Robert Edward Stevenson[1] (31 March 1905 – 30 April 1986) was a British-American screenwriter and film director.
After directing a number of British films, including King Solomon's Mines (1937), he was contracted by David O. Selznick and moved to Hollywood, but was loaned to other studios, directing Jane Eyre (1943). He directed 19 live-action films for The Walt Disney Company in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
Having attended Shrewsbury School, Stevenson won a scholarship to study at St John's College, Cambridge.[1] There he won the John Bernard Seely Prize for Aeronautics, and in 1927 graduated with a first-class MA (Cantab) degree in the Mechanical Sciences Tripos (engineering). He was also president of the university's Liberal Club, editor of the student Granta magazine, and while conducting postgraduate research in psychology he was elected president of the prestigious Cambridge Union Society.[3] On leaving Cambridge, his parents gave him six weeks to find a job, and he gained employment as the assistant of Michael Balcon.[4]
Stevenson went on to write and direct Falling for You (1933) with Hulbert and Courtneidge, and did some uncredited direction on The Camels Are Coming (1934) with Hulbert. On that film he met Anna Lee, who became his wife in 1935.[5] He was a producer on Little Friend (1934).
Stevenson worked for the Disney Company in 1956 for six weeks and ending up making 19 films in 20 years.[7] His early credits were Johnny Tremain (1957), a story set in the American Revolution, and Old Yeller (1957), a boy and his dog tale. In 2019, Old Yeller was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[8]
In July 1977, Variety reported that his track record at Disney made him "the most commercially successful director in the history of films." At the end of 1976, he had 16 films on Variety's list of all-time domestic rental films, more than any other director at the time, with the second most successful having only 12. The Shaggy D.A. was to become his 17th, all being Disney films. The total US and Canadian rentals for these 17 pictures was $188,000,000, which Variety said translated into roughly $250 million in world rentals or an estimated world box office gross of $750 million.[10]
Personal life
Stevenson was married four times. He married his first wife Cecilie L Leslie in 1929 and divorced her in 1934, then married English actress Anna Lee in that same year. They lived on London's Bankside for five years, moving to Hollywood in 1939, where he remained for many years. They had two daughters, Venetia and Caroline, before divorcing in March 1944.
He married Frances Holyoke Howard on October 8, 1944, they later divorced. They had one son, Hugh Howard Stevenson. In 1963 he married Ursula Henderson, and they remained married until Stevenson's death in 1986. Robert Stevenson's widow, Ursula Henderson, appeared as herself in the documentary Locked in the Tower: The Men behind Jane Eyre in 2007.
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Director Blue Ribbon Award – Best Foreign Film Nominated – DGA Award – Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures
Sequel to 1959's The Shaggy Dog. Was Stevenson's final film for Disney, and his final original film.
1985
The Walt Disney Comedy and Magic Revue
(video short) (archive footage)
References
^ abRyall, Tom, "Stevenson, Robert Edward (1905–1986)"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, online edition, May 2014. Retrieved 6 July 2018. (subscription required)
^John Wakeman, World Film Directors, Volume One, 1890–1945. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, (1987), pp1057-1063.
^"English Star Marries Producer". The News. Vol. XXIV, no. 3, 610. Adelaide. 14 February 1935. p. 12. Retrieved 4 December 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^ ab"ARE THEY WISE?". The Telegraph (SECOND ed.). Brisbane. 14 August 1937. p. 22. Retrieved 4 December 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Studio Notes". The West Australian. Vol. 55, no. 16, 624. 13 October 1939. p. 2. Retrieved 4 December 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^ abcd"Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious". Daily Variety. 25 October 1977. p. 31.
^"All-Time Top Film Rentals". Archived from the original on 7 October 1999.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) Variety. 1998. Accessed 7 October 1999.
^"Stevenson preps his 20th Disney film in 21 years" Daily Variety. 14 July 1977 p.1.