film director, producer and screenwrit­er. Born: 6 March 1920 in London. Died: 23 February 2018 in Monaco, aged 97.

Lewis Gilbert, the British director, producer and screenwrit­er whose films included the acclaimed 1966 comedy-drama Alfie, which made Michael Caine a star, as well as three James Bond adventures, has died at 97.

Gilbert directed, and often wrote or co-wrote, war stories, romances and family dramas in his half-century career. He made small but well-liked films like Educating Rita (1983), which reunited him with Caine, and Shirley Valentine (1989).

He also made action spectacula­rs like Sink the Bismarck! (1960), the most successful of his many Second World War films, which told the true story of the British navy’s quest to destroy Germany’s largest and most powerful warship.

His most admired film was Alfie, a dark comedy-drama that gave Caine his breakthrou­gh role, as an amoral Cockney womaniser. The film received five Oscar nomination­s, including one for best picture and one for Caine as lead actor. Gilbert was nominated as the film’s producer but not its director. It was the only Oscar nomination of his career.

Alfie was a hit, but its gritty realism and unflinchin­g look at the consequenc­es of casual sex did not typecast Gilbert: James Bond followed hard on Alfie’s heels.

Gilbert’s first foray into the world of 007 was You Only Live Twice (1967), the fifth movie in the series. With a screenplay by Roald Dahl, it followed Bond (Sean Connery) into the dark universe of the villainous Blofeld (Donald Pleasance), who had plans to rule the world.

Gilbert returned to the franchise ten years later, directing The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and Moonraker (1979), by which time Roger Moore had replaced Connery as Bond.

In his autobiogra­phy, All My Flashbacks (2010), Gilbert wrote that he could immediatel­y see that Moore had to be a different sort of Bond.

“While watching him, I’d had the feeling that Cubby Broccoli and Harry Saltzman, the film’s producers, wanted him to be Sean c on nery ,” he wrote .“this was no use. Roger didn’t have Sean’s animal grace. However, he was at ease in light comedy. It therefore seemed to me much more sensible for Roger to play to the strength he had, rather than the one Sean had.”

Before Alfie, Gilbert was best known for a series of factbased Second World War films. Reach for the Sky (1957), which he wrote and directed, told the story of Douglas Bader, the Royal Air Force hero who, despite the loss of his legs, was able to become a fighter pilot and survive a Nazi prison camp.

A year later came another tribute to wartime heroism, Carve Her Name With Pride. Written with his frequent collaborat­or Vernon Harris, the movie recounted the true-life adventures of Violette Szabo, a French-speaking widow living in London who was recruited by the British secret service and captured on her second undercover mission to France and executed by the Nazis.

He often took on a producing role as well, as he did with, among other films, Educating Rita, Shirley Valentine and The Adventurer­s, a 1970 political drama based on a Harold Robbins novel involving the jet-set son of an assassinat­ed diplomat.

Gilbert was born in Hackney Central, London, into a showbusine­ss family, including a number of music hall performers. Before long he, too, was performing, leading to small roles in a few films as a teenager.

He got his start behind the camera with the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, when he made several documentar­y shorts, an experience he put to good use in his war films of the 1950s and ‘60s – although the first feature he directed was not a war movie but The Little Ballerina (1948), the story of a young girl in London who dreams of becoming a famous dancer.

His wife, the former Hylda Tafler, died in 2005. They had two sons, John and Stephen.

Late in his career, Gilbert mostly directed small-scale stories about women (making a slight detour with Haunted, a 1995 horror film). Educating Rita followed a housewife (Julie Walters) through her chaste relationsh­ip with an alcoholic professor (Caine) who becomes her tutor and mentor and winds up with a few insights about himself as well. Walters and Caine were nominated for Oscars in 1983.

Another of Gilbert’s later projects was Shirley Valentine, which, like Educating Rita, was adapted from a play by Willy Russell. The film is a portrait of a Liverpool housewife (Pauline Collins) who breaks out of her numbing routine when she travels to Greece.

In Gilbert’s last movie, Before You Go (2002), based on Shelagh Stephenson’s first play, The Memory of Water, three sisters (Walters, Joanne Whalley and Victoria Hamilton) reunite to attend their mother’s funeral.but even with that film’s release, he was not quite ready to call it a career, telling Variety that he could still get a movie done, and done on time and within a budget.

“There’s nothing that can replace experience,” he said. “I know to sit in a chair, not to rush around, and the film will get made. When you’re young you get much more stressed. But now I don’t encounter any problem that I haven’t dealt with before.”

He added: “I sometime wonder whether to try another Hollywood movie. I suppose we all imagine we’re immortal. I just hope that upstairs there’s a film company that’s looking for a young director.”

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