Brackett, Charles
International Dictionary of Film and Filmmakers, (2000) by Ronald Bowers
BRACKETT, Charles
Writer and Producer. Nationality: American. Born: Saratoga Springs, New York, 26 November 1892. Education: Attended Williamstown College, Williamstown, Massachusetts, B.A. 1915; Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, LL.B., 1920. Family: Married 1) Elizabeth Barrows Fletcher, 1920 (died 1948); two daughters; 2) Lillian Fletcher, 1953. Career: Served in the United States Army in World War I: 2nd lieutenant, and vice-consul in St. Nazaire, France (Medal of Honor, France); 1920–25—practicing lawyer, and also writer: first novel, The Counsel of the Ungodly , 1920; 1926–29—drama critic, The New Yorker ; 1930—joined father's law firm (also board member, Adirondacks Trust Company): retained these positions throughout his career; 1934—first film as writer, Enter Madam! ; 1937–50—collaborator with Billy Wilder; 1943—first film as producer, Five Graves to Cairo ; 1949–55—president, Motion Picture Academy; 1954—worked mainly as producer; 1962—retired. Awards: Academy Award (producer and writer) for The Lost Weekend , 1945; Sunset Boulevard , 1950; Titanic , 1953; Writers Guild Award for Sunset Boulevard , 1950; Writers Guild Laurel Award, 1956, and Charles Brackett Founders Award, 1966; Special Academy Award, 1957. Died: In Beverly Hills, California, 9 March 1969.
Films as Writer:
1934
Enter Madam! (Nugent)
1935
College Scandal ( The Clock Strikes Eight ) (Nugent); The Crusades (De Mille); The Lost Outpost ( The Last Outpost ) (Gasnier and Barton); Without Regret (Young)
1936
Woman Trap (Young); Rose of The Rancho (Gering)
1937
Live, Love, and Learn (Fitzmaurice)
1938
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (Lubitsch)
1939
Midnight (Leisen); Ninotchka (Lubitsch)
1940
Arise, My Love (Leisen)
1941
Hold Back the Dawn (Leisen); Ball of Fire (Hawks)
1942
The Major and the Minor (Wilder)
1944
Skirmish on the Home Front (Short)
Films as Writer and Producer:
1943
Five Graves to Cairo (Wilder)
1945
The Lost Weekend (Wilder)
1946
To Each His Own (Leisen)
1948
The Emperor Waltz (Wilder); A Foreign Affair (Wilder); Miss Tatlock's Millions (Haydn)
1950
Sunset Boulevard (Wilder)
1951
The Mating Season (Leisen); The Model and the Marriage Broker (Cukor)
1953
Niagara (Hathaway); Titanic (Negulesco)
Films as Producer:
1944
The Uninvited (Allen)
1954
Garden of Evil (Hathaway); Woman's World (Negulesco)
1955
The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing (Fleischer) ( co-sc); The Virgin Queen (Koster)
1956
Teenage Rebel (Goulding) ( co-sc); The King and I (Walter Lang); D-Day, the Sixth of June (Koster)
1957
The Wayward Bus (Vicas)
1958
The Gift of Love (Negulesco); Ten North Frederick (Dunne); The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker (Levin)
1959
Journey to the Center of the Earth (Levin) ( co-sc); Blue Denim ( Blue Jeans ) (Dunne)
1960
High Time (Edwards)
1962
State Fair (J. Ferrer)
Publications
By BRACKETT: fiction—
The Counsel of the Ungodly , New York, 1920.
Week-End , New York, 1925.
That Last Infirmity , New York, 1926.
American Colony , New York, 1929.
Entirely Surrounded , New York, 1934.
By BRACKETT: other books—
With Billy Wilder, The Lost Weekend in The Best Film Plays of 1945 (screenplay), edited by John Gassner and Dudley Nichols, 1946.
With Billy Wilder and Walter Reisch, Ninotchka (screenplay), 1966.
By BRACKETT: articles—
"Putting the Picture on Paper," in American Cinematographer (Hollywood), December 1951.
In Writing on Life , by Lincoln Barnett, New York, 1951.
On Lubitsch, in Cahiers du Cinéma (Paris), no 198.
On BRACKETT: articles—
Films in Review (New York), March 1960.
Film Comment (New York), Winter 1970–71.
Corliss, Richard, in Talking Pictures , New York, 1974.
Film Comment (New York), May-June 1982.
Frank, Sam, in American Screenwriters , edited by Robert E. Morsberger, Stephen O. Lesser, and Randall Clark, Detroit, Michigan, 1984.
* * *
Who was Charles Brackett? Just a secretary to Billy Wilder? That premise has been proferred numerous times and when one looks at Brackett's work outside the 14 pictures he did with Wilder, there appears to be some truth in it. Yet in all fairness, Brackett was, like many of his screenwriting colleagues, a chameleon who adapted to the influence exerted by his collaborators at the time.
Brackett was a graduate of Harvard Law School and a practicing lawyer for some six years before his second novel, Week-End , landed him a job as drama critic on The New Yorker . In 1932, he signed a writing contract with Paramount and the ten or so pictures he worked on before joining forces with Billy Wilder are mostly forgettable. His first collaboration with Wilder was the screenplay for Bluebeard's Eighth Wife , directed by Ernst Lubitsch. This sophisticated, witty story of greed on the French Riviera owed much to Wilder's dark humor, but Brackett's contribution should not be diminished. Wilder's films all have a streak of cruelty running through them, and Brackett's chief talent was his ability to be a mellowing buffer to this characteristic, to "Americanize" Wilder's Viennese idiom and to provide the "bridging dialogue" between Wilder's perceptive but sarcastic ideas.
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