In this intimate and often surprising personal portrait, Joseph Mc Bride challenges the conventional wisdom that Welles’s career after Citizen Kane, widely regarded as the greatest film ever made, fell into a long decline. The author shows instead how Welles never stopped directing radical, adventurous films and was always breaking new artistic ground as a filmmaker. Mc Bride is the first author to provide a comprehensive examination of the films of Welles’s artistically rich yet widely misunderstood later period in the United States (1970–1985), when Mc Bride knew the director and worked with him as an actor on The Other Side of the Wind, Welles’s personal testament on filmmaking. To put Welles’s later years into context, the author reexamines the filmmaker’s entire life and career. This newly updated edition rounds out the story with a final chapter analyzing The Other Side of the Wind, finally completed in 2018, and his rediscovered 1938 film, Too Much Johnson. Mc Bride offers many fresh insights into the collapse of Welles’s Hollywood career in the 1940s, his subsequent political blacklisting, and his long period of European exile.
What Ever Happened to Orson Welles? serves as a major reinterpretation of Welles’s life and work. Mc Bride’s revealing portrait changes the framework for how Orson Welles is understood as a man, an actor, a political figure, and a filmmaker.
Table of Content
1. Introduction: ‘The high priest of the cinema’
2. ‘God, how they’ll love me when I’m dead!’
3. ‘Committing masterpieces’
4. Orson Welles at large
5. ‘Twilight in the Smog’
6. ‘Your friendly neighborhood grocery store’
7. ‘No wine before its time’
8. Epilogue: ‘From before the beginning, young fella—and now, it’s after the end’—Revelations from Welles’s ongoing career
9. Acknowledgements
10. Sources
11. Index
About the author
Joseph Mc Bride is the author of twenty-two books, including acclaimed biographies of Frank Capra, John Ford, and Steven Spielberg, two other books on Welles, and critical studies of Ernst Lubitsch and Billy Wilder. A former reporter, reviewer, and columnist for Daily Variety in Hollywood, Mc Bride is a professor in the School of Cinema at San Francisco State University.