Period as film editor Bored by his work, Lean spent every evening in the cinema, and in 1927, after an aunt had advised him to find a job he enjoyed, he visited
Gaumont Studios where his obvious enthusiasm earned him a month's trial without pay. He was taken on as a teaboy, promoted to
clapperboy, and soon rose to the position of
third assistant director. By 1930 he was working as an editor on
newsreels, including those of
Gaumont Pictures and
Movietone, while his move to feature films began with
Freedom of the Seas (1934) and
Escape Me Never (1935). He edited
Gabriel Pascal's film productions of two
George Bernard Shaw plays,
Pygmalion (1938) and
Major Barbara (1941). He edited
Powell & Pressburger's
49th Parallel (1941) and
One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942). After this last film, Lean began his directing career, after editing more than two dozen features by 1942. As
Tony Sloman wrote in 1999, "As the varied likes of David Lean,
Robert Wise,
Terence Fisher and
Dorothy Arzner have proved, the cutting rooms are easily the finest grounding for film direction." David Lean was given honorary membership of the
Guild of British Film Editors in 1968.
British films His first work as a director was in collaboration with
Noël Coward on
In Which We Serve (1942), and he later adapted several of Coward's plays into successful films. These films are
This Happy Breed (1944),
Blithe Spirit (1945) and
Brief Encounter (1945) with
Celia Johnson and
Trevor Howard as quietly understated clandestine lovers, torn between their unpredictable passion and their respective orderly middle-class marriages in suburban England. The film shared Grand Prix honors at the 1946 Cannes film festival and garnered Lean his first Academy nominations for directing and screen adaptation, and Celia Johnson a nomination for Best Actress. It has since become a classic, one of the most highly regarded British films. Two celebrated
Charles Dickens adaptations followed –
Great Expectations (1946) and
Oliver Twist (1948).
David Shipman wrote in
The Story of Cinema: Volume Two (1984): "Of the other Dickens films, only Cukor's
David Copperfield approaches the excellence of this pair, partly because his casting, too, was near perfect". These two films were the first directed by Lean to star
Alec Guinness, whom Lean considered his "good luck charm". The actor's portrayal of Fagin was controversial at the time. The first screening in Berlin during February 1949 offended the surviving Jewish community and led to a riot. It caused problems too in New York, and after private screenings, was condemned by the
Anti-Defamation League and the American Board of Rabbis. "To our surprise it was accused of being anti-Semitic", Lean wrote. "We made Fagin an outsize and, we hoped, an amusing Jewish villain." The terms of the
production code meant that the film's release in the United States was delayed until July 1951 after cuts amounting to eight minutes. The next film directed by Lean was
The Passionate Friends (1949), an atypical Lean film, but one which marked his first occasion to work with
Claude Rains, who played the husband of a woman (
Ann Todd) torn between him and an old flame (Howard).
The Passionate Friends was the first of three films to feature the actress Ann Todd, who became his third wife.
Madeleine (1950), set in Victorian-era Glasgow is about an 1857
cause célèbre with Todd's lead character accused of murdering a former lover. "Once more", writes film critic
David Thomson "Lean settles on the pressing need for propriety, but not before the film has put its characters and the audience through a wringer of contradictory feelings." The last of the films with Todd,
The Sound Barrier (1952), has a screenplay by the playwright
Terence Rattigan and was the first of his three films for
Sir Alexander Korda's
London Films. ''
Hobson's Choice'' (1954), with
Charles Laughton in the lead, was based on the play by
Harold Brighouse.
International films Summertime (1955) marked a new departure for Lean. It was partly American financed, although again made for Korda's London Films. The film features
Katharine Hepburn in the lead role as a middle-aged American woman who has a romance while on holiday in
Venice. It was shot entirely on location there. Although best known for his epics, Lean's personal favourite of all his films was
Summertime, and Hepburn his favourite actress. He developed
The Wind Cannot Read but could not come to terms with Alex Korda and the Rank Organisation.
For Columbia and Sam Spiegel and
Omar Sharif in Lean's
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) Lean's films now began to become infrequent but much larger in scale and more extensively released internationally.
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) was based on a novel by
Pierre Boulle recounting the story of British and American prisoners of war trying to survive in a Japanese prison camp during the
Second World War. The film stars
William Holden and
Alec Guinness and became the highest-grossing film of 1957 in the United States. It won seven
Academy Awards, including
Best Picture,
Best Director, and
Best Actor for
Alec Guinness, who had battled with Lean to give more depth to his role as an obsessively correct British commander who is determined to build the best possible bridge for his Japanese captors in Burma. After extensive location work in the Middle East,
North Africa,
Spain, and elsewhere, Lean's
Lawrence of Arabia was released in 1962. This was the first project of Lean's with a screenplay by playwright
Robert Bolt, rewriting an original script by
Michael Wilson (one of the two blacklisted writers of
Bridge on the River Kwai). It recounts the life of
T. E. Lawrence, the British officer who is depicted in the film as uniting the squabbling Bedouin peoples of the Arab peninsula to fight in
World War I and then push on for independence. After some hesitation, Alec Guinness appeared here in his fourth David Lean film as the Arab leader Prince Faisal, despite his misgivings from their conflicts on
Bridge on the River Kwai. French composer
Maurice Jarre, on his first Lean film, created a soaring film score with a famous theme and won his first Oscar for Best Original Score. The film turned actor
Peter O'Toole, playing Lawrence, into an international star. Lean was nominated for ten Oscars, winning seven, including two for Best Director. Lean remains the only British director to win more than one Oscar for directing.
For MGM Lean had his greatest box-office success with
Doctor Zhivago (1965), a romance set during the
Russian Revolution. The film, based on the Soviet suppressed novel by Nobel Prize-winning Russian poet
Boris Pasternak, tells the story of a brilliant and warm-hearted physician and poet (
Omar Sharif) who, while seemingly happily married into the Russian aristocracy, and a father, falls in love with a beautiful abandoned young mother named Lara (
Julie Christie) and struggles to be with her in the chaos of the Bolshevik revolution and subsequent
Russian Civil War. arriving to Joensuu, Finland, to shoot
Doctor Zhivago, March 1965 Initially, reviews for
Doctor Zhivago were lukewarm, but critics have since come to see it as one of Lean's best films, with film director
Paul Greengrass calling it "one of the great masterpieces of cinema". , it is the 9th highest-grossing film of all time, adjusted for inflation. Producer
Carlo Ponti used
Maurice Jarre's
lush romantic score to create a pop tune called "
Lara's Theme", which became an international hit song with lyrics under the title "Somewhere My Love", one of cinema's most successful theme songs. The British director of photography,
Freddie Young, won an Academy Award for his colour cinematography. Around the same time, Lean also directed some scenes of
The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) while
George Stevens was committed to location work in Nevada. Lean's ''
Ryan's Daughter'' (1970) was released after an extended period on location in Ireland. A doomed romance set against the backdrop of 1916 Ireland's struggles against the British, it is loosely based on
Gustave Flaubert's
Madame Bovary. Starring the aging Hollywood 'bad boy'
Robert Mitchum in an uncharacteristic role as a long-suffering Irish husband and British actress
Sarah Miles as his faithless young wife, the film received far fewer positive reviews than the director's previous work, being particularly savaged by the New York critics. Some critics felt the film's massive visual scale on gorgeous Irish beaches and extended running time did not suit its small-scale romantic narrative. Nonetheless, the film was a box office success, earning $31 million and making it the 8th highest-grossing film of that year. It won two Academy Awards the following year, another for cinematographer
Freddie Young and for supporting actor
John Mills in his role as a village halfwit. The poor critical reception of the film prompted Lean to meet with the
National Society of Film Critics, gathered at the
Algonquin Hotel in New York, including
The New Yorker Pauline Kael, and ask them why they objected to the movie. "I sensed trouble from the moment I sat down", Lean says of the now famous luncheon.
Time critic
Richard Schickel asked Lean point blank how he, the director of
Brief Encounter, could have made "a piece of bullshit" like ''Ryan's Daughter''. These critics so lacerated the film for two hours to David Lean's face that the devastated Lean was put off from making films for a long time. "They just took the film to bits", said Lean in a later television interview. "It really had such an awful effect on me for several years ... you begin to think that maybe they're right. Why on earth am I making films if I don't have to? It shakes one's confidence terribly."
Last years and unfulfilled projects The Lawbreakers and The Long Arm From 1977 until 1980, Lean and Robert Bolt worked on a film adaptation of
Captain Bligh and Mr. Christian, a dramatized account by
Richard Hough of the
Mutiny on the Bounty. It was originally to be released as a two-part film, one named
The Lawbreakers that dealt with the voyage out to Tahiti and the subsequent mutiny, and the second named
The Long Arm that studied the journey of the mutineers after the mutiny as well as the admiralty's response in sending out the frigate
HMS Pandora, in which some of the mutineers were imprisoned. Lean could not find financial backing for both films after
Warner Bros. withdrew from the project; he decided to combine it into one and looked at a seven-part TV series before getting backing from Italian mogul
Dino De Laurentiis. The project then suffered a further setback when Bolt suffered a serious
stroke and was unable to continue writing; the director felt that Bolt's involvement would be crucial to the film's success.
Melvyn Bragg ended up writing a considerable portion of the script. Lean was forced to abandon the project after overseeing casting and the construction of the $4 million
Bounty replica; at the last possible moment, actor
Mel Gibson brought in his friend
Roger Donaldson to direct the film, as producer De Laurentiis did not want to lose the millions he had already put into the project over what he thought was as insignificant a person as the director dropping out. The film was eventually released as
The Bounty.
A Passage to India Lean then embarked on a project he had pursued since 1960, a film adaptation of
A Passage to India (1984), from
E. M. Forster's
1924 novel of colonial conflicts in British-occupied India. Entirely shot on location in the sub-continent, this became his last completed film. He rejected a draft by
Santha Rama Rau, responsible for the stage adaptation and Forster's preferred screenwriter, and wrote the script himself. In addition, Lean also edited the film with the result that his three roles in the production (writer, editor, director) were given equal status in the credits. Lean recruited long-time collaborators for the cast and crew, including Maurice Jarre (who won another Academy Award for the score), Alec Guinness in his sixth and final role for Lean, as an eccentric Hindu Brahmin, and
John Box, the production designer for
Dr. Zhivago. Reversing the critical response to ''Ryan's Daughter'', the film opened to universally enthusiastic reviews; the film was nominated for eleven Academy Awards and Lean himself nominated for three Academy Awards in
directing,
editing, and
writing. His female star, in the complex role of a confused young British woman who falsely accuses an Indian man of attempted rape, gained Australian actress
Judy Davis her first Academy nomination.
Peggy Ashcroft, as the sensitive Mrs. Moore, won the Oscar for best supporting actress, making her, at 77, the oldest actress to win that award. According to Roger Ebert, it is "one of the greatest screen adaptations I have ever seen".
Empire of the Sun He was signed on to direct a
Warner Bros.–backed adaptation of
J. G. Ballard's autobiographical novel
Empire of the Sun after director
Harold Becker left the project.
Steven Spielberg was brought on board as a producer for Lean, but later assumed the role of director when Lean dropped out of the project; Spielberg was drawn to the idea of making the film due to his long-time admiration for Lean and his films.
Empire of the Sun was released in 1987.
Nostromo During the last years of his life, Lean was in pre-production of a film version of
Joseph Conrad's
Nostromo. He assembled an all-star cast, including
Marlon Brando,
Paul Scofield,
Anthony Quinn,
Peter O'Toole,
Christopher Lambert,
Isabella Rossellini and
Dennis Quaid, with
Georges Corraface as the title character. Lean also wanted
Alec Guinness to play Dr. Monygham, but the aged actor turned him down in a letter from 1989: "I believe I would be disastrous casting. The only thing in the part I might have done well is the crippled crab-like walk." As with
Empire of the Sun, Steven Spielberg came on board as producer with the backing of Warner Bros., but after several rewrites and disagreements on the script, he left the project and was replaced by
Serge Silberman, a respected producer at Greenwich Film Productions. The
Nostromo project involved several writers, including
Christopher Hampton and
Robert Bolt, but their work was abandoned. In the end, Lean decided to write the film himself with the assistance of Maggie Unsworth (wife of cinematographer
Geoffrey Unsworth), with whom he had worked on the scripts for
Brief Encounter,
Great Expectations,
Oliver Twist, and
The Passionate Friends. Originally Lean considered filming in
Mexico but later decided to film in London and
Madrid, partly to secure O'Toole, who had insisted he would take part only if the film was shot close to home.
Nostromo had a total budget of $46 million and was six weeks away from filming at the time of Lean's death from
throat cancer. It was rumoured that fellow film director
John Boorman would take over direction, but the production collapsed.
Nostromo was finally adapted for the small screen with an unrelated
BBC television mini-series in 1997. ==Personal life==