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Richard Brooks
Birthday:
18 May 1912
Birth Name:
Reuben Sax
Height:
191 cm
Biography
[on his films] Like most fathers, I'm sometimes partial to the weak ones rather than the strong ones. Those that don't succeed I feel a little more partial to, and it isn't necessarily because think they're better movies, but because they've tripped somewhere or fallen somehow.
[on his films] Like most fathers, I'm sometimes partial to the weak ones rather than the strong ones. Those that don't succeed I feel a little more partial to, and it isn't necessarily because think they're better movies, but because they've tripped somewhere or fallen somehow.
I don't play the social game very well, but I'm trying to learn. There are people who dislike you for the women you've married . . . or loved, or left . . . or have left you. I try not to get in the social life out there because I don't have time. It's very demanding, but you have to get dressed, you have put on a necktie and all, too.
I don't play the social game very well, but I'm trying to learn. There are people who dislike you for the women you've married . . . or loved, or left . . . or have left you. I try not to get in the social life out there because I don't have time. It's very demanding, but you have to get dressed, you have put on a necktie and all, too.
[on working in radio with Orson Welles] With Welles, everything began with the writing. And he was very good at it. He was a terrific guy. After I had done a few days' work, we'd go over the scenes. He had such a remarkable memory that if we'd get into a dispute about the way the story should or should not go, he'd say, "Well, let's see, now, in 'Lear' . . ....
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[on working in radio with Orson Welles] With Welles, everything began with the writing. And he was very good at it. He was a terrific guy. After I had done a few days' work, we'd go over the scenes. He had such a remarkable memory that if we'd get into a dispute about the way the story should or should not go, he'd say, "Well, let's see, now, in 'Lear' . . . ", and then he would review the whole of the second act of "King Lear", doing all the parts! Or he could quote from the Old or New Testament by the yard. His wealth of information and background about story lines was inexhaustible. He was inventive. Fearless.
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[to cast and crew on the first day of shooting Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977)] I'm sure that all of you have your own ideas about what kind of contribution you can make to this film, what you can do to improve it or make it better. Keep it to yourself. It's my fucking movie and I'm going to make it my way!
[to cast and crew on the first day of shooting Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977)] I'm sure that all of you have your own ideas about what kind of contribution you can make to this film, what you can do to improve it or make it better. Keep it to yourself. It's my fucking movie and I'm going to make it my way!
The privilege of failure has been taken away in America. All they want is success, success, success, one after the other. And what is continued success? Mediocrity!
The privilege of failure has been taken away in America. All they want is success, success, success, one after the other. And what is continued success? Mediocrity!
If you're going to make a book just as a book, then there's no need to make it as a film at all.
If you're going to make a book just as a book, then there's no need to make it as a film at all.
Directing is only writing with a camera. Editing is writing. Scoring is writing. It all has to do with a story, how to tell a story.
Directing is only writing with a camera. Editing is writing. Scoring is writing. It all has to do with a story, how to tell a story.
[about his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame] A little dog squatted and peed on my name. Well, I've learned to like that dog and all the other dogs that have pissed on me because it reminds me that first of all, I'm a writer.
[about his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame] A little dog squatted and peed on my name. Well, I've learned to like that dog and all the other dogs that have pissed on me because it reminds me that first of all, I'm a writer.
[how he'd like to be remembered] Told a good story. And that I was honest--and I mean in my work. That means a great deal to me.
[how he'd like to be remembered] Told a good story. And that I was honest--and I mean in my work. That means a great deal to me.
[on agreeing to direct Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) ] I became intrigued by the possibility of saying something about the lack of commitment young people seem to have today. Their infatuation with the merely sensational. Their desire for instant relief and gratification. Their lack of sexual joy. And their disillusionment because everything didn't turn out...
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[on agreeing to direct Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) ] I became intrigued by the possibility of saying something about the lack of commitment young people seem to have today. Their infatuation with the merely sensational. Their desire for instant relief and gratification. Their lack of sexual joy. And their disillusionment because everything didn't turn out the way TV commercials say it should.
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[engraved on his tombstone] First comes the word.
[engraved on his tombstone] First comes the word.
Richard Brooks
Richard Brooks was an Academy Award-winning film writer who also earned six Oscar nominations and achieved success as a film director and producer.He was born Ruben Sax on May 18, 1912, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents were Russian-Jewish immigrants. He graduated from West Philadelphia HS, attended Philadelphia's Temple University for two years, before dropping out and later working as a sports reporter and radio journalist in the 1930s. After a stint as a writer for the NBC network, he worked for one season as director of New York's Mill Pond Theatre, and then headed to Los Angeles. There he broke into films as a script writer of "B" movies, Maria Montez epics, serials, and did some radio writing. During the Second World War, he served with the US Marines for two years.Richard Brooks made his directorial debut with MGM's Crisis (1950) starring Cary Grant. He scripted and directed The Brothers Karamazov (1958) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) and two years later won the Academy Award for Best Screenplay for Elmer Gantry (1960). He had six Oscar nominations and 25 other nominations during his film career. Brooks was a writer and director of Chekhovian depth, who mastered the use of understatement, anticlimax and implied emotion. His films enjoyed lasting appeal and tended to be more serious than the usual mainstream productions. Brooks was regarded as "independent" even before he officially broke away from the studio system in 1965. In the 1980s, he had his own production company.Richard Brooks died of a heart failure on March 11, 1992, in Beverly Hills, California, and was laid to rest in the Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City, California. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6422 Hollywood Blvd., for his contribution to the art of motion picture.
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Richard Brooks Filmography

Bogart Life Comes in Flashes
Wrong Is Right
Looking for Mr. Goodbar
In Cold Blood (1967)
The Professionals
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
The Catered Affair
Deadline - U.S.A.
Key Largo
Cobra Woman
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