George Roy Hill

Former Marine pilot George Roy Hill began his career as an actor, debuting with Cyril Cusack's company at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. He scored a personal success in Strindberg's "The Creditors" (1950) at the Cherry Lane Theatre, before concentrating on writing and directing for American TV in the 1950s. He scripted and acted in his first work for NBC's "Kraft Television Theatre", the autobiographical "My Brother's Keeper" (1953), inspired by his pilot's experience of being "talked down" by a ground controller, and "A Night to Remember" (also for "Kraft"), a drama about the sinking of the Titanic, earned him 1956 Emmy nominations as director and co-author. Hill scored a huge success in his Broadway directing debut, the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Look Homeward, Angel" (1957,) and made his feature film debut helming the adaptation of Tennessee Williams' play "Period of Adjustment" (1962), which he had directed on Broadway.

Hill delighted reviewers (though the box office was meager) with "The World of Henry Orient" (1964), starring Peter Sellers, and took his first abortive stab at shepherding a big-budget project, the critical and commercial failure "Hawaii" (1966). His fortunes changed for the better with his first and only movie musical the Roaring Twenties spoof "Thoroughly Modern Millie" (1967), which made a good deal of money and set the stage for his greatest triumphs, two fluid, lightly handled vehicles for the superstar team of Paul Newman and Robert Redford: "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (1969) and "The Sting" (1973). The latter earned eight Oscars including Best Picture and one for Hill as Best Director. In between, "Slaughterhouse Five" (1972), adapted from the Kurt Vonnegut novel, won a special jury prize at Cannes but proved uncommercial. Hill also teamed with Redford on "The Great Waldo Pepper" (1975), his hymn to the great aerial stuntman of his boyhood, and with Newman for the hockey burlesque "Slap Shot" (1977).

With "A Little Romance" (1979), Hill returned to the territory he had explored so sensitively in "The World of Henry Orient", that of adolescent infatuation. Most critics enjoyed the engaging tale of 13-year-olds in love, the gorgeous European locations, the fine acting (including Laurence Olivier's wily old con man) and direction that never wallowed in sentiment, and the public seemed to agree, disregarding the naysayers who dismissed it as a gimmicky product of commercialism. Hill next shocked Hollywood by leaving to teach a class in drama at his alma mater Yale but came back to make "The World According to Garp" (1982), adapted by Steve Tesich from the John Irving novel. Although it couldn't capture Irving's literary imagination, "Garp" offered excellent performances, particularly by Glenn Close (in her film debut) and John Lithgow as a transsexual; both earned Oscar nominations for their work. Hill rounded out his filmmaking career with the unsuccessful thriller "The Little Drummer Girl" (1984) and the mild comedy "Funny Farm" (1988) before returning to academia.

  • Also Credited As:
    George Roy Hill Jr
  • Born:
    December 20, 1922 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
  • Died:
    December 27, 2002.
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Screenwriter, Actor, Producer, College instructor (post-Hollywood), Newspaper reporter, Pilot
Family
  • Daughter: Owens Hill.
  • Father: George Roy Hill.
  • Mother: Helen Frances Hill.
  • Son: George Roy Hill III.
  • Son: John Andrew Steele Hill.
Education
  • Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
Milestones
  • 1948 Acting debut in Shaw s The Devil s Disciple with Cyril Cusack s repertory company in Dublin
  • 1948 Stage directing debut Biography at Gate Theatre in Dublin
  • 1950 Scored considerable personal success as Gustav in Strindberg s The Creditors opposite Beatrice Arthur at the Cherry Lane Theatre
  • 1952 Appeared in documentary style drama Walk East on Beacon Street
  • 1953 His play, My Brother s Keeper , performed on Kraft Television Theatre (NBC); also acted in it
  • 1956 Nominated for Emmys as director and co-author of A Night to Remember ( Kraft Television Theatre ), a drama about the sinking of the Titanic
  • 1957 Broadway directing debut, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Look Homeward, Angel , starring Anthony Perkins
  • 1960 Directed Frank Loesser s musical Greenwillow , again starring Perkins
  • 1962 Film directing debut, adaptation of Tennessee Williams play Period of Adjustment , which he had directed on Broadway
  • 1964 Delighted reviewers with The World of Henry Orient , starring Peter Sellers; though some maintain it is his beat picture, it did poorly at the box office
  • 1966 Had critical and commercial failure with big-budget Hawaii , a picture that actually faired better on TV; first collaboration with Julie Andrews
  • 1967 First real moneymaker, the musical Thoroughly Modern Millie , starring Andrews and Mary Tyler Moore
  • 1969 Scored huge hit with first collaboration with Paul Newman and Robert Redford, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid , co-produced by Hill and Paul Monash
  • 1972 Co-produced (again with Monash) and directed Slaughterhouse Five , adapted from the Kurt Vonnegut novel
  • 1975 Reteamed with Newman and Redford and won the Best Director Oscar for The Sting
  • 1982 Returned to Hollywood and made The World According to Garp , adapted by Steve Tesich from the John Irving novel; Hill had cameo as pilot who crashes into Garp s house
  • 1988 Last film to date, Funny Farm , an easy-going, mildly endearing comedy starring Chevy Chase
  • Appeared on Broadway in a small part in Richard II
  • Formed independent company, Pan Arts, with his former agent Jerome Hellman
  • Quit Hollywood after A Little Romance (1979) to teach a course in drama at his alma mater Yale
  • Returned to teaching at Yale
  • Served as a fighter pilot in Korean War, achieved rank of major
  • Served in World War II as Marine transport pilot
  • Toured USA with Margaret Webster s Shakespeare Repertory Company in early 1950s

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