Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Director, Editor, Writer |
Birth Day | January 03, 1897 |
Birth Place | San Francisco, California, United States |
Age | 122 YEARS OLD |
Died On | October 1, 1979(1979-10-01) (aged 82)\nLa Quinta, California, U.S. |
Birth Sign | Aquarius |
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1922–1943 |
Net worth
Dorothy Arzner, a renowned director, editor, and writer hailing from the United States, is estimated to have a net worth ranging from $100,000 to $1 million by 2024. Arzner, a pioneering figure in the film industry, was the first woman to direct a sound film, breaking barriers and making significant contributions to the world of cinema. With an impressive career spanning several decades, her work has left a lasting impact on the industry, earning her both critical acclaim and financial success. Today, Arzner is recognized as a trailblazer, paving the way for women in the field of filmmaking.
Biography/Timeline
Through connections with Director william C. DeMille, Arzner got a job as a stenographer in 1919 at Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, which later became Paramount Pictures. She moved on to be a script Writer, was promoted to film Editor within six months and quickly mastered the job. Her first assignment as an Editor was in 1922 for the renowned classic Blood and Sand, starring Rudolph Valentino. She was soon receiving accolades for the high quality of her work. Impressed by her technique, Director James Cruze employed her as a Writer and Editor for several of his films, including Old Ironsides (1926).
Arzner achieved a great deal of clout through this, along with her work on over fifty other films at Paramount. She eventually threatened to move to rival Columbia Studios unless given a directorial position. Paramount conceded in 1927, putting her in charge of the film Fashions for Women, which became a financial success.
The Wild Party was a success with critics and was the third top-grossing film of 1929. The film, set in a women's college, introduced some of the apparent lesbian undertones and themes often cited in Arzner's work. According to film scholar Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, the film "carefully articulates what happens when women stray from the confines of the safe all-girl environment" when they are "subject to the sexist advances of drunk, aggressive men." Her films of the following three years were strong examples of Hollywood before the Production Code. These films featured aggressive, free-spirited and independent women. She left Paramount in 1932 to begin work as an independent Director for several of the studios. The films she directed during this period are her best known, including her 1940 film Dance, Girl, Dance. In the film, which began to break down conventions of the Hollywood narrative yet simultaneously fit a standard mold of storytelling, Judy O'Brien (Maureen O’Hara) is an aspiring Dancer stuck in a role as a stooge in a burlesque show. Night after night, the crowd (of mostly men) watches her dance and ridicules her pure, virtuous aesthetic. By the end of the film, Judy confronts the audience and tells them how she sees them, thus calling out the crowd's patriarchal gaze and highlighting the objectification of women.
In 1972 the First International Festival of Women's Films honored her by screening "The Wild Party", and her oeuvre was given a full retrospective at the Second Festival in 1976. In 1975 the Director's Guild of America honored her with "A Tribute to Dorothy Arzner." During the tribute, a telegram from Katharine Hepburn was read: "Isn't it wonderful that you've had such a great career, when you had no right to have a career at all?"
R.M. Vaughan's 2000 play, Camera, Woman depicts the last day of Arzner's career. According to the play, Harry Cohn fired her over a kissing scene between Merle Oberon and fictitious actor Rose Lindstrom—the name of a character played by Isobel Elsom in Arzner's last film, First Comes Courage, in which Oberon starred—in a never-completed final film. The play also depicts Arzner and Oberon as lovers. The play is told in a prologue, four acts, and an epilogue in the form of a post-show interview that contains actual quotations from Arzner.
S. Louisa Wei's 2014 feature documentary, Golden Gate Girls, compares the media representation of Arzner with that of Esther Eng, Hong Kong's first woman Director who was a Chinese American. Judith Mayne, the author of Directed by Dorothy Arzner, is interviewed in the documentary, saying, "I love the fact that history of woman filmmakers now would include Dorothy Arzner and Esther Eng as the two of the real exceptions, who proved it was entirely possible to build a successful film career without necessarily being a part of mainstream identity."
In March 2018, Paramount dedicated its Dressing Room building to Arzner.