Henry Jaglom

Love him or hate him, there is no denying that Henry Jaglom is an auteur, one that has always made a profit on his quirky, low-budget, stream-of-consciousness pictures, often about loneliness and relationships. A scion of a wealthy Russian Jewish financier, he began his career in New York theater before moving to Los Angeles where he continued his affiliation with the Actors Studio and was signed as a contract player with Columbia-Screen Gems, working on series like "Gidget" and "The Flying Nun" (both starring Sally Field). His first foray behind the camera came during the Six Day War (Egypt vs. Israel) in 1967 when he shot a three-hour, 8mm, silent movie on the frontlines. The social gadfly in him had already cultivated friendships with such Hollywood personages as Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, Sally Kellerman, the screenwriter Carol Eastman and producer Bert Schneider of BBS Productions who saw his movie and hired him to help edit Dennis Hopper's "Easy Rider" (1969).

BBS subsequently produced Jaglom's writing-directing debut, "A Safe Place" (1971), a spaced-out, 94-minute fantasy culled from 50 hours of footage, causing critics to decry that unorthodox editing had destroyed all sense of time and yielded a confused mess. Though it boasted performances by no less than Tuesday Weld, Orson Welles and Nicholson and retains a cult following to this day, "A Safe Place" branded him a pariah, and it would be five years before he would make his second film, the Vietnam-obsessed "Tracks" (1976), starring Hopper as a soldier cracking up. Jaglom is at his best when he combines strong ensemble acting (a trademark of his pictures) with a coherent narrative as in "Sitting Ducks" (1980), a rollicking good comedy about ripping off the Mob, directed with style and a sense of fun. For the most part, however, he has refused to write conventional scripts, rejecting their visual compromise in favor of his distinctive muse, making maddening movies that in the words of David Thomson "might actually bring someone to lay hands on a weapon."

Jaglom's "Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?" (1983), the official US entry at Cannes, starred Karen Black and Jaglom's brother Michael Emil (bringing to his part the same galloping hypochondria and original theories on sex that his "Sitting Ducks" character expressed). Allowing his actors to improvise much of the time, Jaglom got a sometimes uncanny sense of authenticity, as when the neurotic Black tries to make up her mind what to order in a restaurant, but accompanying this blessing was the curse of a slack framework, its scenes dragging on longer than necessary. He fared better with the confessional comedy "Always (But Not Forever)" (1985), a bittersweet account of the breakup of his marriage with Patrice Townsend, starring himself and Townsend. Highly personal and utterly universal, it is one of his most accessible films to date, despite the director's signature wall-to-wall talk and occasional moments when improvisatory inspiration flags.

Jaglom's "Someone to Love" (1987), a seriocomic psychodrama in which the filmmaker calls on his friends to explore why he and they have problems with commitment or finding the right mate, is a loving farewell to Welles (making his final film appearance), his outsized personality in full flavor. Glimpsed briefly at pic's beginning, Welles dominated the entire last section, sensationally responsive, inquisitive, impudent and alive playing himself in a situation that showcased his great mind and conversation. "Eating" (1990), with its predominantly female cast and whimsical understanding of compulsions and fads, brought the director success on the art-house circuit, and "Babyfever" (1994) teamed him for the first time with wife Victoria Foyt, who co-scripted and starred opposite him in yet another docudrama which did its fair share of man-bashing. Leaving the feminist terrain of those two films, he again collaborated with Foyt on "Last Summer at the Hamptons" (1995), a Chekhov-inspired study of a theatrical family headed by Viveca Lindfors (in her last screen role). Polished production values along with engaging performances by Lindfors, Andre Gregory and Jon Robin Baitz helped make his 11th feature a pleasing, passably commercial outing.

Voluble to a fault ("Orson Welles used to say--he talked in paragraphs, I talk in chapters"), Jaglom has created his own larger-than-life character, one which cries out for a better actor than Henry Jaglom on screen. Though he is a professed champion of women, his choice to focus on vain, superficial, obnoxious members of the species in "Eating" painted a shallow portrait of shallow women, and "Babyfever" presented stereotypical females and the specter of the ticking biological clock treated better and in a more timely fashion a decade before. Writing-wise, his partnership with Foyt bodes well, since by Jaglom's own admission she favors a stronger storyline than is his wont. To some, though, "Deja Vu" (1998) exposed her as an underwhelming screen presence, too slight to carry a picture, while others felt it was among Jaglom's best work. His films remain best appreciated by fans of his own peculiar cinema verite, but for more mainstream audiences he finishes a poor second to Woody Allen, whose sense of structure and ability to blend comedy and drama is far superior.

  • Also Credited As:
    Michael Emil
  • Born:
    January 26, 1938 in London, England, United Kingdom
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Producer, Screenwriter, Actor, Editor
Family
  • Brother: Michael E Jaglom. appeared in Tracks (1975), Sitting Ducks (1978) and Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? (1983), among other Jaglom films, under pseudonym Michael Emil
  • Daughter: Sabrina Marie Jaglom. born in December 1991; mother, Victoria Foyt; appeared in Last Summer in the Hamptons (1995)
  • Father: Simon Jaglom. born in December 1896 in Russia; lost all his property to the Communists in 1917 but remade his money in international trade in the Free State of Danzig (now Gdansk, Poland) during the world wars, eventually emigrating to NYC with his fortune intact in 1939
  • Mother: Marie Jaglom.
  • Son: Simon Orson Jaglom. born in 1994; mother, Victoria Foyt
Significant Others
  • Companion: Andrea Marcovicci. acted in Someone to Love (1987)
  • Companion: Brenda Vaccaro.
  • Companion: Karen Black. acted in Can She Bake a Cherry Pie
  • Companion: Natalie Wood.
  • Companion: Tuesday Weld. acted in A Safe Place (1971)
Education
  • University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, acting, writing and directing, 1959
  • Actors Studio, New York, New York
Milestones
  • 1939 Moved from Europe to New York with family
  • 1965 Moved to Los Angeles
  • 1967 Shot three-hour 8mm silent movie on the frontline of the Six Day War
  • 1968 Feature debut as actor in Richard Rush s Psych-Out
  • 1969 Tapped by Bert Schneider (who had seen his Six Day War footage) to help edit Dennis Hopper s original five-hour version of Easy Rider down to 95 minutes; credited as consultant
  • 1971 Directorial and screenwriting debut, A Safe Place , with Tuesday Weld, Jack Nicholson and Orson Welles; though it bombed in the USA, film played at one Paris theater for seven years; produced by BBS Productions (Schneider, Bob Rafelson and Steve Blauner); shot some of it in his parents apartment on Central Park West (NYC), featuring the family s art collection (including paintings by Picasso, Gaughin and Renoir), reputed to be the most expensive privately-owned collection in NYC
  • 1972 Directed by Welles in the never completed The Other Side of the Wind
  • 1974 Presented and financed (through his Rainbow Pictures) the Oscar-winning documentary Hearts and Minds
  • 1976 Helmed and scripted Tracks , a Vietnam-obsessed pic which starred Hopper as a vet who eventually goes bonkers escorting his dead buddy across the country
  • 1980 Third feature, Sitting Ducks , an energetic, funny sleeper about a timid syndicate accountant (the director s brother Michael Emil) and pal who take a day s collections, ripping off the Mob; a sequel remains unreleased
  • 1982 Directed two of the four segments of National Lampoon Goes to the Movies
  • 1983 His Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? starred girlfriend Karen Black as an unpredictable neurotic whose husband just left her; was the official US entry at Cannes
  • 1985 Acted opposite ex-wife Patrice Townsend in the often hilarious Always (But Not Forever) , a bit of art imitating life in its bittersweet account of their marriage s breakup
  • 1987 Someone to Love , featured Welles in his final film appearance and another of the director s girlfriends, Andrea Marcovicci
  • 1989 New Year s Day was the official US entry at the Venice Film Festival; filmed in his NYC apartment
  • 1990 Had art-house success with Eating
  • 1994 With wife Victoria Foyt, co-wrote the script for Babyfever ; also directed, with Foyt starring
  • 1995 Co-wrote (with Foyt) Last Summer in the Hamptons ; also directed and acted in it alongside Foyt; shot the film on location while selling his parents East Hampton home
  • 1995 Subject of documentary feature Who Is Henry Jaglom? , co-directed by H Alex Rubin and Jeremy Workman
  • 1998 Again reteamed with Foyt (who co-wrote and starred) for Deja Vu , based on a short story the director wrote in 1974; cast included Stephen Dillane, Vanessa Redgrave and her real-life mother Rachel Kempson
  • 2001 Edited, wrote and directed Festival in Cannes
  • 2005 Helmed Going Shopping a film, which looks at the unique role that clothing and shopping plays in the lives of women, co-starring Victoria Foyt, Lee Grant and Rob Morrow
  • 2007 Wrote and directed Hollywood Dreams starring Justin Kirk and Tanna Frederick
  • Acted in Hopper s The Last Movie (1971) and Nicholson s Drive, He Said (1972, also produced by BBS)
  • Auditioned for the leading role of The Graduate
  • Founded and served as president of International Rainbow Pictures, Jagfilms Inc., The Women s Film Company (all Los Angeles)
  • Signed as contract TV actor by Columbia-Screen Gems and appeared in episodes of Gidget and The Flying Nun (both ABC)
  • While based in NYC, acted off-Broadway and in summer stock and cabaret

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