Don Siegel
About
Biography
Filmography
Family & Companions
Bibliography
Notes
"I'm a rebel. That's why the young kids like my films. I've been fired from almost every place I've ever worked. I resent authority."--Don Siegel ("New York Times", 1972 interview)
"A movie-industry maverick with an un-Hollywoodlike sympathy for bad guys, Siegel had an important influence on younger filmmakers. Both Sam Peckinpah and John Cassavetes worked for him and absorbed the off-hand, improvisatory style of his movies."--Matthew Flamm ("New York Post" obituary, April 24, 1991)
Biography
The montage department at Warner Bros. gave producer-director Don Siegel the necessary tools to impart his signature economical, action-driven style that made films like "Riot on Cell Block 11" (1954), "Invasion of the Body Snatcher" (1955), "The Killers" (1964), "Dirty Harry" (1971) and "Charley Varrick" (1973) such high water marks in the crime and thriller genres. Though Siegel disavowed any notable style, his films were earmarked by their brisk pace, uncompromising violence, and heroes that frequently followed the same moral path as their villains. Siegel's strongest pictures were in collaboration with "Harry" star Clint Eastwood, whose own prominence was boosted by his work with the director in "Coogan's Bluff" (1968) and "Escape from Alcatraz" (1979), among others. There was no denying that Siegel's four-decade career generated some of the most enjoyable and mature crime dramas to come from Hollywood.
Born in Chicago, IL on Oct. 26, 1912, Don Siegel came from a musical family that included a violinist father. As a young man, Siegel initially trained to be a stage actor. After graduating from Jesus College in Cambridge, England, he began working in the Warner Bros. film library in 1934. Siegel quickly graduated to assistant editor and later assistant head of the insert department before taking control of the studio's montage department. There, he composed some of the most striking montages for features, including the opening sequence in "Casablanca" (1942), "Now, Voyager" (1942) and "Action in the North Atlantic" (1943). His experience there led to work as a second unit and assistant director on films like "Sergeant York" (1941) and "To Have and Have Not" (1943). Both experiences would prove invaluable to his subsequent career as a director; the montage work taught him to plan his shots with meticulous care, which would in turn allow him greater control over the finished product by limiting the amount of footage available for producers to re-edit his films. The limited time, budget and access to performers afforded to second unit directors taught Siegel the importance of working quickly and accurately, both of which would be hallmarks of his subsequent directorial style.
Features were Siegel's ultimate goal, but Warner chief Jack Warner refused to let him out of his contract for fear that they would lose his distinctive montage. Warner eventually consented to let Siegel direct a pair of short films; the first, "Star in the Night" (1945), was a modern Western that presented a 20th century take on the Biblical story of Christmas, while "Hitler Lives" (1946) incorporated wartime footage of Nazi leaders with dramatized scenes to underscore its message of vigilance towards postwar Germany and Nazi sympathizers in the United States. Though Siegel was not credited for the latter project, both films won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. "Hitler" would also serve as the seed of a lingering debate in regard to Siegel's political stance, with some viewing it as a strongly conservative picture, while others taking its message as virulently anti-totalitarianism. Regardless of their themes, both films signaled that Siegel was ready to tackle features, and in 1946, he ended his 14-year relationship with Warner Bros. to freelance as a director for various studios.
Siegel's first directorial effort was "The Verdict" (1946), an offbeat mystery featuring the fabled screen duo of Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet. Soon after, he began to craft his signature style through a series of dramas and thrillers, most notably "Night Unto Night" (1949), a unusual feature about the romance between a man (Ronald Reagan) stricken with epilepsy and a woman (Siegel's wife, actress Vivica Lindfors) contemplating suicide after her divorce. Though Siegel would deny any sense of an individual style, recurrent themes and elements would begin to surface in his work in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Pictures like "The Big Steal" (1949), "Riot in Cell Block 11" (1954) and "Private Hell 36" (1954) were briskly paced, violent affairs, with restless camerawork following his characters rather than dictating their movement. Such an approach lent a realistic feel which heighted the drama and action that were inherent to his films.
Siegel's editing background also brought a burst of energy to his action scenes; fistfights, car chases and shootouts were delivered in brief but intense explosions of tension and release. Siegel's heroes also reflected his economical, no-nonsense approach; Robert Mitchum's Army lieutenant in "Big Steal" and Neville Brand's inmate in "Cell Block 11" (1954) were tough, single-minded men whose sole purpose in life was to stand by their own personal codes of honor. They avoided the standard societal codes, operating under their own rules, and frequently broke traditional movie tenets in their pursuit of their desires, whether financial, personal or otherwise. Often times, there was very little separating his heroes from his villains. Such an approach endeared Siegel to noir fans, as well as serious students of American cinema like Francois Truffaut, who was an unabashed admirer. For his part, Siegel described himself as a "whore" who simply worked for the profit, and indeed, for every great effort during the 1950s and beyond, there were minor, forgettable efforts like "Hound-Dog Man" (1959), a frivolous, fictionalized biopic of Elvis Presley with Fabian in the lead, and countless television episodes, including "The Doctor" (NBC, 1952-53) and two of the weakest stories on "The Twilight Zone" (CBS, 1959-1964).
Despite the erratic nature of Siegel's career, he turned out some exceptional films in the late '50s and 1960s that became favorites for crime and thriller enthusiasts and scholars alike. "Crime in the Streets" (1956) was a gritty urban drama with James Whitmore as a social worker attempting to turn street punks John Cassavetes and Sal Mineo away from a life of crime, while "The Lineup" (1958) afforded character actor Eli Wallach a rare lead as a psychopathic gangster who tracked down and killed tourists who had become unwitting drug mules. He was also adept at war pictures, like the Steve McQueen vehicle "Hell is For Heroes" (1962) and Westerns like "Flaming Star" (1960), which gave Elvis Presley one of his best screen roles as a half-Native American caught between his adopted white family and warring tribes. Siegel also made one of the greatest science fiction films of the 20th century, "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1956), which depicted the takeover of a small California town by extraterrestrials with the ability to duplicate humans through giant plant-like pods. The film was the center of considerable debate over its allegiance or opposition to the anti-Communist witch hunts of the period, with both sides swearing Siegel's fealty to their side. For his part, Siegel would later comment that the pods represented the front office at Hollywood studios. In 1959, he made his debut as producer-director on "Edge of Eternity" (1959), and would oversee nine more films during his lengthy career.
Save for "The Killers" (1964), a savage gangster picture with Lee Marvin as an amoral killer and Ronald Reagan in his final screen role as a cruel mob boss, Siegel worked in television for most of the mid-1960s before returning to features with "Madigan" (1968), a downbeat police drama about a New York detective (Richard Widmark) on the trail of a killer who eluded him during a routine bust. The film was particularly trying for the director, who clashed frequently with producer Frank Rosenberg. However, his next film, "Coogan's Bluff" (1968), marked the beginning of a career revival, as well as a long personal and professional collaboration with its star, Clint Eastwood. At the time, Eastwood was riding the wave of popularity from his Italian westerns with Sergio Leone, and had returned to the United States in search of quality projects. A fan of Siegel's earlier work, he tapped the older man to direct "Bluff," a crime drama with Western overtones about an Arizona sheriff (Eastwood) who pursued a psychotic criminal (Don Stroud) through New York.
The new actor/director team soon followed their first hit with "Two Mules for Sister Sara" (1970), a Western with Shirley MacLaine as a prostitute posing as a nun and Eastwood as the drifter who aids her against Mexican soldiers, and "The Beguiled" (1971), a Gothic period piece about a wounded Union soldier (Eastwood) who, after being rescued by the teacher and students at an female boarding school, received a brutal come-uppance after attempting to seduce them. The picture was marked by negative reactions to Eastwood's weak character and a perceived notion of misogyny, an idea bolstered in part by Siegel's comment about the film's depiction of women's "basic desire to castrate men." However, the controversy it generated was nothing when compared to the firestorm of criticism that followed their next collaboration, "Dirty Harry" (1971).
A violent crime thriller about a trigger-happy San Francisco detective (Eastwood) whose investigative methods were not dissimilar to the sadistic sniper (Andrew Robinson) he pursued, "Harry" became an iconic role for Eastwood, and one of Siegel's biggest career hits, but the film was dogged as a right-wing fantasy that celebrated police brutality and fascist responses to violence. Siegel distanced himself from the debate, which actually incurred protests at screenings, though several critics saw the film as an implication of viewers' own violent urges and knee-jerk responses to acts of brutality. Harry Callahan would return for several more movie adventures, though Siegel would not direct any of them. He would, however, serve as a strong influence on the directorial career of Eastwood, whose own terse cinematic style and focus on the moral ambiguity of his characters reflected Siegel's worldview.
Siegel's output slowed in the years following "Harry." He had been in the movie business for over four decades, and had enjoyed a career that most directors would find envious. He would direct and producer a handful of films in the 1970s, most of which turned a profit and enjoyed respectable box office returns. The cult favorite "Charley Varrick" (1973) starred Walter Matthau as a cagey bank robber who runs afoul of mobsters, and featured one of the most unique chase scenes in film history, with Matthau in a plane pursued by relentless killer Joe Don Baker in a car. "The Shootist" (1976) was an unsentimental Western about an aging gunfighter (John Wayne, in his final screen role) whose attempt to retire was challenged by a vicious criminal (Richard Boone). And "Escape from Alcatraz" (1979) was a tense prison film about the real-life escape from the maximum-security prison by inmate Frank Morris (Eastwood). Though a hit, the picture ended the long relationship between Eastwood and Siegel when the latter took over the production of the film from his star.
In addition to his directing career, Siegel acted in minor roles in several films. He made cameos in many of his own projects, including an elevator passenger in "Coogan's Bluff" and a pedestrian in "Dirty Harry." Eastwood cast him in a minor part as a bartender in "Play Misty for Me" (1971), while Philip Kaufman brought him aboard the remake of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" (1978) as the driver of the cab who struck Kevin McCarthy, the star of Siegel's version. Siegel would direct two more films, "Rough Cut" (1980) and "Jinxed!" (1982) before retiring in the 1980s. The former was a minor hit for Burt Reynolds as a jewel thief, while the latter was a disastrous comedy for Bette Midler as a Vegas lounge singer who fell for an unlucky card dealer (Ken Wahl). Both stars opened loathed each other during filming, and Midler also clashed with Siegel, who suffered a heart attack during production. The film's sole positive note was the brief revival it afforded Sam Peckinpah, who was hired by Siegel as second unit director on the film, and as a result, received a final turn as director on "The Osterman Weekend" (1983) before his death. On April 20, 1991, Siegel died from cancer in Nipomo, CA. His body of work underwent several re-evaluations in the years that followed his passing, with his own autobiography, A Siegel Film, published posthumously in 1993, serving as the final word on many of his projects. In 1992, Eastwood dedicated his Oscar-winning Western "Unforgiven" to the two men whose work had the greatest impact on his career: Sergio Leone and Don Siegel.
Filmography
Director (Feature Film)
Cast (Feature Film)
Producer (Feature Film)
Visual Effects (Feature Film)
Director (Special)
Cast (Special)
Director (Short)
Life Events
1930
Performed with Hollywood's Contemporary Theatre Group
1933
Joined Warner Bros. As assistant film librarian (hired by Hal Wallis)
1939
Organized and headed Warner Bros. Montage department
1946
Feature film directorial debut, "The Verdict"
1953
TV directing debut, "The Doctors"
1959
First film as producer, "Edge of Eternity" (also director and first cameo appearance)
1965
Directed first TV movie, "The Hanged Man"
1971
First film as actor only, "Play Misty for Me"
1980
Subject of a Dutch TV documentary, "Don Siegel--Last of the Independents"
1982
Suffered a heart attack during the filming of "Jinxed" and his former assistant director on "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" Sam Peckinpah directed some of the film without credit
Photo Collections
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Family
Companions
Bibliography
Notes
"I'm a rebel. That's why the young kids like my films. I've been fired from almost every place I've ever worked. I resent authority."--Don Siegel ("New York Times", 1972 interview)
"A movie-industry maverick with an un-Hollywoodlike sympathy for bad guys, Siegel had an important influence on younger filmmakers. Both Sam Peckinpah and John Cassavetes worked for him and absorbed the off-hand, improvisatory style of his movies."--Matthew Flamm ("New York Post" obituary, April 24, 1991)
Siegel's 1964 film "The Killers" was the first movie to be made for the small screen, but was rejected for TV broadcast because of excessive violence and released to theaters instead.