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9780375413735

Otto Preminger The Man Who Would Be King

Otto Preminger The Man Who Would Be King
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  • ISBN-13: 9780375413735
  • ISBN: 0375413731
  • Publication Date: 2007
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Hirsch, Foster

SUMMARY

PROLOGUE: An Encounter I was in the presence of Otto Preminger only once. Because he was listed as the director, in November 1980 I went to see a play at an acting studio where Preminger was then teaching called The Corner Loft, located at Twelfth Street and University Place in New York City. The play, a routine psychological thriller calledThe Killer Thing,turned out to be beside the point, because during the intermission, with the audience members squashed together in the minuscule lobby, a drama far more enticing than the one onstage erupted suddenly. As if in response to some deep atavistic instinct, patrons parted to make room for the tall, commanding figureunmistakably Otto Preminger in person who entered the lobby and began, with purposeful stride, to make his way across the room that seemed almost too small to contain him. With his large, bald, ovoid head, piercing blue eyes, lips that formed a faint half-smile that seemed poised between charm and contempt, and his imperial bearing, Preminger radiated a lifetime of privilege, wealth, fame, and power. There was no disregarding this man's deeply engrained sense of self, his unassailable amour propre. The milling crowd, evidently as pleased as I was to catch a glimpse of a director who at the time was as recognizable as Alfred Hitchcock, looked at him with the respect, and the wariness, that his reputation as a terrible-tempered tyrant seemed to warrant. Such a large man in such a small space seemed pregnant with possibilities for a collision of Grand Guignol magnitude. And indeed, within a few seconds of his appearance, Preminger's booming voice"You always louse things up, don't you?"reduced the room to a hushed silence, quickly shattered by another insult delivered in Preminger's thick Austrian accent."Lousing things up and getting in the way is your particular specialty, isn't it?"Evidently trying to wish himself into invisibility, the minion who was the object of the director's blasts crumpled into an almost fetal position as he walked (hobbled?) to a nearby door, fumbled briefly with the doorknob, then disappeared from view. (And from history. No one I talked to who had worked at the Loft in the Preminger era, including its director, Elaine Gold, or John Martello, who starred in the play, was able to identify the unlucky subaltern.) Frozen, we all waited for Preminger's next move. His half-smile in place and behaving as if the scene we had witnessed had not happened, the director calmly helped himself to coffee and cookies at the refreshment table. In what seemed at the time excruciating slow motion, the room began to fill once again with the murmur of conversation as the audience feebly pretended to do what Preminger had accomplished with such remarkable aplombdismiss the scene he had just played. Was the tantrum for real, or had the maestro favored us with a command performance of "Otto Preminger," the world-renowned filmmaker who was as noted for his outbursts as for his work? Were we privileged witnesses of a reprise of the Hollywood Nazi roles Preminger had played with such conviction that some of his enemies regarded these performances as the real thing? Or had we just observed an aging director losing his grip? The explosion was awesome, but also ambiguous: that secret-sharer smile, the post-tirade ease and obliviousness with which he helped himself at the coffee table. "Real people don't behave this way," I remember thinking at the time. What had the unfortunate young man done, or failed to do, to warrant such withering public abuse? Couldn't the dressing-down have waited until Preminger and the miscreant were discreetly out of sight? Or was a public forum precisely the arena in which PremingerHirsch, Foster is the author of 'Otto Preminger The Man Who Would Be King', published 2007 under ISBN 9780375413735 and ISBN 0375413731.

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