George Cukor

One of Hollywood's brightest talents, George Cukor has often been dismissed as a "woman's director". Accurate or not, he was responsible for some of the greatest treasures of Hollywood's golden era.

The plump, bespectacled Cukor was born and raised in New York City. Stage-struck from childhood, he haunted Broadway and got his first professional work as assistant stage manager in a Chicago company of "The Better 'Ole" (1919). From 1920-1927, he directed for his own stock company in Rochester, NY, then relocated to manage the Empire Theater on 42nd Street. It was there he worked with such stage divas as Ethel Barrymore, Jeanne Eagels and Laurette Taylor.

The movies came calling in 1929, and Cukor joined Paramount (as dialogue director on the early talkie "River of Romance"). He worked on "All Quiet on the Western Front" (Universal, 1930) before debuting as a director on "Grumpy" (1930, sharing credit with Cyril Gardner). From there on, there was no holding Cukor back.

Cukor made a handful of films (including Tallulah Bankhead's 1931 "Tarnished Lady", his first solo flight), before decamping to RKO over a disagreement with Ernst Lubitsch about "One Hour with You" (1932). His career really took off at RKO (1932-35). "What Price Hollywood?" (1932) was a brilliant precursor to "A Star is Born", a dark yet sparkling indictment of the star-making machinery. He fought to cast Katharine Hepburn in her screen debut, "A Bill of Divorcement" (1932), and went on to make another eight films (and two TV-movies) with her, including "Little Women" (1933), a sweet cameo of a film, and the financial flop (but subsequent cult favorite) "Sylvia Scarlett" (1936). He was loaned to MGM in 1933, where he marshaled such stars as Jean Harlow, Marie Dressler, John and Lionel Barrymore and Wallace Beery in the delightful "Dinner at Eight" (1933)--filmed in an amazing 28 days.

Despite a loan-out to Columbia for a sterling adaptation of Philip Barry's "Holiday" (1938, with Hepburn and Cary Grant), Cukor finally settled down at MGM for the bulk of his career. His 1930s hits there included "David Copperfield" (1935), a lush if flawed version of "Romeo and Juliet" (1936), Garbo's transcendent "Camille" (1937) and the brittle all-star comedy "The Women" (1939). That same year, he was fired from "Gone with the Wind" and replaced by Victor Fleming--a move that caused much speculation and gossip (such as Clark Gable's demanding another director because of Cukor's homosexuality).

In 1942, Cukor enlisted--at the age of 43--in the Army Signal Corps, where he directed training and propaganda films. He was honorably discharged (because of his age) the following year. Cukor made only a dozen theatrical films in the 1940s, but several were among his most fondly remembered and featured tour-de-force roles for top actresses. He directed Hepburn's comeback vehicle, "The Philadelphia Story" (1940), one of Joan Crawford's better performances, "A Woman's Face" (1941), Ingrid Bergman's Oscar-winning turn in "Gaslight" (1944) and the Tracy-Hepburn comedy "Adam's Rib" (which provided a wonderful part for neophyte Judy Holliday, 1949). But even the best of directors has his flops; Cukor's included Garbo's career-killing comedy "Two-Faced Woman" (1941) and Norma Shearer's "Her Cardboard Lover" (1942).

Despite his few ventures into film noir, Cukor was best known for a light-hearted mixture of sophistication and bandbox Hollywood corn at its best. Even his darkest works ("What Price Hollywood?", "Gaslight") have a glamorous sheen. His amazing ability to coax performances from divas (male and female) made him both a valuable team player and the savior of more than one film career. He also brought a theatrical sensibility to films, never interrupting the flow of dialogue with fast cuts or self-concsious film techniques.

Cukor continued working until 1981; his last film was "Rich and Famous", a remake of "Old Acquaintance" (1943), starring Candice Bergen and Jacqueline Bisset. Among his latter-day hits were three Judy Holliday vehicles, "Born Yesterday" (for which she won an Oscar in 1950), "The Marrying Kind" (1952) and the delightful "It Should Happen to You" (1954); the Tracy-Hepburn comedy "Pat and Mike" (1952); Judy Garland's comeback, "A Star is Born" (1954, his first color film and a musical remake of his 1932 "What Price Hollywood?"); and Audrey Hepburn's immensely popular "My Fair Lady", which won Cukor his only Best Director Oscar (1964). He continued mixing hits with misses, including Marilyn Monroe's unsuccessful "Let's Make Love" (1960) and the expensive Russian-American flop "The Blue Bird" (1976). He was also directing Monroe in "Something's Got to Give" (1962) at the time of her death.

Cukor made much-heralded ventures into TV with "Love Among the Ruins" (1975), for which he won an Emmy, and "The Corn is Green" (1979), both starring his old friend Katharine Hepburn. The highly sociable director, discreet but long known as gay to his Hollywood peers, lived in a huge art deco mansion for most of his career, and was famed in the film community for his sparkling gourmet dinner parties and weekend salons.

  • Also Credited As:
    George Dewey Cukor
  • Born:
    July 7, 1899 in New York City, New York, USA
  • Died:
    January 24, 1983.
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Stage manager
Family
  • Father: Victor Cukor. married Ilona Gross in 1894
  • Mother: Helen Cukor. married Victor Cukor in 1894
  • Sister: Elsie Cukor. born in 1895; predeceased him
Education
  • DeWitt Clinton High School, New York, New York
Milestones
  • 1917 Served in sudent Army Training Corps
  • 1919 Became a Broadway stage manager, first for Edgar Selwyn organization, then for the Shuberts
  • 1919 Hired as stage manager in Chicago for The Better Ole
  • 1922 General manager and actor with the Lyceum Players (Rochester, New York) where he made stage directing debut
  • 1925 Broadway directorial debut, credited as co-stager of Antonia
  • 1926 Enjoyed first success as a Broadway director with The Great Gatsby
  • 1929 Went to Hollywood under contract to Paramount and earned first screen credit, as dialogue director for River of Romance
  • 1930 First film as co-director (with Cyril Gardner), Grumpy
  • 1931 Solo film directing debut, The Tarnished Lady
  • 1932 First film with Katharine Hepburn, A Bill of Divorcement
  • 1932 Put under contract by RKO
  • 1933 Directed Hepburn in Little Women ; received first Best Director Oscar nomination
  • 1933 Loaned to MGM for Dinner at Eight
  • 1935 Signed contract with MGM
  • 1936 Helmed both Camille with Greta Garbo and Romeo and Juliet with Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard
  • 1938 Guided Hepburn and Cary Grant through Holiday , an engaging adaptation of Philip Barry s romantic comedy
  • 1939 Did uncredited tests for The Wizard of Oz
  • 1939 Directed an all-star cast in The Women
  • 1939 Was fired from Gone with the Wind
  • 1940 Reteamed with Hepburn and Grant for another Philip Barry adaptation The Philadelphia Story ; earned second Academy Award nomination as Best Director; James Stewart received the Best Actor Oscar
  • 1941 Directed Garbo in her final screen appearance in Two-Faced Woman
  • 1942 Enlisted in Army Signal Corps at age of 43; honorably discharged a year later and returned to MGM
  • 1944 Helmed Gaslight , a thriller starring Ingrid Bergman (in an Oscar-winning performance), Charles Boyer and Angela Lansbury
  • 1947 Received third Best Director Oscar nod for A Double Life , a drama about an actor who takes playing Othello a little too close to heart; star Ronald Coleman picked up a Best Actor Oscar
  • 1949 Helmed Adam s Rib , which teamed Hepburn and Spencer Tracy
  • 1950 Guided Judy Holiday to a Best Actress Oscar in Born Yesterday ; received fourth Best Director nomination
  • 1952 Again directed Holiday in The Marrying Kind
  • 1952 Reunited with Tracy and Hepburn for Pat and Mike
  • 1954 Last film with Holiday, It Should Happen to You
  • 1954 Made first color film, A Star Is Born , teaming Judy Garland and James Mason
  • 1957 Helmed the musical Les Girls , with Gene Kelly and Mitzi Gaynor
  • 1960 Directed Marilyn Monroe in Let s Make Love
  • 1962 Signed to direct Marilyn Monroe in Something s Got to Give ; film never completed
  • 1964 Won Best Director Oscar for helming My Fair Lady , starring Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn; last film for five years
  • 1969 Returned to features as director of Justine , adapted from one of Lawrence Durrell s novels that comprised The Alexandria Quartet
  • 1972 Helmed Travels with My Aunt ; star Maggie Smith garnered a Best Actress Oscar nomination
  • 1975 First TV-movie, Love Among the Ruins (ABC), starring Katharine Hepburn and Laurence Olivier; won Emmy Award
  • 1976 Went to Russia to direct the first Soviet-US co-production, the misguided The Blue Bird , starring Elizabeth Taylor, Ava Gardner and Jane Fonda
  • 1979 Final TV-movie, a remake of The Corn Is Green (CBS) starring Katharine Hepburn
  • 1981 Final feature film, Rich and Famous

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