Orson Welles: Hello Americans

Orson Welles: Hello Americans

by SimonCallow (Author)

Synopsis

The reason for the decline of Orson Welles' career is a hotly debated issue, but decline it certainly did. When Citizen Kane , his first film, opened in 1941, Welles was universally acclaimed as the most audacious film maker alive. But instead of marking the beginning of a triumphant career in Hollywood, the film still regularly voted the greatest ever made proved to be an exception in Welles' life and work. He found it increasingly impossible to function within Hollywood's system. Project after project foundered, either abandoned incomplete - as with his ambitious Brazilian epic It's All True - or, as in the case of virtually every other film he made in America, being released in very different form from the one he intended. Finally, in 1947, he left America for Europe where for the best part of twenty years he lived in self-imposed exile, occasionally and briefly returning to stage a play, make a film or shoot a television drama. In close and colourful detail, Hello Americans examines the years from Citizen Kane to Macbeth in which Welles' Hollywood film career came apart. It offers a scrupulous analysis of the factors involved, revealing the immense and sometimes self-defeating complexities of Welles' temperament as well as some of the monstrous personalities with whom he had to contend. At the same time, the book gives full weight to the almost bewildering range of his activities beyond Hollywood: his serious but doomed attempts to be a radio comedian and stage magician, his flamboyant and financially disastrous endeavour to revive spectacular theatre single-handedly, his newspaper columns, and the political activities into which he so passionately flung himself. And of course the films, as fascinating as they were flawed: The Magnificent Ambersons , Journey Into Fear , The Stranger , and The Lady From Shanghai . The thread that runs through this apparently incoherent blur of activity is an often frustrated engagement with his native land, its faults, its dreams, its popular arts, and its history. But by 1947, he had said all that he had to say to his fellow citizens; it was Goodbye Americans for two decades of endlessly experimental and innovative but essentially European work.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 507
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd
Published: 04 May 2006

ISBN 10: 0224038532
ISBN 13: 9780224038539
Book Overview: The second volume of Simon Callow's brilliant, definitive biography of Orson Welles. 20021108

Media Reviews
It is not only the best biography of Welles that we can possibly have, it is also one of the best biographies in any field I've read in years.
-Roger Lewis, Sunday Express
A vivid, sympathetic account . . . provides a definitive explanation of Welles's ultimate, lingering downfall.
- Financial Times

From the Trade Paperback edition.

Author Bio
Simon Callow is an actor, director and writer. He has appeared on the stage and in many films, including the hugely popular Four Weddings and a Funeral. Callow's books include Being an Actor, Shooting the Actor, a highly acclaimed biography of Charles Laughton, and Love Is Where It Falls, an account of his friendship with Peggy Ramsay.