Happy Birthday: John Ford (1894–1973)

johnford.jpgJohn Ford (1894–1973)

Born: February 1, 1894 in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, USA
Died: August 31, 1973 (age 79) in Palm Desert, California, USA

For a director there are commercial rules that it is necessary to obey. In our profession, an artistic failure is nothing; a commercial failure is a sentence. The secret is to make films that please the public and also allow the director to reveal his personality.

[on John Wayne] Duke is the best actor in Hollywood.

As a beauty, Dolores del Rio is in a class with [Greta Garbo]. Then she opens her mouth and becomes Minnie Mouse.

My name is John Ford and I make Westerns.

[1967] I am a liberal Democrat and a rebel.

THE INFORMERThe Informer
1935
dir. John Ford
Cast
Victor McLaglen
Heather Angel
YOUNG MR LINCOLNYoung Mr. Lincoln
1939
dir. Ford
Starring
Henry Fonda
Alice Brady
HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEYHow Green Was My Valley
1941
dir. Ford
Starring
Walter Pidgeon
Maureen O’Hara
The Quiet ManThe Quiet Man
1952
dir. Ford
starring
John Wayne
Maureen O’Hara
The Long Gray LineThe Long Gray Line
1955
dir. Ford
Starring
Tyrone Power
Maureen O’Hara
THE SEARCHERSThe Searchers
1956
dir. Ford
Starring
John Wayne
Vera Miles
MOVIEStagecoach
1939
dir. John Ford
Starring
John Wayne
Claire Trevor
THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCEThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
1962
dir. Ford
starring
James Stewart
John Wayne
MOVIE POSTERTHE GRAPES OF WRATH
1940
dir. John Ford
Stars:
Henry Fonda
Jane Darwell

John Ford was one of the first and maybe the best at playing the singular individual against the vastness of nature, and in so doing laid the ground work for the modern epic. Other director’s are probably more known for that particular style of filmmaking–David Lean certainly explored further into what an epic could do–but there would have been no David Lean without John Ford.

Like Chaplin and Hitchock, Ford started out in the silent’s, transporting the ability to tell a story in purely visual terms into the age of sound (and eventually color and cinemascope) without losing his own personal voice. And like Hitchcok, Ford was a specialist. He made the western what is and was.

It’s hard to remember, today, just how big the Western was in its heyday. In the 1950s if you were going to make a new TV show, it was probably going to be a western. While superhero comics languished, western comics rode on. And ever year, any studio worth its salt was making sure it had a slate full of western’s.

And Ford was its master. “Stage Coach” “The Searchers” “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.” Even people who didn’t make western’s the way Ford did often made them in spite of the way he made them. If you made a Western, John Ford was your starting point.

But he was certainly capable of other things. His adaptation of “The Grapes of Wrath” is as good as any western he ever made. There are similarities of course, but that might be less because he turned everything into a western as it is that he found the innate humanity in all of his stories, and it is that which made all of his films so good.

Even decades after his preferred genre has fallen from the pedestal it once sat on, John Ford still remains.

TV CONTESTSUBMIT your Best Scene Screenplay or TV SPEC Script
Voted #1 TV Contest in North America.
Screenplay CONTESTSUBMIT your Best Scene Screenplay or FEATURE Script
FULL FEEDBACK on all entries. Get your script performed
Screenplay CONTESTFIRST SCENE (first 10pgs) Screenplay CONTEST
Submit the first stages of your film and get full feedback!
WILDsound Festival's avatar

By WILDsound Festival

Submitters reactions to their feedback on their stories. New testimonials coming each month! Watch this month's winning readings. At least 15 performances a month: www.wildsoundfestival.com Submit your script, story, poem, or film to the festival today: www.wildsound.ca

2 comments

Leave a comment