ROD STEIGER, 1925 - 2002
From the docks of New York to the rural back roads of Mississippi to the war torn Russian steppes, Rod Steiger reveled in creating some of the most overpowering and difficult men on the screen. He could be a total scoundrel, embodying Machiavelli's idiom that "it's better to be feared than loved" in the movies. But as an actor he refused to be typecast and his wide range included characters who were secretly tormented (The Pawnbroker, 1965) or loners (Run of the Arrow, 1965) or eccentrics (The Loved One, 1965).
Along with Marlon Brando, Steiger helped bring the 'Method School' from the Group Theater and Actors Studio in New York to the screens of Hollywood. The Method technique, taught by Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg, insisted on complete immersion into the character's psyche and resulted in intense, dramatic performances and performers. Steiger made his first significant screen appearance as Brando's older brother in On the Waterfront (1954). Their climatic scene together in a taxicab is one of the great moments in American cinema.
It was a short leap from playing a crooked lawyer in On the Waterfront to playing the shady boxing promoter in The Harder They Fall (1956). Based on the tragic tale of true-life fighter Primo Carnera, The Harder They Fall details the corruption behind the scenes of professional boxing bouts. Steiger is a fight manager named Nick Benko who enlists newspaperman Eddie Willis (Humphrey Bogart in his final screen appearance) to drum up publicity for a fixed prizefight. While the boxing scenes were often brutally realistic, the most powerful dramatic moments took place between Steiger and Bogart on the sidelines.
As mob boss Al Capone (1959), Steiger got to play another man you loved to hate. He vividly depicted the criminal from his swaggering early days to his pathetic demise from syphilis. In Doctor Zhivago (1965), Steiger was the only American in the international cast, playing the hateful and perverse Komarovsky. During the production of Dr. Zhivago, Steiger often found himself at odds with director David Lean. Schooled in the British tradition, Lean valued the integrity of the script and demanded that actors remain faithful to the script. Steiger, on the other hand, relied on improvisation and spontaneity. When kissing the lovely Lara (played by Julie Christie), Steiger jammed his tongue into Christie's mouth to produce the desired reaction - disgust. It worked! While it might not have been Lean's approach, it brought a grittier edge to the prestige production and made Komarovsky is a detestable but truly memorable figure.
Steiger dared audiences to dislike him. As the smalltown southern Sheriff Gillespie in In The Heat of the Night (1967), Steiger embodied all the prejudices and suspicions of a racist. When a black northern lawyer, played by Sidney Poitier, arrives on the crime scene, Gillespie is forced to recognize his fellow man as an equal despite skin color. Here, Steiger's character started as a bigot and developed into a better man. He finally claimed a Best Actor Academy Award for his performance as Sheriff Gillespie.
Steiger was an actor's actor. A chameleon who didn't think twice about diving into challenging roles that others would shy away from. In the Private Screenings interview he did with host Robert Osborne he admitted that Paul Muni was one of his idols because of his total immersion into his roles. Steiger said, "I believe actors are supposed to create different human beings." And Steiger showed us a rich and diverse cross section of them.
by Jeremy Geltzer & Jeff Stafford
Black Water
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Nicolas Gessner
Michael Earl Reid
Ned Beatty
Vince Williams
Stacey Dash
Brian Mcnamara
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A young European lawyer concluding music negotiations in Nashville becomes entangled in a menacing affair when he picks up a hitchhiker.
Director
Nicolas Gessner
Cast
Michael Earl Reid
Ned Beatty
Vince Williams
Stacey Dash
Brian Mcnamara
Mary Kane
Denise Crosby
Ed Lauter
Gary Grubbs
Rod Steiger
Julian Sands
Johnny Cash
Lew Hopson
Billy Ray Sharkey
Crew
David Berlatsky
David Cohen
Pio Corradi
Peter-christian Fueter
Nicolas Gessner
Norman Gimbel
William Mark Hartman
Marcel Just
Hans Werner Kettenbach
Laird Koenig
Bernard Lang
Mark Ragland
Michel Rubini
Hartwig Schmidt
Fred Schwoebel
Jurg Staubli
Roger Weill
Blake Wilcox
Hilary Wright
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
TCM Remembers - Rod Steiger
TCM Remembers - Rod Steiger
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1989
Released in United States August 1989
Released in United States May 13, 1989
Released in United States on Video July 13, 1994
Shown at Cannes Film Festival (market) May 13, 1989.
Shown at Locarno Film Festival August 3-13, 1989.
Began shooting August 22, 1988.
Completed shooting September 1988.
Released in United States 1989
Released in United States May 13, 1989 (Shown at Cannes Film Festival (market) May 13, 1989.)
Released in United States on Video July 13, 1994
Released in United States August 1989 (Shown at Locarno Film Festival August 3-13, 1989.)