Arthur Hiller

4/5

Biography

German footballer

  • Primary profession
  • Director·producer·actor
  • Country
  • Canada
  • Nationality
  • Canadian
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 22 November 1923
  • Place of birth
  • Edmonton
  • Death date
  • 2016-08-17
  • Death age
  • 60
  • Place of death
  • Los Angeles
  • Education
  • Victoria School of the Arts·University of Toronto
  • Knows language
  • German language
  • Member of
  • 1. FC Pforzheim·1. FC Pforzheim·Germany national football team

Movies

Books

Awards

Trivia

Was president of the Directors Guild of America (DGA) from 1989-1993.

Attended Victoria School for the Performing and Visual Arts (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)

(1993-1997) President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences .

Directed 5 different actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Ryan ONeal , Ali MacGraw , John Marley , Maximilian Schell and George C. Scott.

Only two of Hillers films, "Penelope" and "Tobruk" , were made in anamorphic widescreen ratio (that is, 2.35: 1). All of the rest were made in what is now known as spherical widescreen (anywhere from 1.66: 1 to 1.85: 1), even the musical "Man of La Mancha", which was blown up to 70 mm in first-run engagements.

"Love Story" director and former Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences president Arthur Hiller, was married to Gwen Hiller , both were born in Edmonton, Alberta, she 10 days before him on Nov. 12, 1923. Her family noted that when they were schoolmates, he proposed to her when they were 8 years old. They married in 1948.

He studied psychology at the University of Toronto, and law at the University of British Columbia. He decided to go into communications, and got a job at Canadas CBC network in Toronto. He started out directing public affairs programs, and eventually advanced to dramas, where he caught Hollywoods attention.

His parents, Rose (Garfin) and Harry Hiller, were Polish Jewish immigrants. They ran a Yiddish school and theater in Edmonton, Alberta.

He served in the Royal Air Force during WWII.

Died just twelve days before his Silver Streak and See No Evil, Hear no Evil star, Gene Wilder.

Although since dismissed by some as overly syrupy, "Love Story," with Ali McGraw and Ryan ONeal as star-crossed Ivy League lovers, was one of the most popular movies of 1970. The film, based on the popular novel of the same name by Erich Segal, reduced thousands of moviegoers to tears and created a national catch phrase: "Love means never having to say youre sorry." McGraw stated after Hillers death, that Hiller was "an integral part of one of the most important experiences of my life. He was a remarkable, gifted, generous human being and I will miss him terribly. My heart and love go out to his family." Interestingly enough, Hiller recalled in 1991, the film almost didnt get made. "Paramount was in rocky financial shape," he recalled, and executives wanted to cancel the project. But production boss Robert Evans loved the script and allowed Hiller to proceed - if he would spend only $2 million. Hiller brought the film in - $25,000 under budget, then Hiller insisted on spending $15,000 for memorable exterior location scenes in the Boston snow. "Love Story" kicked off a busy two decades of work for Hiller, who had gotten his start directing such television shows as "Gunsmoke," "Perry Mason" and "The Rifleman" in the 1950s. He directed nearly two dozen feature films between 1970 and 1990 and was equally at ease with comedy and drama. He even helmed a musical, 1972s "Man of La Mancha" with Peter OToole and Sophia Loren, and a biography, 1976s "W.C. Fields and Me," with Rod Steiger and Valerie Perrine.

Notable dramas were "The Americanization of Emily" with James Garner and Julie Andrews, "The Man in the Glass Booth" with Maximilian Schell, "The Hospital" with George C. Scott and Diana Rigg and "Tobruk" with Rock Hudson and George Peppard. Hillers versatility, plus his willingness to take on projects unworthy of his talent, may have forestalled recognition of his achievements. Although he earned good reviews for his better films, his lesser ones were savaged by film critics. His only Oscar nomination came for "Love Story," for which he won a Golden Globe. Hiller once explained his choice of scripts, saying, "I prefer them with good moral values, which comes from my parents and my upbringing.... Even in my smaller, lesser films, at least theres an affirmation of the human spirit." A soft-spoken man with a black mane like a symphonic conductors, the Canadian-born Hiller served two terms apiece as president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and president of the Directors Guild of America. In 2002 the Academy presented Hiller with its "Jean Hersholt Award for Humanitarian Service." He was born in Edmonton, Alberta, where his parents operated a Yiddish school and theater. After leaving the University of Alberta to join the Royal Air Force during World War II, he studied psychology at the University of Toronto and law at the University of British Columbia. Hiller eventually decided to go into communications, applying for a job at Canadas CBS network in Toronto. When asked what kind of work he was seeking, Hiller replied: "I want to be a director".

Hillers more memorable comedies included "The In-Laws" with Peter Falk and Alan Arkin, "Plaza Suite" starring Walter Matthau, "The Wheeler Dealers" with James Garner and Lee Remick, "The Out-of-Towners" with Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis, "The Lonely Guy" with Steve Martin and Charles Grodin, and "Author, Author" with Al Pacino and Dyan Cannon. Hiller teamed comics Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor twice, in the 1976 hit "Silver Streak" and with less success in 1989s "See No Evil, Hear No Evil.".

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