Biography: life and films
Maurice Tourneur's real name was Maurice Félix Thomas. He was
born on 2nd February 1876, in the Epinettes district of Paris, France.
The son of a jewel merchant, he first found work as a graphic designer and
magazine illustrator. After serving in the French artillery in North
Africa, he became assistant to the sculptor Auguste Rodin and painter Amélie
Puvis de Chavannes. In 1900, he decided to change tack and become an
actor, following his siblings into the theatre. Adopting the stage
name Maurice Tourneur, he first started out with a small theatre company
in Paris before joining Gabrielle Réjane's company on a tour of South
America. After this he became a member of André Antoine's illustrious
theatre company in Paris. In 1904, he married Fernande Petit, who later
that year bore him his son Jacques Tourneur, who later followed his father's
profession as a film director.
By 1911, Maurice Tourneur had acted in over 400 stage productions, but by
now he was more interested in the cinema. Giving up acting, he made
the decision to become a film director, after working for a short time as
an assistant to his friend Émile Chautard. He made his first
films for the Société Française des Films in 1913 and
was then taken on by Cinématographes Éclair. Because
of his fluency in English, the latter company sent Tourneur to the United
States to work at their Fort Lee studios in New Jersey. Not long afterwards,
he moved to William A. Brady's World Film Corporation, where he directed
some notable films:
Alias
Jimmy Valentine,
The Cub and
Trilby. By now,
Maurice Tourneur was shaping up to be one of the world's pre-eminent filmmakers.
One of the most important pioneers of early American cinema, he played as
big a part in developing and defining the language of cinema as D.W. Griffith,
whom he greatly admired.
In 1917, Tourneur moved to Adolph Zukor's Artcraft Pictures Corporation where
he directed Mary Pickford in
The Pride of the Clan
(1917) and
The Poor
Little Rich Girl (1917). He worked with several other important
actors of the day but was thoroughly opposed to the star system, as he regarded
this as damaging to the integrity of cinema. Craving artistic independence,
he founded his own film production company (Maurice Tourneur Productions)
in 1918, and this gave him the freedom to experiment with new forms of cinematic
expression, moving away from the naturalistic style of his previous films
to a more expressionistic, dream-like aesthetic, exemplified by his silent
masterpiece
The Blue Bird
(1918). Although his more stylised films won praise from the critics,
they struggled to find an audience, so Tourneur soon returned to his more
realistic style, finding box office success with such films as
The Last of the Mohicans
(1920).
By the early 1920s, it was apparent to Tourneur that Hollywood was destined
to become the hub of the American film industry. Having directed
The
Christian (1923) for Samuel Goldwyn and wound up his own company in the
mid-1920s, Tourneur settled in Los Angeles to work for the big studios, Universal
and Paramount (amongst others). In 1923 he separated from his first
wife. It was not long afterwards that Tourneur became disenchanted
with Hollywood, the movie-making mass production factory that now offered
limited scope for creativity and originality and was focused solely on making
money. His American career ended after he was taken off MGM's production
of
The Mysterious Island in 1928 following disagreements with his
producer Irving Thalbeg . His return to France coincided with the arrival
of sound cinema.
The most significant impact that Maurice Tourneur had when he started making
films back in France was in the crime-thriller genre. He directed several
highly influential films of this kind, all showing the emergence of the distinctive
film noir style that would come to define the genre on both sides of the
Atlantic in the next decade. These include
Accusée, levez-vous!
(1930),
Au nom de la loi
(1932),
Justin de Marseille
(1934) and
Obsession (1933). It was during the making of the
latter film that the director met the actress Louise Lagrange, whom he married
not long afterwards. Tourneur also lent his talents to comedies -
Les Gaietés de
l'escadron (1932),
Lidoire (1933) - and period dramas -
Les Deux Orphelines
(1933),
Koenigsmark (1935),
Volpone (1941). At the time
of the Nazi Occupation, he worked for the German run company Continental
on a number of films, some with a pro-Vichy slant. These include:
La Main du diable (1943)
,
Le Val d'enfer (1943) and
Cécile est morte (1944).
After the war, he concluded his filmmaking career with two atmospheric noir
melodramas:
Après l'amour (1948) and
Impasse des Deux-Anges
(1948).
In 1949, Maurice Tourneur was involved in a car accident that left him without
the use of his legs. Wheelchair-bound, he devoted the rest of his life
to writing crime novels, whilst his son Jacques made a successful career
for himself as a director in America. Tourneur died in Paris on 4th
August 1961, aged 85 and is now buried in Père-Lachaise cemetery in
Paris. His star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles bears
testament to his importance as one of the great luminaries of cinema in its
formative years.
© James Travers 2017
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