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Orson Welles Biography and Filmography
Orson Welles
Birthday: May 6, 1915
Birth Place: Kenosha, Wisconsin, USA
Height: 6' 1"
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for Orson Welles.
If you have any corrections or additions, please email us.
We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.
Biography
The most well-known filmmaker to the public this side of Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles was the classic example of the genius that burns bright early in life only to flicker and fade later. The prodigy son of an inventor and a musician, Welles was well-versed in literature at an early age — particularly Shakespeare — and, through the unusual circumstances of his life (both of his parents died by the time he was 12, leaving him with an inheritance and not many family obligations), he found himself free to indulge his numerous interests, which included the theater. He was educated in private schools and traveled the world, even wangling stage work with Dublin's Gate Players while still a teenager. He found it tougher to get onto the Broadway stage, and traveled the world some more before returning to get a job with Katharine Cornell, with help from such notables as Alexander Woollcott and Thornton Wilder. He later became associated with John Houseman, and, together, the two of them set the New York theater afire during the 1930s with their work for the Federal Theatre Project, which led to the founding of the Mercury Theater. The Mercury Players later graduated to radio, and their 1938 "War of the Worlds" broadcast made history when thousands of listeners mistakenly believed aliens had landed on Earth. In 1940, Hollywood beckoned, and Welles and company went west to RKO, where he began his short-lived reign over the film world. Working as director, producer, co-author, and star, he made Citizen Kane (1941), the most discussed — if not the greatest — American movie ever created. It made striking use of techniques that had been largely forgotten or overlooked by other American filmmakers, and Welles was greatly assisted on the movie by veteran cinematographer Gregg Toland. Kane, himself, attracted more attention than viewers, especially outside the major cities, and a boycott of advertising and coverage by the newspapers belonging to William Randolph Hearst — who had served as a major model for the central figure of Charles Foster Kane — ensured that it racked up a modest loss. Welles second film, The Magnificent Ambersons, ran into major budget and production problems, which brought down the studio management that had hired him. With the director overextending himself, the situation between Welles and RKO deteriorated. Faced with a major loss on a picture that was considered unreleasable, RKO gained control of the film and ordered it recut without Welles' consent or input, and the result is considered a flawed masterpiece. However, it was a loss for RKO, and soon after the Mercury Players were evicted from RKO, word quickly spread through the film community of Welles' difficulty in adhering to shooting schedules and budgets. His career never fully recovered, and, although he directed other films in Hollywood, including The Stranger (1946), Macbeth (1948), and Touch of Evil (1958), he was never again given full control over his movies. European producers, however, were more forgiving, and with some effort and help from a few well-placed friends, Welles was able to make such pictures as Othello (1952), Chimes at Midnight (1967), and The Trial (1963). He also remained highly visible as a personality — he discovered in the mid-'40s that, for 100,000 dollars a shot, he could make money as an actor to help finance his films and his fairly expensive lifestyle, which resulted in Welles' appearances in The Third Man (1949), The Roots of Heaven (1958), and Catch-22 (1970), among other pictures. He also made television appearances, did voice-overs and recordings, and occasional commercials until his death in 1985. Despite his lack of commercial success, Welles remains one of the most well-known, discussed, and important directors in the history of motion pictures.
Filmography
The Hitch Hiker (2004)
Moby Dick (1999)
Someone to Love (1987)
[ Michael Emil ]
The Transformers: The Movie (1986)
[ Judd Nelson ][ Leonard Nimoy ][ Eric Idle ][ Frank Welker ][ Robert Stack ]
The Enchanted Journey (1984)
Where Is Parsifal? (1983)
[ Tony Curtis ][ Donald Pleasence ][ Erik Estrada ]
Hot Money (1983)
[ Michael Murphy ]
Butterfly (1982)
[ Stacy Keach ]
Slapstick (Of Another Kind) (1982)
[ Pat Morita ][ Jerry Lewis ]
History of the World: Part I (1981)
[ Mel Brooks ][ John Hurt ][ Dom DeLuise ][ Gregory Hines ][ John Hillerman ]
Shogun (1980)
[ John Rhys-Davies ][ Richard Chamberlain ][ Toshirô Mifune ]
Tajna Nikole Tesle (1980)
[ Strother Martin ]
The Greenstone (1980)
The New Media Bible: Book of Genesis (1979)
[ Topol ]
The Double McGuffin (1979)
[ Ernest Borgnine ][ George Kennedy ][ Vincent Spano ]
The Muppet Movie (1979)
[ Steve Martin ][ Mel Brooks ][ Frank Oz ][ Richard Pryor ][ Elliott Gould ]
A Woman Called Moses (1978)
Grande attacco, Il (1978)
[ Henry Fonda ][ John Huston ][ Stacy Keach ][ Helmut Berger ]
It Happened One Christmas (1977)
[ Christopher Guest ][ C. Thomas Howell ][ Wayne Rogers ]
Hot Tomorrows (1977)
[ Hervé Villechaize ]
Some Call It Greed (1977)
Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1977)
Voyage of the Damned (1976)
[ Malcolm McDowell ][ Jonathan Pryce ][ Max von Sydow ][ James Mason ][ Denholm Elliott ]
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi (1975)
And Then There Were None (1974)
[ Oliver Reed ][ Richard Attenborough ][ Herbert Lom ]
Necromancy (1972)
[ Michael Ontkean ]
The Man Who Came to Dinner (1972)
[ Don Knotts ][ Michael Gough ]
Treasure Island (1972)
Get to Know Your Rabbit (1972)
[ Brian De Palma ][ John Astin ][ M. Emmet Walsh ]
Freedom River (1971)
Malpertuis (1971)
London (1971)
Décade prodigieuse, La (1971)
[ Anthony Perkins ]
A Safe Place (1971)
[ Jack Nicholson ]
Waterloo (1970)
[ Christopher Plummer ][ Rod Steiger ][ Dan O'Herlihy ]
Catch-22 (1970)
[ Jon Voight ][ Martin Sheen ][ Alan Arkin ][ Anthony Perkins ][ Bob Balaban ]
Start the Revolution Without Me (1970)
[ Donald Sutherland ][ Gene Wilder ][ Graham Stark ]
The Kremlin Letter (1970)
[ Max von Sydow ][ John Huston ][ George Sanders ]
The Deep (1970)
The Golden Honeymoon (1970)
Is It Always Right to Be Right? (1970)
Upon This Rock (1970)
12 + 1 (1969)
The Southern Star (1969)
[ George Segal ]
Kampf um Rom II - Der Verrat (1969)
Bitka na Neretvi (1969)
[ Yul Brynner ][ Franco Nero ]
The Merchant of Venice (1969)
Kampf um Rom I (1968)
House of Cards (1968)
[ George Peppard ]
The Immortal Story (1968)
Tepepa (1968)
[ Tomas Milian ]
I'll Never Forget What's'isname (1967)
[ Oliver Reed ][ Edward Fox ]
Oedipus the King (1967)
[ Donald Sutherland ][ Christopher Plummer ]
The Sailor from Gibraltar (1967)
[ John Hurt ][ Christopher Isherwood ]
Casino Royale (1967)
[ Woody Allen ][ Peter Sellers ][ Peter O'Toole ][ William Holden ][ Billy Wilder ]
A Man for All Seasons (1966)
[ John Hurt ][ Robert Shaw ]
Paris brûle-t-il? (1966)
[ Kirk Douglas ][ Anthony Perkins ][ Glenn Ford ][ Alain Delon ][ Robert Stack ]
Campanadas a medianoche (1965)
[ John Gielgud ]
Fabuleuse aventure de Marco Polo, La (1965)
[ Anthony Quinn ][ Omar Sharif ]
A King's Story (1965)
[ David Warner ]
The V.I.P.s (1963)
[ Richard Burton ][ Rod Taylor ]
Ro.Go.Pa.G. (1963)
[ Jean-Luc Godard ][ Tomas Milian ]
Procès, Le (1962)
[ Anthony Perkins ]
Tartari, I (1961)
[ Victor Mature ]
King of Kings (1961)
[ Rip Torn ][ Jeffrey Hunter ][ Robert Ryan ]
La Fayette (1961)
Austerlitz (1960)
[ Jack Palance ]
Crack in the Mirror (1960)
David e Golia (1960)
Ferry to Hong Kong (1959)
Compulsion (1959)
[ Dean Stockwell ]
High Journey (1959)
The Roots of Heaven (1958)
[ Errol Flynn ][ Edward Albert ][ Herbert Lom ]
The Fountain of Youth (1958)
The Vikings (1958)
[ Kirk Douglas ][ Ernest Borgnine ][ Tony Curtis ]
Touch of Evil (1958)
[ Charlton Heston ][ Joseph Cotten ][ Dennis Weaver ][ Keenan Wynn ]
The Long, Hot Summer (1958)
[ Paul Newman ]
Man in the Shadow (1957)
Moby Dick (1956)
[ Gregory Peck ]
Mr. Arkadin (1955)
Napoléon (1955)
[ Louis de Funès ][ Henri Vidal ]
Three Cases of Murder (1955)
Moby Dick Rehearsed (1955)
[ Christopher Lee ][ Patrick McGoohan ]
Trouble in the Glen (1954)
Si Versailles m'était conté (1954)
King Lear (1953)
Uomo, la bestia e la virtù, L' (1953)
[ Sergio Leone ]
Trent's Last Case (1952)
The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice (1952)
[ Joseph Cotten ]
Petit monde de Don Camillo, Le (1952)
The Black Rose (1950)
[ Peter Sellers ][ Robert Blake ][ Tyrone Power ][ Herbert Lom ]
Prince of Foxes (1949)
[ Tyrone Power ]
Black Magic (1949)
[ Raymond Burr ]
The Third Man (1949)
[ Joseph Cotten ][ Lee Strasberg ]
Macbeth (1948)
[ Roddy McDowall ][ Dan O'Herlihy ]
The Lady from Shanghai (1947)
[ Errol Flynn ]
Duel in the Sun (1946)
[ Gregory Peck ][ Joseph Cotten ][ Lionel Barrymore ]
The Stranger (1946)
Tomorrow Is Forever (1946)
Jane Eyre (1944)
Journey Into Fear (1943)
[ Joseph Cotten ]
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
[ Joseph Cotten ]
Citizen Kane (1941)
[ Alan Ladd ][ Joseph Cotten ]
Swiss Family Robinson (1940)
Too Much Johnson (1938)
[ Joseph Cotten ]
The Hearts of Age (1934)
Trivia
  • Dated Eartha Kitt. He called her "the most exciting woman in the world."
  • Once ate 18 hotdogs in one sitting at Pink's (a Los Angeles hot dog institution).
  • On old time radio, Orson Welles provided the voice for Lamont Cranston, aka THE SHADOW.
  • H.G. Wells was driving through San Antonio, Texas and stopped to ask the way. The person he happened to ask was none other than Orson Welles who had recently broadcast "The War of the Worlds" on the radio. They got on well and spent the day together.
  • Daughter born. [27 March 1938]
  • 'American Broadcasting Company (ABC) [us]' wanted him to play Mr. Roarke on "Fantasy Island" (1978), but Aaron Spelling insisted on Ricardo Montalban.
  • Died the same day as Yul Brynner.
  • Ashes are buried inside an old well covered by flowers, within the rural property of retired bullfighter Antonio Ordóñez, Ronda, Malaga, Spain.
  • One of only six actors to receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for his first screen appearance. (The other five actors are: Alan Arkin, James Dean, Paul Muni, Montgomery Clift and Lawrence Tibbett)
  • Father, with Rita Hayworth, of Rebecca (born 1944) (died October 17, 2004). She was survived by her husband Guy, her son Marc and 3 stepchildren as well as her 8 grandchildren and her 3 half-siblings Yasmin, Christopher and Beatrice.
  • Father, with Paola Mori, of Beatrice (b. 1955).
  • Father, with Virginia Nicholson, of Christopher (b. 1937).
  • On 30 October 1938, he directed the Mercury Theatre On the Air in a dramatization of "War of the Worlds", based on H.G. Wells' novel. Setting the events in then-contemporary locations (The "landing spot" for the Martian invasion, Grover's Mill, New Jersey, was chosen at random with a New Jersey road map) and dramatizing it in the style of a musical program interrupted by news bulletins, complete with eye-witness accounts, it caused a nationwide panic, with many listeners fully convinced that the Earth was being invaded by Mars. The next day, Welles publicly apologized. While many lawsuits were filed against both Welles and the CBS radio network, all were dismissed. The incident is mentioned in textbook accounts of mass hysteria and the delusions of crowds.
  • Despite his reputation as an actor and master film-maker, he maintained his membership in the Magicians' Union, and regularly practiced sleight-of-hand magic in case his career came to an abrupt end.
  • A bootleg tape of a short-tempered (and foul-mouthed) Orson Welles arguing with a recording engineer during a voice-over session has been widely distributed. It was used as the basis for an episode of the cartoon show "Pinky and the Brain" (1995), with The Brain reading cleaned-up verions of Orson's rantings (the episode's title, "Yes, Always", is taken from one of Orson's complaints). Ironically, the actor who plays The Brain, Maurice LaMarche, dubbed the voice of the actor who portrays Orson Welles in Ed Wood (1994).
  • He was born on the same day that Babe Ruth hit his very first home run.
  • Declined the chance to be the voice of Darth Vader in Star Wars (1977).
  • He tried to make a film version of the book Don Quixote. He started working on it in 1955 and continued to film through the 1970s with Francisco Reiguera and Akim Tamiroff starring. An incomplete version was released in Spain in 1992.
  • Made a Hollywood satire, The Other Side of the Wind (1972), starring John Huston and Peter Bogdanovich. Though it was completed, the post-production process was not and the film also ran into legal problems.
  • He was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1988.
  • Frank Sinatra was the godfather of one of his daughters.
  • Host/narrator of the BBC/Mutual Radio's "The Black Museum" (1952).
  • Portrayed the title character on the syndicated radio show "The Lives of Harry Lime" (also known as "The Third Man") (1951-1952). It was based on his character from the film The Third Man (1949).
  • Has the distinction of appearing in both the American Film Institute and British Film Institute's #1 movie. For AFI it was Citizen Kane (1941). For BFI it was The Third Man (1949).
  • He was the studio's first choice to play the voiceover role of "OMM" in THX 1138 (1971). However, director George Lucas insisted on casting the relatively unknown stage actor James Wheaton instead.
  • Provided voice for some songs of heavy metal band Manowar: Dark Avenger and Defender
  • He became obese in his 40s, weighing over 350 pounds towards the end of his life.
  • Was possibly not as tall as is often reported. According to Simon Callow in the excellent biography "Orson Welles: The Road To Xanadu," medical records exist from a Welles physical in 1941. His weight is listed as 218, and his height at 72" - 6 feet even. Biographers Charles Higham and Frank Brady describe Welles as being 6'2", though they never provide a source. Biographer Barbara Leaming often comments on his height, but never gives an exact measurement. An early Current Biography article on Welles describes him as being "tall and chubby," while a later one gives the obviously incorrect 6'3-1/2" height. If you average all the figures and based on his size compared to other actors, he probably in fact stood a little over 6 feet tall (6'1" to 6'2").
  • Was voted the 2nd Greatest Film Director of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
  • Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume One, 1890- 1945". Pages 1168-1185. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1987.
  • His 1937 Broadway stage production of William Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar", in which the setting was changed to a modern Fascist Rome to reflect the Mussolini era, but in which Shakespeare's language was completely retained, became, and still remains, the longest-running Broadway production of the play. Welles played Brutus. This production was never filmed, but years later, Welles' former working partner John Houseman produced a traditional film version of the play for MGM, starring James Mason as Brutus, Marlon Brando as Marc Antony and John Gielgud as Cassius.
  • Was the subject of author Mary Pacios' book about the "Black Dahlia" murder in Los Angeles in 1947 (called the most gruesome in the city's history). Pacios claimed Welles was the unknown murderer who slaughtered struggling actress Elizabeth Short; however the book was considered pure nonsense and debunked by many historians.
  • When he signed on to direct Touch of Evil (1958), instead of reading the book on which it was based, a pulp novel named "Badge of Evil," he completely changed an early draft of the script.
  • Narrated the teaser trailer for Star Wars (1977).
  • Told Peter Bogdanovich that, as a practicing magician, he became adept at the old carny trick of fortune-telling, but he became so good at it that it scared him. He was worried that he'd come to believe he actually DID have the power to tell the future, like the self-deluded fortune tellers known as a "shut eye."
  • Wanted to make films of two literary masterpices, Herman Melville's "Moby Dick" and Joseph Heller's "Catch-22", but had to be satisfied in having supporting roles in the films made of the two books by John Huston and Mike Nichols.
  • Wrote his novel "Mr. Arkadian" during an extended stay with Laurence Olivier and his wife Vivien Leigh. Welles was appearing at Olivier's St. James Theater in London at the time.
  • Laurence Olivier had wanted to cast him as Buckingham in his film of Shakespeare's "Richard III" but gave the role to Ralph Richardson, his oldest friend, because Richardson wanted it. In his autobiography, Olivier says he wishes he had disappointed Richardson and cast Welles instead, as he would have brought an extra element to the screen, an intelligence that would have gone well with the plot element of conspiracy.
  • Lobbied to get the part of Don Vito Corrleone in The Godfather (1972). Francis Ford Coppola, a fan of his, had to turn him down because he already had Marlon Brando in mind for the role and felt Welles wouldn't be right for it.
  • He made The Lady from Shanghai (1947) towards the end of his marriage to Rita Hayworth. They were constantly fighting at the time and (some say as a comeuppance to Hayworth) he made her cut off most of her long, luxurious red hair and dye it bright platinum blonde.
  • Was named #16 on the 50 Greatest Screen Legends list of the American Film Institute.
  • Was the narrator for many of the trailers for Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979).
  • In his collection of interviews, "This Is Orson Welles", he claimed to have never even read his so-called novelization of "Mr Arkadin", let alone written it.
  • Before deciding on adapting the life of William Randolph Hearst in Citizen Kane (1941), he intended his first film to be an adaptation of Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness". Ironically enough, he was Francis Ford Coppola's first choice for the role of Col. Kurtz in Apocalypse Now (1979), itself an adaptation of "Heart of Darkness".
  • His average dinner famously consisted of two steaks cooked rare, and a pint of scotch - explaining his obesity as he got older, and his subsequent death.
  • Is portrayed by Liev Schreiber in RKO 281 (1999) (TV), by Edward Edwards in Rita Hayworth: The Love Goddess (1983) (TV), by Eric Purcell in Malice in Wonderland (1985) (TV), by Vincent D'Onofrio in Ed Wood (1994), and by Angus Macfadyen in Cradle Will Rock (1999)
  • Ranked #9 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Greatest directors ever!" [2005]
  • His father was an alcoholic
  • Considered black and white to be "the actor's best friend", feeling that it focused more on the actor's expressions and feelings than on hair, eye or wardrobe color.
  • Was very good friends with Peter Bogdanovich, in whose house he lived for several years during Bogdanovich's affair with Cybill Shepherd. Welles even gave Bogdanovich written instructions to finish his last film, _Other Side of the Wind, The (1974)_ , before his death.
  • Was a passionate painter
  • Most of his movie projects never got finished or released due to financial problems and disputes with studio executives. Some of his unfinished productions are: The Deep (1970) (Laurence Harvey's death made a finished movie impossible), The Merchant of Venice (1969) (TV) and Don Quijote de Orson Welles (1992).
  • Longtime companion of Oja Kodar. They lived together until his death.
  • Is portrayed by Paul Shenar in the made-for-TV film The Night That Panicked America (1975) (TV), which dramatized Welles' "War of the Worlds" radio drama.
  • Has been played by Vincent D'Onofrio twice: Ed Wood (1994) and Five Minutes, Mr. Welles (2005).
  • In the 1930s he worked at various radio stations in New York City, at different times of the day. He found it difficult to be on time for his live shows because he had to use taxicabs and the heavy New York City traffic meant that he was often late. He soon found a loophole in the law that said you didn't have to be sick to hire an ambulance, so he did just that and had the drivers blast their sirens as he traveled from one station to the next, and that way he was on time.
  • Profiled in in J.A. Aberdeen's "Hollywood Renegades: The Society of Independent Motion Picture Producers". Palos Verdes Estates, CA: Cobblestone Entertainment
  • Merv Griffin claims in his new DVD collection, "Merv Griffin: Interesting People" that Welles died two hours after giving Merv an interview in which he had said to ask him anything, "for this interview there are no subjects about which I won't speak." In the past, Welles refused to speak about the past.
  • His performance as Harry Lime in "The Third Man" (1949) is ranked #93 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
  • His performance as Charles Foster Kane in "Citizen Kane" (1941) is ranked #12 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
  • Hated working on Transformers: The Movie (1986), where he voiced Unicron. When asked about the film, he not only couldn't remember the name of his character, but he described the film as being "I play a big toy who attacks a bunch of smaller toys."
  • John Ford, whom Welles admired as the greatest American director and who, in turn, admired Welles as a director and actor, wanted to cast him as Mayor Frank Skeffington in his movie adaption of 'Edwin O'Connor' (Qv)'s novel _Last Hurrah, the (1958)_ . Welles was unable to accept the role due to scheduling conflicts, and Spencer Tracy was cast instead.
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