The News-Times

Peter Bogdanovic­h, Oscar-nominated director, dies at 82

- By Harrison Smith

Peter Bogdanovic­h, an Oscar-nominated director who was part of the vanguard of New Hollywood filmmakers who helped reinvigora­te American cinema, gaining wide popularity with 1970s movies such as “The Last Picture Show,” “What’s Up, Doc?” and “Paper Moon” before suffering a string of personal and profession­al calamities, died Jan. 6 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 82.

Nicholas Latimer, a spokesman for Bogdanovic­h’s publisher, Knopf, confirmed the death but did not give a cause.

Boyishly handsome, with neatly combed hair, hornrimmed glasses and a signature bandanna that he wore knotted around his neck, Bogdanovic­h was alternatel­y celebrated and despised, acquiring a reputation at the onset of his career for making friends with vaunted old directors just as quickly as he made enemies with younger colleagues.

“I don’t judge myself on the basis of my contempora­ries,” he told the New York Times in 1971. “I judge myself against the directors I admire — Hawks, Lubitsch, Buster Keaton, Welles, Ford, Renoir, Hitchcock. I certainly don’t think I’m anywhere near as good as they are, but I think I’m pretty good.”

Like French directors such as Jean-Luc Godard, Éric Rohmer and François Truffaut, he started out as a film critic and journalist before going on to make movies. But he broke into the industry in a distinctly American way, as a protege of B-movie maestro Roger Corman, who produced his feature-film debut — the taut crime thriller “Targets” (1968) — and who also helped launch the careers of contempora­ries such as Francis Ford Coppola and Martin Scorsese.

Like those other directors, Bogdanovic­h brought a bold new energy to Hollywood, shaking up a studio production system that was increasing­ly viewed as out of touch with younger audiences and shifting tastes. But while other filmmakers raced to distance themselves from cinematic tradition, Bogdanovic­h sought to revive some of the glories of the old Hollywood, positionin­g himself as an heir to vaunted directors such as John Ford and Howard Hawks, whom he interviewe­d and befriended early in his career.

“No one makes old movies better than Bogdanovic­h,” Scorsese once said.

In a phone interview, film historian Jeanine Basinger described Bogdanovic­h as a bridge between old and new Hollywood, noting that his film scholarshi­p and interviews with veteran directors and actors - collected in books such as “Who the Devil Made It” (1997) and “Who the Hell’s In It” (2004) — helped introduce classic films to new audiences. “His work reflected the very best of the past, put into a modern format and updated,” she said, adding that Bogdanovic­h “showed us that this tradition of original and personal filmmaking in America can continue.”

Bogdanovic­h directed some 20 feature films, writing many of them himself, but remained best known for “The Last Picture Show” (1971), a coming-ofage story about high school seniors in a windswept Texas town. Shot in black and white and based on a novel by Larry McMurtry, with whom he co-wrote the screenplay, the film was funny, poignant and rapturousl­y received.

“The Last Picture Show” evoked older films such as Orson Welles’s “The Magnificen­t Ambersons” and Hawks’s “Red River” but was “so good,” wrote New York Times film critic Vincent Canby, “that, in 1971, everything about it looks absolutely original.” The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including best picture, diThe rector and adapted screenplay, and won two, for supporting actors Ben Johnson and Cloris Leachman.

Bogdanovic­h received further acclaim for his next two films: the screwball comedy “What’s Up, Doc?” (1972), which starred Barbra Streisand and Ryan O’Neal, and “Paper Moon” (1973), a Depression-era road movie that featured O’Neal and his real-life daughter, 10-yearold Tatum O’Neal, who became the youngest person to win a competitiv­e Academy Award.

Yet by the mid-1970s, Bogdanovic­h was making headlines as much for his personal life as his movies. His marriage to screenwrit­er and production designer Polly Platt, one of his closest collaborat­ors, broke down when he started a much-publicized affair with Cybill Shepherd, one of the stars of “The Last Picture Show.”

“It was inevitable,” he later told the Times. “My upbringing, the movies I’d seen, had made me totally vulnerable to falling in love with an actress. For ‘Picture Show’ and the role of Jacy, we had found this girl from Memphis, Cybill Shepherd. She was 20 and perfect — very smart and funny. And I felt myself falling in love with her. I tried to avoid it. I told her, ‘I don’t know whether I want to go to bed with Jacy, or you.' ”

Bogdanovic­h directed Shepherd in “Daisy Miller” (1974), a period drama adapted from a novel by Henry James, and “At Long Last Love” (1975), a critically reviled jukebox musical. Reviewing the latter, film critic Frank Rich declared that it was “like watching a musical unfold within ‘Night of the Living Dead.' “

A few years later, Bogdanovic­h fell into a love affair with Dorothy Stratten, a Playboy model whom he cast in his bitterswee­t romantic comedy “They All Laughed” (1981). Shortly after filming wrapped in 1980, she was murdered by her estranged husband. Her killing inspired another movie, Bob Fosse’s “Star 80,” and traumatize­d Bogdanovic­h, who wrote a book, “The Killing of the Unicorn” (1984), about Stratten and her murder.

episode also led Bogdanovic­h to grow closer with Stratten’s younger sister, Louise. They married in 1988, when he was 49 and she was 20. “It’s like a shipwreck. We both ended up hanging on to the same piece of driftwood, and we saw that we loved each other,” he told the website Vulture, looking back on their relationsh­ip.

By then, Bogdanovic­h was struggling to regain his footing as a critically beloved, commercial­ly successful director. Major box office failures — including that of “They All Laughed” — had tarnished his reputation. He declared bankruptcy twice in a dozen years, and was angered by suggestion­s that his early, best-reviewed films were in large part the result of his collaborat­ion with Platt, who went on to work as a producer and collaborat­e with filmmaker James L. Brooks.

“The whole thing about my personal life got in the way of people’s understand­ing of the movies,” he told the Associated Press in 2020. “That’s something that has plagued me since the first couple of pictures.”

Still, he pressed on, continuing to make movies and befriendin­g younger directors such as Quentin Tarantino, with whom he lived for a time in the 2000s.

Peter Bogdanovic­h was born in Kingston, N.Y., on July 30, 1939, and grew up in Manhattan, where movies served as an escape from a melancholy family, haunted by the accidental death of an older brother. His father was an artist from Serbia, and his mother was a homemaker who came from a wealthy Jewish family in Austria.

 ?? Michael Williamson / The Washington Post ?? Oscar-nominated director Peter Bogdanovic­h died Jan. 6 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 82.
Michael Williamson / The Washington Post Oscar-nominated director Peter Bogdanovic­h died Jan. 6 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 82.

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