Walter Mirisch

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Biography

Walter Mirisch and brothers 'Marvin Mirisch' .

  • Primary profession
  • Producer
  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 08 November 1921
  • Place of birth
  • New York City
  • Education
  • Harvard Business School·DeWitt Clinton High School·University of Wisconsin–Madison

Movies

Books

Awards

Trivia

Brother of Marvin Mirisch , Harold Mirisch.

President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences from 1973 to 1977

In his 2008 memoir, "I Thought We Were Making Movies, Not History," he says that he vetoed John Huston s desire to use his daughter Anjelica Huston as his leading lady opposite John Hurt in the film Sinful Davey , the story of a Scottish rakehell. Mirisch was worried that the inexperienced Angelica, who had appeared in only one other film at the time-- A Walk with Love and Death , also directed by her father--would have to adopt a Scottish accent for the role. In addition, Mirisch felt that "... her appearance was rather more Italian than Scottish, and in stature she towered over John Hurt. John [Huston] and I then had a serious falling-out about casting Angelica". (For the record, Angelica is officially listed as 510" and Hurt at 59".) The producer and his director constantly butted heads regarding Anejelica playing the lead, but the director finally capitulated and Pamela Franklin was cast instead (Angelica appears in the finished film in an uncredited bit part). Mirisch believes that Huston acted unprofessionally in the post-production period after the shooting of "Sinful Davey". The initial preview of Hustons cut of the film in New York was disastrous, and Huston refused to re-cut it after attending another preview, informing Mirisch via his agent that "he liked it just the way it is." Hustons agent informed Mirisch that his client "didnt see any reason to be present at previews." United Artists, which financed the film, was upset over the previews and demanded a re-edit. Huston refused to re-cut the picture, and the re-editing process was overseen by Mirisch. "Sinful Davey" was a failure at the box office. Mirisch thinks the failure might have been caused by the casting of John Hurt in the lead, but he is sure that the casting of the leading lady had nothing to do with the picture flopping at the box office. Another reason Mirisch gives for the films failure was that American audiences likely were put off by the Scottish accents of the actors and that it might have come out too soon after Tom Jones , a huge hit that won the Best Picture Oscar in 1964, five years before the release of "Sinful Davey." Mirsich also felt that "Sinful Davey" was not as entertaining as "Tom Jones." In his memoir, Walter Mirisch writes that "John Huston, in his autobiography, said that he was aghast when he saw what I had done in the re-editing of his picture. Responding to preview criticism, I had tried to make it less draggy and more accessible to American audiences... I saw John Huston again on a couple of occasions, many years after the release of Sinful Davey, and he was very cold, as I was to him. I thought his behavior in abandoning the picture was unprofessional." The two, who had worked together on Moby Dick , Hustons version of Herman Melville s classic novel, never collaborated again.

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