Film director, screenwriter, film editor, film producer, educator
Years active
1930–1958
Thorold Barron DickinsonCBE (16 November 1903 – 14 April 1984) was a British film director, screenwriter, film editor, film producer, and Britain's first university professor of film.[1] Dickinson's work received much praise,[2] with fellow director Martin Scorsese describing him as "a uniquely intelligent, passionate artist... They're not in endless supply."[3]
Early life
Of Norwegian descent,[4]his father was the Archdeacon of Bristol from 1921 to 1927, Dickinson was educated at Clifton College[5] and Keble College, Oxford where he read theology, history and French.[4] He was sent down from Oxford in his last year because his interest in theatre and film caused him to neglect his studies; he was inspired by lectures given by Edward Gordon Craig.[4] During his time at Oxford he interrupted his studies to observe the film industry in France where he worked with George Pearson, the father of an Oxford friend.[6] For Pearson he wrote the scenario of The Little People (1926).[7] Following this he observed the American industry's transition to sound in New York in 1929. In the 1920s and 1930s he was active in the London Film Society, being responsible for the technical presentation of films. At the LFS, he helped introduce the work of the Soviet directors Sergei Eisenstein and Dziga Vertov to British audiences, and in 1937 staged a notable programme protesting the Italian invasion of Abyssinia, Record of War.[8]
Career
Dickinson worked as a film editor on such features as Love's Option (1928), Auld Lang Syne (1929), Loyalties (1933) and Sing As We Go! (1934). His first directorial experience was on Java Head (1934), when he took over after J. Walter Ruben became ill and was unable to continue.[7] He became Vice-President of the Association of Cine-Technicians in 1936, observing the Soviet film industry for the craft union the following year,[9] remaining in the post until 1953.
Dickinson's first feature film, starring Lionel Atwill and Lucie Mannheim, was The High Command (1937), for which he formed the short-lived Fanfare Pictures with Gordon Wellesley. He visited Spain during the Civil War and made two documentary shorts, one of which Spanish ABC (1938) "is a sober advocacy of the educational policy of Republican Spain".[9] At short notice, Dickinson took over direction of Gaslight (1940). Based on the Patrick Hamiltonplay, it was later suppressed for some years when MGM bought the rights for its own version, but led to an invitation to work in Hollywood from David O. Selznick which was rejected by Dickinson.[10]
A film biography of Disraeli, The Prime Minister (1941), starring John Gielgud, was disowned by its director,[8] but The Next of Kin (1942), expanded from what was originally intended as a training film, is described by Philip Horne as "one of the most interesting, and thrillingly ruthless, propaganda films of the War".[11]Men of Two Worlds (1946), from a script by novelist Joyce Cary starring Robert Adams, attempted to "tell an African story from the point of view of an African".[12] It was though a difficult production; the crew lost equipment and film stock.
For The Queen of Spades (1949) Dickinson assumed responsibility at five days notice after he was recommended by actor Anton Walbrook, the star of Gaslight, when the production was close to collapse. Following an aborted attempt to adapt Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge in time for the Festival of Britain, he returned to Secret People (1952), a long cherished project which Ealing Studios took up, but this was unsuccessful at the box-office and became Dickinson's last British-made feature film.
Secret People was notable for providing Audrey Hepburn with her first supporting film role. Performing all her own ballet moves during the dance sequences, Dickinson went on to film the screen test of Audrey which led to international stardom. In the screen test, she describes how she used to dance for audiences to raise funds for the resistance in The Netherlands during the Second World War. The screen test was sent to director William Wyler and led to her casting as Princess Ann in Roman Holiday.[13]
In Israel, Dickinson directed a short film for the Israeli Army, The Red Ground (1953),[14] and an English-language feature, Hill 24 Doesn't Answer (1955), for which he reworked the screenplay in collaboration with his wife Joanna. Dickinson's other work outside the UK included a tenure with the United Nations Department of Public Information as Chief of Film Services from 1956 to 1960.[15] In 1959 he was a member of the jury at the 1st Moscow International Film Festival.[16]
^Dickinson, Thorold (1964–1965). "The Maturing Cinema". The Journal of the Society of Cinematologists. 4. The Journal of the Society of Cinematologists, Vol. 4/5: 9–19. doi:10.2307/1224798. JSTOR1224798.
^Bawden, L.A. (April 1971). "Pragmatic Prolegomena to Film Studies". Journal of Aesthetic Education. 5 (2). Journal of Aesthetic Education, Vol. 5, No. 2: 103–114. doi:10.2307/3331678. JSTOR3331678.