Arthur Penn

Arthur Penn

Arthur Penn Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Sep. 29, 2010.
NEW YORK (AP) - Director Arthur Penn, a myth-maker and myth-breaker who in such classics as "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Little Big Man," refashioned movie and American history and sealed a generation's affinity for outsiders, died Tuesday night, a day after his 88th birthday.

Daughter Molly Penn said her father died at his home, in Manhattan, of congestive heart failure. Longtime friend and business manager Evan Bell said Wednesday that Penn had been ill for about a year. A memorial service would be held before the end of the year. Penn's older brother was photographer Irving Penn, who died in October 2009.

Penn's older brother was photographer Irving Penn, who died in October 2009.

After first making his name on Broadway as director of the Tony Award-winning plays "The Miracle Worker" and "All the Way Home," Penn rose as a film director in the 1960s, his work inspired by the decade's political and social upheaval, and Americans' interest in the ir past and present.

"Bonnie and Clyde," with its mix of humor and mayhem, encouraged moviegoers to sympathize with the lawbreaking couple from the 1930s, while "Little Big Man" told the tale of the conquest of the West with the Indians as the good guys.

"A society would be wise to pay attention to the people who do not belong if it wants to find out ... where it's failing," Penn once said.

Penn's other films included his adaptation of "The Miracle Worker," featuring an Oscar-winning performance by Anne Bancroft; "The Missouri Breaks," an outlaw tale starring Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson; "Night Moves," a Los Angeles thriller featuring Gene Hackman; and "Alice's Restaurant," based on the wry Arlo Guthrie song about being turned down for the draft because he had once been fined for littering.

Penn was most identified with "Bonnie and Clyde," although it wasn't a project he initiated or, at first, wanted. Beatty, who earlier starred in Penn's "Mickey One" and produced "Bonnie and Clyde," had to persuade him to take on the film, written by Robert Benton and David Newman and inspired by the movies of the French New Wave. (Francois Truffaut and Jean Luc-Godard each turned down offers to direct the film).

Penn was in his 40s when he made "Bonnie and Clyde," but his heart was very much with the gorgeous stars, played by Beatty and Faye Dunaway, and with the story, as liberal in its politics as it was with the facts - a celebration of individual freedom and an expose of the banks that had ruined farmers' lives.

Released in 1967, when opposition to the Vietnam War was ballooning and movie censorship crumbling, "Bonnie and Clyde" was shaped by the frenzy of silent comedy, the jarring rhythms of the French New Wave and the surge of youth and rebellion. The robbers' horrifying death, a shooting gallery that took four days to film and ran for less than a minute, only intensified their appeal.

"I thought that if we re going to show this (violence), we should SHOW it," Penn said in the documentary "A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies."

"We should show what it looks like when somebody gets shot." TV coverage of Vietnam, he added, "was every bit, perhaps even more, bloody than what we were showing on film."

With the glibbest of promotional tag lines, "They're young ... they're in love ... and they kill people," it was a film that challenged and changed minds. Beatty worked for a reduced fee because the studio, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, was convinced that "Bonnie and Clyde" would flop. Released in August 1967, then rereleased early in 1968 in response to undying attention, "Bonnie and Clyde" appalled the old and fascinated the young, widening a generational divide not only between audiences, but critics.

The New York Times' Bosley Crowther, then at the end of his career - an end hastened by "Bonnie and Clyde" - snorted that the film was "a cheap piece of bald-faced slapstick comedy that treats the hideous depredations of that sleazy, moronic pair as though they were as full of fun and frolic as the jazz-age cutups in 'Thoroughly Modern Millie.'"

But Pauline Kael, just starting her long reign at The New Yorker, welcomed "Bonnie and Clyde" as a new and vital kind of movie - an opinion now widely shared - and asked, "How do you make a good movie in this country without being jumped on?"

"The accusation that the beauty of movie stars makes the anti-social acts of their characters dangerously attractive is the kind of contrived argument we get from people who are bothered by something and clutching at straws," Kael wrote. "'Bonnie and Clyde' brings into the almost frighteningly public world of movies things people have been feeling and saying and writing about."

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, with Estelle Parsons winning for best supporting actress, and is regarded by many as the dawn o f a golden age in Hollywood, when the old studio system crumbled and performers and directors such as Penn, Beatty, Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese enjoyed creative control.

Penn, who had fought - and lost to - the studios over the editing of such early films as "The Left Handed Gun" and "The Chase," now was able to realize a long-desired project - an adaptation of "Little Big Man," based on the Thomas Berger novel.

"Originality is filtered out like tar is filtered out of cigarettes," Penn once complained. "I have not had a lot of success with the suits - or the dresses. Executives are executives. They're going to interfere as much as they can.

"('Little Big Man') didn't happen until I had so much clout I sort of made it happen."

None of Penn's other films would have the impact of "Bonnie and Clyde," but the director regarded "Little Big Man," released in 1970, as his greatest success, with Dustin Hoffman playing the 121-year-old lone survivor of Cus ter's last stand. It was, again, a violent and romantic overturning of the past and an angry finger pointed at the war and racism of the present.

Penn earned Academy Award nominations for both films and for his first movie, "The Miracle Worker," based on the Broadway show about Helen Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan, played by Bancroft. Among Penn's other stage credits: "All the Way Home," which won both the Tony and Pulitzer Prize in 1961 as best play; "Two for the Seesaw"; the musical version of "Golden Boy"; and "Wait Until Dark."

Penn traced his affinity for alienated heroes and heroines to the trauma of his childhood. Truffaut's film "The 400 Blows," he once said, "was so much like my own childhood it really stunned me."

When he was 3, Penn moved from Philadelphia to New York with his mother after his parents divorced. He and his mother, a nurse who had run a health food store, lived in a succession of apartments in New Jersey and New York City, an d the boy attended at least a dozen elementary schools.

At age 14, Penn returned to Philadelphia to live with his ailing father and help him run his watch repairman's shop.

"He was an excellent mechanic. ... His hands were magical," Penn said. "But he was an evasive man for someone to try to make contact with. I think I'm like him in some ways. I'm not the most available of men, emotionally or personally."

He was no filmgoer as a child; books and baseball mattered more. Penn was frightened by a horror picture when he was 5 and said he did not see another movie until his teens, when Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" ''staggered" him.

Along with Welles and Charlie Chaplin, Penn greatly admired Akira Kurosawa and the French New Wave directors, especially Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard.

He was known for allowing actors to improvise - and getting a wide range of expression from them in return. He believed words are to the theater as action is to film: "A loo k, a simple look, will do it."

Penn's 1960s success was bracketed by frustration. Early in his career, he was so angered by how Warner Bros. changed "The Left Handed Gun," a Western released in 1958, that he stopped making movies for years and turned to Broadway. He was fired from "The Train," a 1964 film, over disagreements with the lead actor, Burt Lancaster. And none of his later works found favor at the box office, though several - "Night Moves" (1975), "The Missouri Breaks" (1976) and "Four Friends" (1981) - won critical acclaim.

He decided to live in New York, rather than Los Angeles, as Hollywood soured on his social vision. Broadway, too, seemed increasingly drawn to blockbuster musicals rather than serious drama, further marginalizing Penn.

"It was frustrating and more than a little humiliating," Penn told The New York Times.

"It's not that I've drifted away from film," he said in another interview. "I'm very drawn to film, but I'm not sure th at film is drawn to me."

Arthur Hiller Penn was born in Philadelphia Sept. 27, 1922, the son of Harry and Sonia Penn and brother of Irving Penn. Although both sons were involved in the visual arts, Arthur Penn later said that he saw little in common in their work and rarely discussed it. (Beatty would claim the director was influenced profoundly by his brother, known for a spare, but dramatic style.)

He joined the Army during World War II, formed a dramatic troupe at Fort Jackson, S.C., was often in trouble for behaving disrespectfully to his superiors and was in an infantry unit that fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, he studied literature in Italy for two years, then returned to New York, where he found work as a floor manager on NBC-TV's "Colgate Comedy Hour."

By the early 1950s, Penn was writing and directing TV dramas. In 1956, he debuted as a Broadway director, but "The Lovers" closed after just four days.

As a boy, Penn had little success learning the watchmaker's trade from his father, who died without having seen any of his son's films.

"He went to his grave despairing I would never find my way in the world," the director said, "and the movies rescued me."


Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press

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23 Entries

September 17, 2019

God is a God of all Comfort and he will Comfort the Family's...My heartfelt sympathy..

toni costanzo

October 7, 2010

Our Deepest Sympathies To All The Penn Family Members For The Loss Of Mr. Arthur Penn. In God's Gentle Hands He Rests

Margaret Beard

October 4, 2010

To the Family of Arthur Penn,
I send my condolence to you in your time of sorrow and pains. It is not overlooked by our Creator because, "He is a God of comfort, to all the ones that are mourning." Isaiah 61:2

Tojeaux Richard

October 3, 2010

My sympathy is with the family in this hour of need. Please thank God in your prayers for me and my family for having had the pleasure of sharing Arthur Penn through the years....he has made our lives a little brighter and minds a little stronger.....Tojeaux Richard and Family

Julia Bowman

October 3, 2010

Little Big Man is one of my all time favorites. I found it very powerful. Thank you.

Patrick Burns

October 3, 2010

When I first saw Bonnie and Clyde as a teenager, I didn't quite know what to make of it, but I knew I wanted to see it again. I wound up seeing it five times in the theater. Those repeated showings opened up a world of amazement for me. I never knew that a movie could do so many things all at once. It was funny, sad, shocking, and totally entertaining from start to finish. Even the opening credits were done in a way never seen before, and the cast was absolutely flawless. Thank you, Mr. Penn, for giving us one of the greatest movies ever made.

October 2, 2010

To Family and Friends of Arthur Penn,

The world has lost a very creative and talented man of his time. He did a outstanding job with on the "Bonnie and Clyde" movie.
In this difficult time I hope the family will draw happiness from the many memories he must have made over the years.
Please find hope from the following thought found at Revelation 21:4-"God promises to wipe out every tear from our eyes, and death will be no more".

The Grant Family

October 2, 2010

My thoughts and prayers are with the PENN FAMILY in their time of grief.
At ti mes like these, drawing close to God in prayer is what will "sustain you." (Psalm 55:22) I hope this will bring the family a measure of comfort.

A Friend

Jim Bemiss

October 1, 2010

Penn did a great job with Alice's Restaurant for Arlo. It captured the times and feelings of the era like no other motion picture. The settings, locations, and Officer Obie will forever provide the future with a snapshot of the 60's as they really were. Thanks and Rest in Peace.

Walt fellowes

October 1, 2010

I met Mr Penn on a flight from Chicago the alias he used to travel under was similar to my name and we struck up a conversation. He had an interesting and meaningful life. It was a very nice conversation and my thought and prayers go out to the family. Walt

MerlG

September 30, 2010

Mr. Penn will always be remembered for his great contribution to the entertainment industry.
To you his family, accept my deepest sympathy. Loosing a loved one is very difficult but you can be assured that GOD knows the pain you feel and will comfort you at this time of loss.
2 Corinthians 1:3&4.

September 30, 2010

Dear family,
I am so sorry to hear about this news. I decided to write because I know what is to lose someone. But I want to share the promise God give us regarding this matter. He will swallow up death for ever and will resurrect our love ones in an earthly paradise. Meanwhile his holy spirit will help us dealing with the sadness and anger that we probably will feel. I hope these words will help all this family and friends.

Sincerely,

Lynette Gonzalez-Perth Amboy, NJ

margaret williams

September 30, 2010

I love Little Big Man. Thanks for directing such a telling movie from "the other side."

Jill Paperno

September 30, 2010

I woke up this morning to the news and cried for 2 hours. I worked for Arthur Penn and Fred Coe in the 60's. Mr. Penn led me through my time as a receptionist, helped me to work myself up to script reader and eventually, producer. I believe that he may have been the kindest combination of intellectual and creative genius, coupled with personal caring that I have ever know. My deepest condolences.
Jill Paperno

September 30, 2010

To the Family, My deepest condolences. May God comfort the family and friends of Arthur Penn. We can all look forward to the time when death will be no more, and instead of tears of sorrow there will be tears of happiness. May your memories bring you a measure of comfort at this time of great sorrow.

T B

September 30, 2010

Although I enjoyed all his work, Alice's Restaurant will always be my favourite. It was just that unique.

Lori George Alexander

September 30, 2010

Mr. Penn was a man of true vision and genius. My sympathies to the family and friends of this great man.

Shirley Griffin

September 30, 2010

My sincere condolences goes out to the family of Arthur Penn, may the God of all comfort be with you in your time of grief.

Henryk Zaleski

September 30, 2010

Rest in peace.

September 29, 2010

PENN FAMILY,

SORRY FOR YOUR LOSS. THE MOVIE INDUSTRY WILL MISS MR. PENN. MAY YOUR FAMILY DRAW STRENGTH FROM THE "GOD OF ALL COMFORT", IN YOUR TIME OF SORROW.

LEB FAMILY

September 29, 2010

IN MEMORY OF
MR.ARTHUR PENN

M`Victoria`Andrew

September 29, 2010

our sympathy
what a long life
thank you 'Arthur'
a brillant classic
of many directors
movies actors past,
as of today circle of
associates..
In tribute to a great movie
veteran
who gave cheer to
some
with sadness
laughter of tears
enjoy
the journey
unto your spirit~
rip~ArthurPenn~

John Stepp

September 29, 2010

Don't forget to wind the clock,,,,

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