Marlon Brando (April 3, 1924 – July 1, 2004) was an American actor and activist. Considered one of the greatest actors of the 20th century, he received numerous accolades throughout his career, which spanned six decades, including two Academy Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, one Cannes Film Festival Award and three British Academy Film Awards. Brando is credited with being one of the first actors to bring the Stanislavski system of acting, and method acting, to mainstream audiences.
Brando fell under the influence of Stella Adler and
Stanislavski's system in the 1940s. He began his career on stage, adeptly
reading his characters and consistently anticipating where scenes flowed. He
transitioned to film, initially gaining acclaim and his first Academy Award for
Best Actor nomination for the role of Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named
Desire (1951). He received further praise and his first Academy Award and
Golden Globe Award for his performance as Terry Malloy in On the Waterfront (1954),
which remains a watershed moment in the history of Hollywood, and his work
continues to be studied and interpreted. His portrayal of the rebellious
motorcycle gang leader Johnny Strabler in The Wild One (1953) became an emblem
of the era's generational gap.
The 1960s saw Brando's career take a commercial and critical
downturn. He directed and starred in One-Eyed Jacks (1961), a commercial flop,
after which he delivered a series of notable box-office failures, beginning
with Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), which damaged his career. After ten years of
underachieving and markedly diminished interest in his films, he starred as
Vito Corleone in The Godfather (1972), which helped him win his second Academy
Award and Golden Globe Award in a performance considered among the finest in
the art form's history, based on extensive surveys of critics, directors, and
other actors. With this and his Oscar-nominated performance in Last Tango in
Paris (1972), Brando reestablished himself in the ranks of top box-office stars.
After a hiatus in the early 1970s, Brando was generally
content with being a highly paid character actor in supporting roles of varying
quality such as Jor-El in Superman (1978), as Colonel Kurtz in Apocalypse Now
(1979), and as Adam Steiffel in The Formula (1980) before taking a nine-year
break from film. The last two decades of Brando's life were marked with
controversy, and his troubled private life received significant attention. He
struggled with mood disorders and legal issues. Brando continues to be
respected and held in high regard.
Early life and
education
Brando c. 1934
Marlon Brando Jr. was born on April 3, 1924, in Omaha,
Nebraska, as the only son of Marlon Brando Sr. and Dorothy Pennebaker. His
father was a salesman who often travelled out-of-state and his mother was a
stage actress, often away from home. His mother's absence resulted in Marlon
becoming attached to the family's housekeeper, who eventually left to get
married causing Brando to develop abandonment issues. His two elder sisters
were Jocelyn and Frances. In 1930, when Brando was only 6 years old, the family
moved to Evanston, Illinois, where Brando mimicked other people, developed a
reputation for pranking and met Wally Cox, whom he remained friends with until
Cox's death in 1973. In 1936, his parents separated and Dorothy took her children
to Santa Ana, California. Two years later, they reconciled and Marlon Sr.
purchased a farmhouse in Libertyville, Illinois. Brando attended Libertyville
High School, excelling at sports and drama, but failing in every other subject.
Consequently, he was held back for a year and with his history of misbehaving,
he was expelled in 1941.
Brando's father sent his son to Shattuck Military Academy,
where he himself studied before. There, Brando continued to excel at acting
until 1943 when he was put on probation for being insubordinate to an officer
during maneuvers. He was confined to the campus, but sneaked into town and was
caught. The faculty voted to expel him although he was supported by the
students who thought expulsion was too harsh. Brando was invited back for the
following year but decided instead to drop out of high school. He then worked
as a ditch-digger as a summer job arranged by his father and tried to enlist in
the Army, but his routine physical revealed that a football injury he had
sustained at Shattuck had left him with a trick knee; he was classified
physically unfit for military service.
Brando decided to follow his sisters to New York, studying
at the American Theatre Wing Professional School, part of the Dramatic Workshop
of the New School, with influential German director Erwin Piscator. In a 1988
documentary, Marlon Brando: The Wild One, Brando's sister Jocelyn remembered, "He was in a school play and enjoyed it
... So he decided he would go to New York and study acting because that was the
only thing he had enjoyed. That was when he was 18." In the A&E
Biography episode on Brando, George Englund said Brando fell into acting in New
York because "he was accepted there.
He wasn't criticized. It was the first time in his life that he heard good
things about himself." He spent his first few months in New York
sleeping on friends' couches. For a time he lived with Roy Somlyo, who later
became a four time Emmy winning Broadway producer.
Brando was an avid student and proponent of Stella Adler,
from whom he learned the techniques of the Stanislavski system. This technique
encouraged the actor to explore both internal and external aspects to fully
realize the character being portrayed. Brando's remarkable insight and sense of
realism were evident early on. Adler used to recount that when teaching Brando,
she had instructed the class to act like chickens, and added that a nuclear
bomb was about to fall on them. Most of the class clucked and ran around
wildly, but Brando sat calmly and pretended to lay an egg. Asked by Adler why
he had chosen to react this way, he said, "I'm
a chicken—what do I know about bombs?" Despite being commonly regarded
as a method actor, Brando disagreed. He claimed to have abhorred Lee
Strasberg's teachings:
After I had some
success, Lee Strasberg tried to take credit for teaching me how to act. He
never taught me anything. He would have claimed credit for the sun and the moon
if he believed he could get away with it. He was an ambitious, selfish man who
exploited the people who attended the Actors Studio and tried to project
himself as an acting oracle and guru. Some people worshipped him, but I never
knew why. I sometimes went to the Actors Studio on Saturday mornings because
Elia Kazan was teaching, and there were usually a lot of good-looking girls,
but Strasberg never taught me acting. Stella (Adler) did—and later Kazan.
Brando was the first to bring a natural approach to acting
on film. According to Dustin Hoffman in his online Masterclass, Brando would
often talk to camera men and fellow actors about their weekend even after the
director would call action. Once Brando felt he could deliver the dialogue as
natural as that conversation he would start the dialogue. In his 2015
documentary, Listen To Me Marlon, he said before that actors were like
breakfast cereals, meaning they were predictable. Critics would later say this
was Brando being difficult, but actors who worked opposite would say it was just
all part of his technique.
Career
Early career:
1944–1951
Brando used his Stanislavski System skills for his first
summer stock roles in Sayville, New York, on Long Island. Brando established a
pattern of erratic, insubordinate behavior in the few shows he had been in. His
behavior had him kicked out of the cast of the New School's production in
Sayville, but he was soon afterwards discovered in a locally produced play
there. Then, in 1944, he made it to Broadway in the bittersweet drama I
Remember Mama, playing the son of Mady Christians. The Lunts wanted Brando to
play the role of Alfred Lunt's son in O Mistress Mine, and Lunt even coached
him for the audition, but Brando made no attempt to even read his lines at the
audition and was not hired. New York Drama Critics voted him "Most Promising Young Actor" for
his role as an anguished veteran in Truckline Café, although the play was a
commercial failure. In 1946, he appeared on Broadway as the young hero in the
political drama A Flag is Born, refusing to accept wages above the Actors' Equity
rate. In that same year, Brando played the role of Marchbanks alongside
Katharine Cornell in her production's revival of Candida, one of her signature
roles. Cornell also cast him as the Messenger in her production of Jean
Anouilh's Antigone that same year. He was also offered the opportunity to
portray one of the principal characters in the Broadway premiere of Eugene
O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh, but turned the part down after falling asleep
while trying to read the massive script and pronouncing the play "ineptly written and poorly constructed".
Brando in 1948
In 1945, Brando's agent recommended he take a co-starring
role in The Eagle Has Two Heads with Tallulah Bankhead, produced by Jack
Wilson. Bankhead had turned down the role of Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar
Named Desire, which Williams had written for her, to tour the play for the
1946–1947 season. Bankhead recognized Brando's potential, despite her disdain
(which most Broadway veterans shared) for method acting, and agreed to hire him
even though he auditioned poorly. The two clashed greatly during the
pre-Broadway tour, with Bankhead reminding Brando of his mother, being her age
and also having a drinking problem. Wilson was largely tolerant of Brando's
behavior, but he reached his limit when Brando mumbled through a dress
rehearsal shortly before the November 28, 1946, opening. "I don't care what your grandmother did," Wilson
exclaimed, "and that Method stuff, I
want to know what you're going to do!" Brando in turn raised his
voice, and acted with great power and passion. "It was marvelous," a cast member recalled. "Everybody hugged him and kissed him.
He came ambling offstage and said to me, 'They don't think you can act unless you
can yell.'"
Critics were not as kind, however. A review of Brando's
performance in the opening assessed that Brando was "still building his character, but at present fails to impress.”
One Boston critic remarked of Brando's prolonged death scene, "Brando looked like a car in midtown
Manhattan searching for a parking space." He received better reviews
at subsequent tour stops, but what his colleagues recalled was only occasional
indications of the talent he would later demonstrate. "There were a few times when he was really magnificent," Bankhead
admitted to an interviewer in 1962. "He
was a great young actor when he wanted to be, but most of the time I couldn't
even hear him on the stage."
Brando displayed his apathy for the production by
demonstrating some shocking onstage manners. He "tried everything in the world to ruin it for her,"
Bankhead's stage manager claimed. "He
nearly drove her crazy: scratching his crotch, picking his nose, doing anything."
After several weeks on the road, they reached Boston, by which time
Bankhead was ready to dismiss him. This proved to be one of the greatest
blessings of his career, as it freed him up to play the role of Stanley
Kowalski in Tennessee Williams's 1947 play A Streetcar Named Desire, directed
by Elia Kazan. Moreover, to that end, Bankhead herself, in her letter declining
Williams' invitation to play the role of Blanche, gave Brando this
ringing—albeit acid-tongued—endorsement stating "I do have one suggestion for casting. I know of an actor who can
appear as this brutish Stanley Kowalski character. I mean, a total pig of a man
without sensitivity or grace of any kind. Marlon Brando would be perfect as
Stanley. I have just fired the cad from my play, The Eagle Has Two Heads, and I
know for a fact that he is looking for work".
Pierpont writes that John Garfield was first choice for the
role, but "made impossible
demands." It was Kazan's decision to fall back on the far less
experienced (and technically too young for the role) Brando. In a letter dated
August 29, 1947, Williams confided to his agent Audrey Wood: "It had not occurred to me before what
an excellent value would come through casting a very young actor in this part.
It humanizes the character of Stanley in that it becomes the brutality and
callousness of youth rather than a vicious old man ... A new value came out of
Brando's reading which was by far the best reading I have ever heard." Brando
based his portrayal of Kowalski on the boxer Rocky Graziano, whom he had
studied at a local gymnasium. Graziano did not know who Brando was, but
attended the production with tickets provided by the young man. He said, "The curtain went up and on the stage
is that son of a bitch from the gym, and he's playing me."
Brando in 1950
In 1947, Brando performed a screen test for an early Warner
Brothers script for the novel Rebel Without a Cause (1944), which bore no
relation to the film eventually produced in 1955. The screen test is included
as an extra in the 2006 DVD release of A Streetcar Named Desire. Brando's first
screen role was a bitter paraplegic veteran in The Men (1950). He spent a month
in bed at the Birmingham Army Hospital in Van Nuys to prepare for the role. The
New York Times reviewer Bosley Crowther wrote that Brando as Ken "is so vividly real, dynamic and
sensitive that his illusion is complete" and noted, "Out of stiff and frozen silences he
can lash into a passionate rage with the tearful and flailing frenzy of a taut
cable suddenly cut."
By Brando's own account, it may have been because of this
film that his draft status was changed from 4-F to 1-A. He had had surgery on
his trick knee, and it was no longer physically debilitating enough to incur
exclusion from the draft. When Brando reported to the induction center, he
answered a questionnaire by saying his race was "human", his color was "Seasonal-oyster white to beige", and he told an Army
doctor that he was psychoneurotic. When the draft board referred him to a
psychiatrist, Brando explained that he had been expelled from military school
and had severe problems with authority. Coincidentally, the psychiatrist knew a
doctor friend of Brando. Brando avoided military service during the Korean War.
Early in his career, Brando began using cue cards instead of
memorizing his lines. Despite the objections of several of the film directors
he worked with, Brando felt that this helped bring realism and spontaneity to
his performances. He felt otherwise he would appear to be reciting a writer's
speech. In the TV documentary The Making
of Superman: The Movie, Brando explained "If
you don't know what the words are but you have a general idea of what they are,
then you look at the cue card and it gives you the feeling to the viewer,
hopefully, that the person is really searching for what he is going to say—that
he doesn't know what to say". Some, however, thought Brando used the
cards out of laziness or an inability to memorize his lines. Once on The
Godfather set, Brando was asked why he wanted his lines printed out. He
responded, "Because I can read them
that way."
Rise to fame:
1951–1954
Brando brought his performance as Stanley Kowalski to the
screen in Tennessee William's A Streetcar Named Desire (1951). It earned him
his first Academy Award nomination in the Best Actor category. The role is
regarded as one of Brando's greatest.
Brando as Emiliano
Zapata in Viva Zapata! (1952)
He was also nominated the next year for Viva Zapata! (1952),
a fictionalized account of the life of Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata.
The film recounted Zapata's lower-class upbringing, his rise to power in the
early 20th century, and death. The film was directed by Elia Kazan and
co-starred Anthony Quinn. In the biopic Marlon Brando: The Wild One, Sam Shaw
says, "Secretly, before the picture
started, he went to Mexico to the very town where Zapata lived and was born in
and it was there that he studied the speech patterns of people, their behavior,
movement." Most critics focused on the actor rather than the film,
with Time and Newsweek publishing rave reviews.
Years later, in his autobiography, Brando remarked: "Tony Quinn, whom I admired
professionally and liked personally, played my brother, but he was extremely
cold to me while we shot that picture. During our scenes together, I sensed bitterness
toward me, and if I suggested a drink after work, he turned me down or else was
sullen and said little. Only years later did I learn why." Brando
explained that, to create on-screen tension between the two, "Gadg" (Kazan) had told
Quinn—who had taken over the role of Stanley Kowalski on Broadway after Brando
had finished—that Brando had been unimpressed with his work. After achieving
the desired effect, Kazan never told Quinn that he had misled him. It was only
many years later, after comparing notes, that Brando and Quinn realized the
deception.
Brando's next film, Julius Caesar (1953), received highly
favorable reviews. Brando portrayed Mark Antony. While most acknowledged
Brando's talent, some critics felt Brando's "mumbling"
and other idiosyncrasies betrayed a lack of acting fundamentals and, when his
casting was announced, many remained dubious about his prospects for success.
Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz and co-starring British stage actor John
Gielgud, Brando delivered an impressive performance, especially during Antony's
noted "Friends, Romans, countrymen
..." speech. Gielgud was so impressed that he offered Brando a full
season at the Hammersmith Theatre, an offer he declined. In his biography on
the actor, Stefan Kanfer writes, "Marlon's
autobiography devotes one line to his work on that film: Among all those
British professionals, 'for me to walk onto a movie set and play Mark Anthony
was asinine'—yet another example of his persistent self-denigration, and wholly
incorrect."
Kanfer adds that after a screening of the film, director
John Huston commented, "Christ! It
was like a furnace door opening—the heat came off the screen. I don't know
another actor who could do that." During the filming of Julius Caesar,
Brando learned that Elia Kazan had cooperated with congressional investigators,
naming a whole string of "subversives"
to the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC). By all accounts,
Brando was upset by his mentor's decision, but he worked with him again in On
The Waterfront. "None of us is
perfect," he later wrote in his memoir, "and I think that Gadg has done injury to others, but mostly to himself."
In 1953, Brando also starred in The Wild One, riding his own
Triumph Thunderbird 6T motorcycle. Triumph's importers were ambivalent at the
exposure, as the subject matter was rowdy motorcycle gangs taking over a small
town. The film was criticized for its perceived gratuitous violence at the
time, with Time stating, "The effect
of the movie is not to throw light on the public problem, but to shoot
adrenaline through the moviegoer's veins." Brando allegedly did not
see eye to eye with the Hungarian director László Benedek and did not get on
with costar Lee Marvin.
To Brando's expressed puzzlement, the movie inspired teen
rebellion and made him a role model to the nascent rock-and-roll generation and
future stars such as James Dean and Elvis Presley. After the movie's release,
the sales of leather jackets and motorcycles skyrocketed. Reflecting on the
movie in his autobiography, Brando concluded that it had not aged very well but
said "More than most parts I've
played in the movies or onstage, I related to Johnny, and because of this, I
believe I played him as more sensitive and sympathetic than the script
envisioned. There's a line in the picture where he snarls, 'Nobody tells me
what to do.' That's exactly how I've felt all my life."
Later that same year, Brando co-starred with fellow Studio
member William Redfield in a summer stock production of George Bernard Shaw's
Arms and the Man.
On the Waterfront
In 1954, Brando starred in On the Waterfront, a crime drama
film about union violence and corruption among longshoremen. The film was
directed by Elia Kazan and written by Budd Schulberg; it also starred Karl
Malden, Lee J. Cobb, Rod Steiger and, in her film debut, Eva Marie Saint. When
initially offered the role, Brando—still stung by Kazan's testimony to
HUAC—demurred and the part of Terry Malloy nearly went to Frank Sinatra.
According to biographer Stefan Kanfer, the director believed that Sinatra, who
grew up in Hoboken (where the film takes place and was shot), would work as
Malloy, but eventually producer Sam Spiegel wooed Brando to the part, signing
him for $100,000. "Kazan made no
protest because, he subsequently confessed, 'I always preferred Brando to
anybody.'"
Eva Marie Saint and
Brando in On the Waterfront (1954)
Brando won the Oscar for his role as Irish-American
stevedore Terry Malloy in On the Waterfront. His performance, spurred on by his
rapport with Eva Marie Saint and Kazan's direction, was praised as a tour de
force. For the scene in which Terry laments his failings, saying I coulda been
a contender, he convinced Kazan that the scripted scene was unrealistic.
Schulberg's script had Brando acting the entire scene with his character being
held at gunpoint by his brother Charlie, played by Rod Steiger. Brando insisted
on gently pushing away the gun, saying that Terry would never believe that his
brother would pull the trigger and doubting that he could continue his speech
while fearing a gun on him. Kazan let Brando improvise and later expressed deep
admiration for Brando's instinctive understanding, saying:
What was extraordinary
about his performance, I feel, is the contrast of the tough-guy front and the
extreme delicacy and gentle cast of his behavior. What other actor, when his
brother draws a pistol to force him to do something shameful, would put his
hand on the gun and push it away with the gentleness of a caress? Who else
could read "Oh, Charlie!" in a tone of reproach that is so loving and
so melancholy and suggests the terrific depth of pain? ... If there is a better
performance by a man in the history of film in America, I don't know what it
is.
Upon its release, On the Waterfront received glowing reviews
from critics and was a commercial success, earning an estimated $4.2 million in
rentals at the North American box office in 1954. In his July 29, 1954, review,
The New York Times critic A. H. Weiler praised the film, calling it "an uncommonly powerful, exciting, and
imaginative use of the screen by gifted professionals." Film critic
Roger Ebert lauded the film, stating that Brando and Kazan changed acting in
American films forever and added it to his "Great
Movies" list. In his autobiography, Brando was typically dismissive of
his performance: "On the day Gadg
showed me the complete picture, I was so depressed by my performance I got up
and left the screening room ... I thought I was a huge failure." After
Brando won the Academy Award for Best Actor, the statue was stolen. Much later,
it turned up at a London auction house, which contacted the actor and informed
him of its whereabouts.
Box office success:
1954–1959
Following On the Waterfront, Brando remained a top box
office draw, but critics increasingly felt his performances were half-hearted,
lacking the intensity and commitment found in his earlier work, especially in
his work with Kazan. He portrayed Napoleon in the 1954 film Désirée. According
to co-star Jean Simmons, Brando's contract forced him to star in the movie. He
put little effort into the role, claiming he didn't like the script, and later
dismissed the entire movie as "superficial
and dismal". Brando was especially contemptuous of director Henry Koster.
Brando and Simmons were paired together again in the film
adaptation of the musical Guys and Dolls (1955). Guys and Dolls would be
Brando's first and last musical role. Time found the picture "false to the original in its
feeling", remarking that Brando "sings
in a faraway tenor that sometimes tends to be flat." Appearing in
Edward Murrow's Person to Person interview in early 1955, he admitted to having
problems with his singing voice, which he called "pretty terrible." In the 1965 documentary Meet Marlon
Brando, he revealed that the final product heard in the movie was a result of
countless singing takes being cut into one and later joked, "I couldn't hit a note with a baseball
bat; some notes I missed by extraordinary margins ... They sewed my words
together on one song so tightly that when I mouthed it in front of the camera,
I nearly asphyxiated myself". Relations between Brando and costar
Frank Sinatra were also frosty, with Stefan Kanfer observing: "The two men were diametrical
opposites: Marlon required multiple takes; Frank detested repeating
himself." Upon their first meeting Sinatra reportedly scoffed, "Don't
give me any of that Actors Studio shit." Brando later quipped, "Frank
is the kind of guy, when he dies, he's going to heaven and give God a hard time
for making him bald." Frank Sinatra called Brando "the world's most overrated actor", and referred to him
as "mumbles". The film was
commercially though not critically successful, costing $5.5 million to make and
grossing $13 million.
Brando played Sakini, a Japanese interpreter for the U.S.
Army in postwar Japan, in The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956). Pauline Kael
was not particularly impressed by the movie, but noted "Marlon Brando starved himself to play the pixie interpreter
Sakini, and he looks as if he's enjoying the stunt—talking with a mad accent,
grinning boyishly, bending forward, and doing tricky movements with his legs.
He's harmlessly genial (and he is certainly missed when he's off-screen),
though the fey, roguish role doesn't allow him to do what he's great at and
it's possible that he's less effective in it than a lesser actor might have
been."
In Sayonara (1957), Brando appeared as a United States Air
Force officer. Newsweek found the film a "dull
tale of the meeting of the twain", but it was nevertheless a
box-office success. According to Stefan Kanfer's biography of the actor,
Brando's manager Jay Kanter negotiated a profitable contract with ten percent
of the gross going to Brando, which put him in the millionaire category. The
movie was controversial due to openly discussing interracial marriage, but
proved a great success, earning 10 Academy Award nominations, with Brando being
nominated for Best Actor. The film went on to win four Academy Awards. Teahouse
and Sayonara were the first in a string of films Brando would strive to make
over the next decade which contained socially relevant messages, and he formed
a partnership with Paramount to establish his own production company called
Pennebaker, its declared purpose to develop films that contained "social value that would improve the
world." The name was a tribute in honor of his mother, who had died in
1954. By all accounts, Brando was devastated by her death, with biographer
Peter Manso telling A&E's Biography, "She
was the one who could give him approval like no one else could and, after his mother
died, it seems that Marlon stops caring." Brando appointed his father
to run Pennebaker. In the same A&E special, George Englund claims that
Brando gave his father the job because "it
gave Marlon a chance to take shots at him, to demean and diminish him".
In 1958, Brando appeared in The Young Lions, dyeing his hair
blonde and assuming a German accent for the role, which he later admitted was
not convincing. The film is based on the novel by Irwin Shaw, and Brando's
portrayal of the character Christian Diestl was controversial for its time. He
later wrote, "The original script
closely followed the book, in which Shaw painted all Germans as evil
caricatures, especially Christian, whom he portrayed as a symbol of everything
that was bad about Nazism; he was mean, nasty, vicious, a cliché of evil ... I
thought the story should demonstrate that there are no inherently 'bad' people
in the world, but they can easily be misled." Shaw and Brando even
appeared together for a televised interview with CBS correspondent David
Schoenbrun and, during a bombastic exchange, Shaw charged that, like most
actors, Brando was incapable of playing flat-out villainy; Brando responded by
stating "Nobody creates a character
but an actor. I play the role; now he exists. He is my creation." The
Young Lions also features Brando's only appearance in a film with friend and
rival Montgomery Clift (although they shared no scenes together). Brando closed
out the decade by appearing in The Fugitive Kind (1960) opposite Anna Magnani.
The film was based on another play by Tennessee Williams but was hardly the
success A Streetcar Named Desire had been, with the Los Angeles Times labeling
Williams's personae "psychologically
sick or just plain ugly" and The New Yorker calling it a "cornpone melodrama".
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