Arthur Hiller
- Died:
- August 17, 2016, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (aged 92)
- Awards And Honors:
- Academy Award
- Notable Works:
- “Alan Smithee Film: Burn, Hollywood, Burn, An”
- “Author! Author!”
- “Love Story”
- “Making Love”
- “National Lampoon’s Pucked”
- “Outrageous Fortune”
- “Plaza Suite”
- “Popi”
- “See No Evil, Hear No Evil”
- “Silver Streak”
- “The Americanization of Emily”
- “The Babe”
- “The Hospital”
- “The In-Laws”
- “The Man in the Glass Booth”
- “The Out-of-Towners”
Arthur Hiller (born November 22, 1923, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada—died August 17, 2016, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) was a Canadian-born American motion-picture director who made a number of popular comedies in the 1960s and ’70s but was best known for the romance classic Love Story (1970).
(Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.)
Early work
Hiller studied law and psychology before joining the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, where he worked from 1950 to 1955. He broke into American television in the mid-1950s, directing episodes of such series as Playhouse 90, Gunsmoke, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Perry Mason, The Addams Family, and Route 66. During this time, he also helmed his first feature film, the teen-angst drama The Careless Years (1957). However, his movie-directing career did not begin in earnest until 1963, when he made Walt Disney’s live-action Miracle of the White Stallions, about the evacuation of Lipizzaner horses from Vienna during World War II, and The Wheeler Dealers, a comedy starring James Garner and Jim Backus.
In 1964 Hiller directed what may be his best film, The Americanization of Emily. The comedy-drama featured Garner as a U.S. Navy officer who is selected by his superior (Melvyn Douglas) to be the first “victim” of the Normandy Invasion during World War II, thus beating out the other branches of the service for media coverage. Paddy Chayefsky’s caustic script included a romance between Garner’s character and a war widow played by Julie Andrews, but the film’s satire helped make the film a classic. Hiller’s later movies from the 1960s included Promise Her Anything (1966), a sex farce starring Warren Beatty and Leslie Caron; Penelope (1966), a comedy that cast Natalie Wood as a bank robber; and the action thriller Tobruk (1967), which featured Rock Hudson and George Peppard as U.S. soldiers on a mission in the Sahara. Popi (1969) was especially noted for the strong performance by Alan Arkin as an immigrant in Spanish Harlem who stages an elaborate scam to gain a better life for his two sons.
Films of the 1970s
Hiller opened the decade with the Neil Simon-penned The Out-of-Towners (1970), which was a critical and commercial hit. The comedy starred Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis as an Ohio couple stricken by an unending stream of bad luck during a 24-hour visit to New York City. Hiller enjoyed even greater success with his second effort from 1970, Love Story, which Erich Segal adapted from his best-selling novel. The tearjerker about Harvard and Radcliffe students (played by Ryan O’Neal and Ali MacGraw) who fall in love was a huge blockbuster and earned seven Academy Award nominations, including best picture and Hiller’s only Oscar nod for directing.
Hiller and Simon reteamed for Plaza Suite (1971), a comedy consisting of three vignettes, all of which featured Walter Matthau, who earned accolades for his multiple performances; also receiving praise were Maureen Stapleton, Barbara Harris, and Lee Grant in supporting roles. The Hospital (1971) was more ambitious, a bleak satire featuring an Oscar-winning script by Chayefsky. George C. Scott was outstanding as the suicidal chief of surgery who falls in love with a patient’s daughter (Diana Rigg). Hiller’s string of successes ended, however, with Man of La Mancha (1972), a widely panned adaptation of the stage blockbuster.
The Man in the Glass Booth (1975) was a powerful production of Robert Shaw’s play about a Jewish businessman (Maximilian Schell) who is accused of being a Nazi war criminal. Although a displeased Shaw demanded that his name be removed from the final credits, the drama earned wide praise. After the entertaining biopic W.C. Fields and Me (1976), Hiller scored one of the biggest hits of his career with Silver Streak (1976), a comedic take on Alfred Hitchcock’s The Lady Vanishes (1938); the film was a blockbuster, in large part as a result of the teaming of Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. Hiller continued to earn laughs with The In-Laws (1979), an espionage spoof with over-the-top performances by Arkin and Peter Falk.
Later films
In 1982 Hiller directed Making Love, a timid drama about a married doctor who discovers that he is homosexual. A string of forgettable comedies followed, including Author! Author! (1982), which starred Al Pacino as an overwhelmed playwright, and The Lonely Guy (1984), with Steve Martin and a scene-stealing Charles Grodin. Hiller had a modest hit with Outrageous Fortune (1987), which cast Bette Midler and Shelley Long as rivals, but See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989) was disappointing, despite the presence of Wilder and Pryor. Hiller took a break from comedies to direct The Babe (1992), a biopic starring John Goodman as the legendary baseball player; it received mixed reviews, largely because of blatant historical inaccuracies.
After the comedy Carpool (1996), Hiller helmed An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1997), a heavy-handed satire of Hollywood filmmaking that was written by Joe Eszterhas. Hiller had his name removed from the production, reportedly over objections to the final cut; some speculated his decision was meant to generate publicity, but, if so, it proved unsuccessful, as the movie was a box-office disappointment. Hiller’s last film was National Lampoon’s Pucked (2006), a lacklustre comedy featuring pop star Jon Bon Jovi as a dim-witted lawyer.
Hiller received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 2002, and in 2006 he was awarded the Order of Canada.
Michael Barson