1930–1939: Early career and directorial debut During his stay in Mexico, Huston wrote a play called
Frankie and Johnny, based on the ballad of the same title. After selling it easily, he decided that writing would be a viable career, and he focused on it. His self-esteem was enhanced when
H. L. Mencken, editor of the popular magazine
American Mercury, bought two of his stories, "Fool" and "Figures of Fighting Men." During subsequent years, Huston's stories and feature articles were published in
Esquire, Theatre Arts, and
The New York Times. He also worked for a period on the
New York Graphic. In 1931, when he was 25, he moved back to Los Angeles in hopes of writing for the blossoming film industry. The
silent films had given way to "talkies", and writers were in demand. A coroner's jury absolved Huston of blame, but the incident left him "traumatized". He moved to
London and
Paris, living as a "drifter." Huston was recognized and respected as a screenwriter. He persuaded the Warners to give him a chance to direct, under the condition that his next script also became a hit. Huston wrote: They indulged me rather. They liked my work as a writer and they wanted to keep me on. If I wanted to direct, why, they'd give me a shot at it, and if it didn't come off all that well, they wouldn't be too disappointed as it was to be a very small picture. Years later, after Huston moved to Ireland, his daughter, actress
Anjelica Huston, recalled that the "main movies we watched were the war documentaries." Huston performed an uncredited rewrite of
Anthony Veiller's screenplay for
The Stranger (1946), a film he was to have directed. When Huston became unavailable, the film's star,
Orson Welles, directed instead; Welles had the lead role of a high-ranking Nazi fugitive who settles in New England under an assumed name.
1947–1951: Breakthrough and acclaim '
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
(1948)' Huston's next picture, which he wrote, directed, and briefly appeared in as an American asked to "help out a fellow American, down on his luck", was
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948). It would become one of the films that established his reputation as a leading filmmaker. The film, also starring Humphrey Bogart, was the story of three drifters who band together to prospect for gold. Huston gave a supporting role to his father, Walter Huston.
Warners studio was initially uncertain what to make of the film. They had allowed Huston to film on location in Mexico, which was a "radical move" for a studio at the time. They also knew that Huston was gaining a reputation as "one of the wild men of Hollywood." In any case, studio boss
Jack L. Warner initially "detested it." But whatever doubts Warners had were soon removed, as the film achieved widespread public and critical acclaim. Hollywood writer
James Agee called it "one of the most beautiful and visually alive movies I have ever seen." This theme was also expressed in
Treasure of the Sierra Madre, where the group foundered on their own greed. It starred
Sterling Hayden and
Sam Jaffe, a personal friend of Huston. Marilyn Monroe had her first serious role in this film. Huston said, "it was, of course, where Marilyn Monroe got her start." Huston recalls that at the preview showing, before the film was halfway through, "damn near a third of the audience got up and walked out of the theater." At the same time, the film was also the cause of a growing feud between MGM founder
Louis B. Mayer and Producer
Dore Schary to the point where Huston felt like stepping down to avoid growing the conflict. However, Mayer encouraged Huston to stay on telling him to fight for the picture regardless of what he thought of it. '
The African Queen
(1951)' Before
The Red Badge of Courage opened in theaters, Huston was already in Africa shooting
The African Queen (1951), a story based on
C. S. Forester's popular novel. It starred
Humphrey Bogart and
Katharine Hepburn in a combination of romance, comedy and adventure. Barson calls it "one of the most popular Hollywood movies of all time." Clint Eastwood directed and starred in the film
White Hunter, Black Heart, based on
Peter Viertel's novel of the same name, which tells a fictional version of the making of the film.
1952–1966: HUAC period In 1952 Huston moved to Ireland as a result of his "disgust" at the "witch-hunt" and the "moral rot" he felt was created by investigation and hearings by the
House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA), which had affected many of his friends in the movie industry. Huston had, with friends including director
William Wyler and screenwriter
Philip Dunne, established the "
Committee for the First Amendment", as a response to the ongoing government investigations into communists within the film industry. The HCUA was calling numerous filmmakers, screenwriters, and actors to testify about any past affiliations.
Moby Dick (1956), however, was written by
Ray Bradbury, although Huston had his name added to the screenplay credit after the completion of the project. Although Huston had personally hired Bradbury to adapt
Herman Melville's novel into a screenplay, Bradbury and Huston did not get along during pre-production. Bradbury later dramatized their relationship in the short story "
Banshee". When this was adapted as an episode of
The Ray Bradbury Theater, Peter O'Toole played the role based on John Huston. Bradbury wrote more poems, essays, and stories on his time in Ireland, but was reluctant to write a book because he did not want to gossip about Huston. It was not until after he read Katharine Hepburn's memoir,
The Making of the African Queen, that he decided that he could write "a book which is fair, which presents the Huston that I loved along with the one that I began to fear on occasion." He published
Green Shadows, White Whale, a novel about his time in Ireland with Huston, almost 40 years after he wrote the screenplay for
Moby Dick. Huston had been planning to film
Herman Melville's
Moby-Dick for the previous ten years, and originally thought the starring role of
Captain Ahab would be an excellent part for his father,
Walter Huston. After his father died in 1950, Huston chose
Gregory Peck to play the role. The movie was filmed over a three-year period on location in Ireland, where Huston was living. The fishing village of
New Bedford, Massachusetts, was recreated along the waterfront; the sailing ship in the film was fully constructed to be seaworthy; and three 100-foot whales were built out of steel, wood, and plastic. In the film, Huston's voice was dubbed for the voice of actor
Joseph Tomelty and a Pequod lookout. But the film failed at the box office. Critics such as
David Robinson suggested that the movie lacked the "mysticism of the book" and thereby "loses its significance." Critics have since noted the "retrospective atmosphere of doom" associated with the film.
Clark Gable, the star, died of a heart attack a few weeks after the filming was completed;
Marilyn Monroe never finished another film, and died a year later after being suspended during the filming of ''
Something's Got to Give; and costars Montgomery Clift (1966) and Thelma Ritter (1969) also died over the next decade. But two of the Misfits'' stars,
Eli Wallach and
Kevin McCarthy, lived another 50 years. During the filming, Monroe was sometimes taking prescribed drugs, which led to her arriving late on the set. Monroe also sometimes forgot her lines. Monroe's personal problems eventually led to the breakup of her marriage to playwright
Arthur Miller, the scriptwriter, "virtually on set." Huston later commented about this period in Monroe's career: "Marilyn was on her way out. Not only of the picture, but of life." This is the story of Freud's descent into a region as black as hell, man's unconscious, and how he let in the light. Huston explains how he became interested in psychotherapy, the subject of the film: For his next film, Huston again traveled to
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, after meeting an architect, Guillermo Wulff, who owned property and businesses in the town. The filming of
The Night of the Iguana took place in a beach cove called
Mismaloya, about thirty minutes south of town. Huston adapted
the stage play by
Tennessee Williams. The film stars
Richard Burton and
Ava Gardner, and was nominated for several Academy Awards. The production attracted intense worldwide media attention, due to Burton bringing his celebrity mistress, actress
Elizabeth Taylor (who was still married to singer
Eddie Fisher at the time) to Puerto Vallarta. Huston liked the town where filming took place so much that he bought a house near there, as did Burton and Taylor. Guillermo Wulff and Huston became friends and always spent time together while Huston was in town, more frequently at Wulff's El Dorado Restaurant on Los Muertos Beach. Producer
Dino De Laurentis traveled to Ireland to ask Huston to direct
The Bible: In the Beginning. Although De Laurentis had ambitions for a broader story, he realized that the subject could not be adequately covered and limited the story to less than the first half of the
Book of Genesis. Huston enjoyed directing the film, as it gave him a chance to indulge his love of animals. Besides directing he also played the role of
Noah and the voice of God.
The Bible earned rentals of $15 million in North America, making it
the second highest-grossing film of 1966. However, because of its bloated budget of $18 million (which made it the most expensive movie of Huston's career Huston enjoyed describing details about the filming: Every morning before beginning work, I visited the animals. One of the elephants, Candy, loved to be scratched on the belly behind her foreleg. I'd scratch her and she would lean farther and farther toward me until there was some danger of her toppling over on me. One time I started to walk away from her, and she reached out and took my wrist with her trunk and pulled me back to her side. It was a command: "Don't stop!" I used it in the picture. Noah scratches the elephant's belly and walks away, and the elephant pulls him back to her time after time. Huston was interviewed in Irish journalist
Peter Lennon's
Rocky Road to Dublin (1967), where he argued that it was more important for Irish filmmakers to make films in Ireland than for foreign production companies to make international films. In 1969, he shot
Sinful Davey in Ireland using a mixed Irish and British cast.
1972–1987: Later career and final films After several films that were not well received, Huston returned to critical acclaim with
Fat City. Based on
Leonard Gardner's
1969 novel of the same name, it was about an aging, washed-up alcoholic boxer in
Stockton, California, trying to get his name back on the map, while having a new relationship with a world-weary alcoholic. It also featured an
amateur boxer trying to find success in boxing. The film was nominated for several awards. It starred
Stacy Keach, a young
Jeff Bridges, and
Susan Tyrrell; she was nominated for an
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
Roger Ebert stated
Fat City was one of Huston's best films, giving it four out of four stars. Perhaps Huston's most highly regarded film of the 1970s,
The Man Who Would Be King was both a critical and commercial success. Huston had been planning to make this film since the '50s, originally with his friends Humphrey Bogart and Clark Gable. Eventually, the lead roles went to
Sean Connery and
Michael Caine. The movie was partly filmed on location in
Morocco and the
French Alps. The film was praised for its use of old-fashioned escapism and entertainment.
Steven Spielberg has cited the film as one of the inspirations for his film
Raiders of the Lost Ark. After filming
The Man Who Would Be King, Huston took his longest break between directing films. He returned with an offbeat and somewhat controversial film based on the novel
Wise Blood. Here, Huston showed his skills as a storyteller, and boldness when it came to difficult subjects such as religion.
Under the Volcano, Huston's last film set in Mexico, stars
Albert Finney as an alcoholic ambassador during the beginnings of World War II. Adapted from the 1947 novel by
Malcolm Lowry, the film was highly praised by critics, most notably for Finney's portrayal of a desperate and depressed alcoholic. The film was a success on the independent circuit. John Huston's final film, 1987's
The Dead, is an adaptation of the classic short story by
James Joyce. This may have been one of Huston's most personal films, due to his citizenship in Ireland and his passion for classic literature. Huston directed most of the film from a wheelchair, as he needed an oxygen tank to breathe during the last few months of his life. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards and was praised by critics.
Roger Ebert eventually placed it in his Great Movies list; a section of movies he claimed to be some of the best ever made. Huston died nearly four months before the film's release date. In the 1996
RTÉ documentary
John Huston: An t-Éireannach,
Anjelica Huston said that "it was very important for my father to make that film." She contends that Huston did not think that it was going to be his last film, but that it was his love letter to Ireland and the Irish. ==As an actor==