Los Angeles Times

Documentar­ian and mythmaker

D.A. PENNEBAKER, 1925 - 2019

- By Randy Lewis

D.A. Pennebaker, who chronicled Bob Dylan and other pop culture figures, dies at 94.

Filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker, whose documentar­ies stretched across more than 60 years and touched on a plethora of charismati­c and controvers­ial subjects, none more so than Bob Dylan, died Thursday of natural causes. He was 94.

Dylan was the focal point of Pennebaker’s masterful 1967 cinéma vérité film “Dont Look Back,” a work part fact, part fiction, in which the line separating the two was often as elusive as rock’s poet laureate himself.

Pennebaker, described as “the grand old man of flyon-the-wall filmmaking” by Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan, chronicled a who’s who of other pop music and entertainm­ent world figures and icons over the course of his long career, including John Lennon, David Bowie, Jane Fonda, Little Richard, Jimi Hendrix, Chuck Berry and the Monterey Pop Festival.

He also earned considerab­le acclaim, and shared an Academy Award nomination with his wife and frequent collaborat­or Chris Hegedus, for co-directing “The War Room” (1993), a deep look inside Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidenti­al campaign that made media stars out of George Stephanopo­ulos and James Carville.

But he was best known for “Dont Look Back,” his black-and-white film capturing Dylan’s 1965 tour of the U.K., as well as for the widely influentia­l and much duplicated short film illustrati­ng Dylan’s song “Subterrane­an Homesick Blues” that showed Dylan flipping through a series of cards quoting words and phrases from the surrealist­ic song from his album “Bringing It All Back Home.”

“We were down at the Cedar Tavern [in New York] and he [Dylan] said, ‘I was thinking of making up these cards and holding them up and running them like for a song,’ where the words would be the words for the song,” Pennebaker told Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin. “It would be a takeoff of what the Beatles had to do when they had to play the playback, which was demeaning. They accepted it because they were told you had to do this to sell records…. Dylan wanted to put a little needle into that, by doing it as a gag.”

Although Dylan originally approved the release of “Dont Look Back,” he had a fitful relationsh­ip with the film, arguing it “was onesided,” while Pennebaker argued that its liberties with fact were mostly at the behest of its star.

“I think in ‘Dont Look Back,’ that Dylan’s enacting his life — as he wishes to enact it,” Pennebaker told Heylin in “Behind the Shades.” “Not necessaril­y as it is, and not necessaril­y as he wishes it were, but just as he wants to act it. ‘Dont Look Back’ is a kind of fiction, but it’s Dylan’s fiction, not mine. He makes it up as he goes along.”

“Dont Look Back” helped to both establish and spread Dylan’s mystique and is considered one of the most important films about rock music ever made. Director Martin Scorsese incorporat­ed parts of it into his 2005 examinatio­n of Dylan’s music and legacy, “No Direction Home.”

Pennebaker subsequent­ly filmed Dylan’s 1966 tour with the Hawks, the group of mostly Canadian musicians that later came into its own as the Band, for another film, “Eat the Document,” commission­ed by ABC.

Dylan edited it himself, after recuperati­ng from his near-fatal 1966 motorcycle accident, but ABC rejected it as virtually incomprehe­nsible to viewers. It has rarely been screened in theaters and never released for home video, but it has been widely bootlegged.

While the rock music scene was growing exponentia­lly in the ’60s, both commercial­ly and artistical­ly, Pennebaker was tapped to capture the comings and goings at one of the first major rock music festivals, Monterey Pop, held on the California coast in 1967.

Record executive and talent manager Lou Adler, one of the festival’s organizers, dedicated nearly a third of the budget for the event to paying Pennebaker to film the performanc­es, many of which turned into careerlaun­ching moments for Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and the Who.

But his focus wasn’t restricted to rock music. In 1991 he made “Broadway Breakthrou­gh,” a behindthe-scenes look at the creation of Stephen Sondheim’s musical “Company,” which aired on the Learning Channel as part of “Played in the U.S.A.,” a 13-part series with contributi­ons from filmmakers examining various strains of American music.

Pennebaker dedicated his life to the documentar­y form, up to his last, “Unlocking the Cage,” a 2016 look at a group of U.S. attorneys who were trying to establish legal rights for non-human species including elephants, cetaceans and apes.

He was presented with an honorary Oscar at the academy’s Governors Awards ceremony in 2012.

Donn Alan Pennebaker was born July 15, 1925, in Evanston, Ill., attended MIT during the closing years of World War II, worked as an engineer and made his first film in 1953, a documentar­y tracking a train traveling through New York City and using Duke Ellington’s song “Daybreak Express” as both its soundtrack and its title.

Music was a subject he came back to time and again, in part because he found a strong link between the two art forms. “The very nature of film is musical,” he once told Stop Smiling magazine, “because it uses time as a basis for its energy. It needs to go from here to there, whereas pictures and paintings are just there. With movies, you’re putting something together that’s not going to be totally comprehens­ible until the end.”

He was married three times and is survived by Hegedus, his third wife and frequent film collaborat­or, whom he married in 1982, as well as eight children: Stacy Pennebaker, Frazer Pennebaker (a producer of many Pennebaker documentar­ies) and Linley Pennebaker, from his first marriage to Sylvia Bell; TV director Jojo Pennebaker, Chelsea Pennebaker and Zoe Pennebaker, from his second marriage to Kate Taylor; and camera operator Kit Pennebaker and Jane Pennebaker, from his marriage to Hegedus.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A WHO’S WHO OF POP SUBJECTS Pennebaker, here with Bob Dylan, was called “the grand old man of fly-on-the-wall filmmaking.”
Associated Press A WHO’S WHO OF POP SUBJECTS Pennebaker, here with Bob Dylan, was called “the grand old man of fly-on-the-wall filmmaking.”

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