Valentino | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lewis Allen |
Written by | George Bruce |
Produced by | Edward Small |
Starring | Eleanor Parker |
Cinematography | Harry Stradling Sr. |
Edited by | Daniel Mandell |
Music by | Heinz Roemheld |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | Edward Small Productions |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 104 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.3 million [1] |
Box office | $1,550,000 (US rentals) [2] |
Valentino is a 1951 American biographical film directed by Lewis Allen and starring Anthony Dexter and Eleanor Parker.
It is a romantic biopic of the actor Rodolfo Valentino, or Rudolph Valentino as he is better known, who arrives in the United States from Italy and soon becomes a movie star. He falls in love with an actress and dies at an early age.
Edward Small had announced the project in 1938, with Jack Dunn first mooted to play the title role as a follow-up to his debut in The Duke of West Point . [3] However the film had been delayed by script troubles, legal threats, the war, troubles making a movie with the lead character was Italian, and looking for the right actor to play the lead. [4]
Florence Ryan wrote a script in 1939, but this was often rewritten. [5] Others who worked on it (there were an estimated over 30 drafts) include Edward Chodorov, Stephen Longstreet, Sheridan Gibney, Frederick J. Jackson, Virginia Van Upp and George Oppenheimer. [6] [7] Eventual director Lewis Allen described the film as "an imaginary, romantic story with acting as a background." [8] Edward Small could not get clearance from either of Valentino's wives, Jean Acker or Natacha Rambova so the script did not feature either; instead he has three fictitious lovers in the film, one of whom is his married co-star.
Del Casino and Louis Hayward were mentioned as early possibilities. [9] [10] In 1946 it was announced Small tried to secure Cornel Wilde for the lead but was unable to. [11] Frederik Vayder auditioned and Louis Jourdan, Helmut Dantine and John Derek were also considered. [12] [13] [14]
The final script was heavily fictionalised to avoid lawsuits from Valentino's former wives, industry associates and his family specifically his brother Alberto. [15]
Anthony Dexter was selected over 2,000 actors who auditioned. He was under contract to Small for two years, taking acting and dancing lessons before being used in the film. [16] Lewis Allen was hired from Paramount and paid $60,000. [1]
In 1949, another producer Jan Grippo announced plans to make a rival project but eventually came to an agreement with Small; Grippo became an associate on the film. [17] (In the 1940s there was another proposed project starring Victor Mature and Pola Negri. [18] )
Filming started on 2 June 1950 and took place at the Columbia Ranch and the Samuel Goldwyn Studio. George Melford, who had directed Valentino in the 1920s, had a supporting role. [19]
The film includes recreated sequences from such Valentino films as The Sheik (1921), Blood and Sand (1922), A Sainted Devil (1924) and The Eagle (1926).
Reviews were mostly poor. [20] [21]
The film was one of Edward Small's few box-office failures. [1] However, it did well in South America where Anthony Dexter went on a dancing tour. [22]
It was announced that Dexter would appear in a remake of The Sheik (1921), the rights for which Small had purchased in order to include segments of that film in Valentino. However, he only made one more film for Small, The Brigand (1952), after which they terminated their contract by mutual agreement. [23]
Alice Terry sued the filmmakers for $750,000, complaining she was depicted in the film as having an illicit love affair while still being married. Valentino's brother and sister launched a $500,000 lawsuit against the filmmakers. Both cases settled out of court. [24] [25]
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