Biography
Anthony Asquith was one of the most beloved directors of his generation in England; however, as a result of his focus on adapting plays to the screen, his recognition was limited in his own lifetime, and his movies only began getting the respect they deserved in the 21st century. Born in 1902, Asquith was the youngest child of Herbert Henry Asquith (1852-1928), who served as British prime minister from 1908-1916. Anthony Asquith was known to friends by the nickname "Puffin," given him by his mother, for most of his life. He had an avid interest in music as a boy, but conceded a severe lack of talent as a musician; in its place, he discovered the emerging new art of cinema, and played a pivotal but indirect role in the development of motion picture arts in England by co-founding the London Film Society with such luminaries as George Bernard Shaw. Their purpose was to help push the British movie industry to look seriously at adapting the bolder, more inventive cinematic influences of Germany, Sweden, and America. Asquith joined the British film industry in the mid-'20s and quickly moved to the front of his class by virtue of his family name and the opportunities that it afforded for travel. He easily could have become one of England's idle rich, but instead he went to America and visited Hollywood at the tail end of the silent era, making the acquaintanceship of
Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks Sr. as their houseguest and spending his time watching various filmmakers at work. He returned to England, and, with that experience under his belt and some promise already shown, Asquith was moved behind the camera, making his name with
Shooting Stars (1927) and following it up with A Cottage on Dartmoor (1929). He made the transition to talkies with
Tell England (1931), which dealt with the World War I Battle of Gallipoli. The latter is now considered hopelessly jingoistic and dated, but it was massively popular among middle-class audiences in its own time.
The early '30s caught Asquith adrift, working on projects with which he had little sympathy and showed no inventiveness, including the early
Laurence Olivier vehicle
I Stand Condemned (aka Moscow Nights). The mid-'30s marked the nadir of his career. In 1938, all of that changed, however, when Asquith -- owing in part to his longtime friendship with Shaw -- co-directed the screen adaptation of the latter's Pygmalion. The resulting film was perhaps the finest comedy ever to come out of England, as well as the first (and some would say the best) successful screen adaptation of Shaw. The movie was a hit in England and also in the United States and most of the rest of the world, and easily ranked among the most successful British comedies ever released. Its success was due in no small part to Asquith's ability to persuade Shaw to rewrite the ending of the play, something that the author had steadfastly refused to do or permit in earlier attempts to film his plays. In the wake of
Pygmalion, major opportunities started coming Asquith's way; he was, along with his slightly older contemporary
Alfred Hitchcock (who was about to leave England), the most celebrated and prominent filmmaker in England.
Asquith's first notable project after the Shaw film was the chance to direct the screen version of
Terence Rattigan's play French Without Tears, which had been a huge success in London and the work that established Rattigan as a major playwright. Asquith made a good film, despite the insistence by Paramount that the movie use a pair of less-than-ideal performers in its leading roles. (Paramount was putting up half the production money for the U.S. rights, and it was a sign of just how high Asquith's stock was, along with that of the original play, that there was a major American studio eager to put up that money.) His wartime efforts, if not always massively popular, were among the more interesting and unusual movies to come out of England during World War II.
The Demi-Paradise (1943), starring
Laurence Olivier as an official Soviet visitor to England, is an astonishing social and political document as well as a delightful film, and
The Way to the Stars (1945), telling of RAF airmen and their families, is one of the most fondly remembered dramas of the period. Asquith's string of major postwar cinematic successes encompassed
The Winslow Boy (1949) and
The Browning Version (1951, which contained what was arguably
Michael Redgrave's greatest screen performance), both based on hit plays by Rattigan, and culminated with
The Importance of Being Earnest (1952). The latter, amid its sparkling, piercing wit (capturing the work of Dame Edith Evans in a defining role of her stage career, as well as Redgrave in his best comedic work), held a special historical irony: Asquith was the son of the man who, as Home Secretary, had signed the arrest order on playwright Oscar Wilde, leading to the latter's trials (and personal destruction) for his "indecent" relations with other men.
Asquith's career slowed in the mid- to late '50s. This was due, in part, to his declining health, but also to the misplaced assessment, on the part of some critics and producers, that he was a better translator of plays to the screen than he was a filmmaker. Credit for his successes seemed to reside with the plays he'd adapted, rather than with him. Yet it was Asquith's long association with Rattigan (and producer
Anatole de Grunwald) that rescued him and carried him through this rough patch, so that by the early '60s he was -- along with
Carol Reed -- one of the few members of his generation of British directors who was still working on major projects. His screen adaptations of Rattigan's The V.I.P.s (1963) and
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1964) were major international productions, with big-name casts, and were considered highly successful in their time. Asquith was supposed to direct the movie adaptation of Morris L. West's The Shoes of the Fisherman, but his health took a turn for the worse in 1967 while he was scouting locations for the film, and he was replaced by
Michael Anderson.
Asquith passed away in 1968, at a point when his reputation was somewhat in limbo. His recent films, though competent, had shown little of the cleverness of his work of the 1940s and early '50s, which the public and many critics had yet to rediscover. In more recent decades,
Pygmalion,
The Way to the Stars,
The Winslow Boy,
The Browning Version, and
The Importance of Being Earnest have achieved enduring recognition. And, in memory of the filmmaker and his original first creative love, the British Academy Award for Best Music Score has been named the Anthony Asquith Award. The actress
Helena Bonham Carter is his grandniece. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide