peoplepill id: michael-balcon
MB
United Kingdom Great Britain England
2 views today
3 views this week
Michael Balcon
English Film producer

Michael Balcon

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
English Film producer
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Birmingham, Birmingham, West Midlands, West Midlands
Place of death
Hartfield, Wealden, East Sussex, East Sussex
Age
81 years
Michael Balcon
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Sir Michael Elias Balcon (19 May 1896 – 17 October 1977) was an English film producer, known for his work with Ealing Studios. Balcon had earlier worked for Gainsborough Pictures, Gaumont British and MGM-British.

Background

Born in Birmingham, Balcon was the youngest son and fourth of five children of Louis Balcon (c. 1858–1946) and his wife, Laura (née Greenberg; c. 1863–1934), Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe who had met in Britain. Growing up in a respectable but impoverished setting, in 1907 Balcon won a scholarship to Birmingham's George Dixon Grammar School, where a plaque is erected, but had to leave in 1913 owing to his family's financial needs. He worked as a jeweller's apprentice, was turned down for service in the First World War because of defective eyesight, and joined the Dunlop Rubber Company's huge plant at Aston Cross in 1915, rising to become personal assistant to the managing director.

Early film career

Green plaque on Balcon's house in Tufton Street, Westminster

After the war, Balcon's friend Victor Saville suggested a partnership to establish a film distribution company. The company, Victory Motion Pictures, led to them settling in London, and an office in Soho was opened in 1921. In 1923, their first feature film was released, the successful melodrama Woman to Woman, starring Clive Brook and Betty Compson and directed by Graham Cutts. They leased Islington Studios and formed the more long-lasting Gainsborough Pictures.

The studio, recently vacated by the Hollywood company Famous Players-Lasky (later Paramount Pictures) was small but well equipped and fully staffed. A young Alfred Hitchcock was one of its employees. Balcon gave Hitchcock his first directing opportunity, and Gainsborough gained a reputation for producing high-quality films.

By the late 1920s, Balcon's independence had eroded and Gainsborough became an extension of the Gaumont Film Company. Still, between 1931 and 1936, Balcon produced a number of classics, including a string of Hitchcock successes (like The 39 Steps) and Man of Aran, known as 'Balcon's folly' for going well over budget. He also helped individuals escape Nazi Germany, including the actor Conrad Veidt, who had starred in his 1934 film Jew Suss. By 1936, Gaumont was looking for an entry into the American market, and Balcon spent several months in the country forming links with the big Hollywood studios. On his return, he found Gaumont in financial ruin and joined MGM-British Studios that November. The year and a half he spent there was a trying period for Balcon, who clashed frequently with studio head Louis B. Mayer. During this period, Balcon lived at 57a Tufton Street, Westminster, where a plaque marks his former home.

Ealing Studios

English Heritage blue plaque on the front wall of the White Lodge at Ealing Studios, Ealing Green.

When Balcon was invited by an old associate of his, Reginald Baker to head Ealing Studios in 1938, he readily agreed. Under his benevolent leadership and surrounded by a reliable team of directors, writers, technicians and actors, Ealing became the most famous British studio in the world, despite turning out no more than six feature films a year. Went the Day Well?, Dead of Night, Undercover (1943) and of course the Ealing Comedies were released during his time there. Other films from the studio include Dance Hall (1950) with Petula Clark and Diana Dors; and The Blue Lamp (also 1950), whose lead character, George Dixon, took his name from Balcon's school, and later resurfaced in the long-running television drama Dixon of Dock Green. In his 1969 autobiography, Michael Balcon Presents... A Lifetime of Films, he wrote that his years at Ealing Studios were "the most rewarding years in my personal career, and perhaps one of the most fruitful periods in the history of British film production."

Besides Hitchcock, he worked with Basil Dearden, Michael Relph and many other significant figures of British film. He was knighted in 1948.

In 1944, Ealing Studios had been taken over by the Rank Organisation, which in 1955 sold the studio to the BBC. As a result, Balcon left Rank in 1956 and set up the production company Ealing Films, striking a distribution and production deal with MGM. This meant that MGM would handle the worldwide distribution of the company's films, and Balcon's company would shoot them at MGM-British Studios in Borehamwood.

In 1959 Balcon became chairman of Bryanston Films, a subsidiary of British Lion Films. The firm went bankrupt in 1963 with Balcon taking over British Lion Films. Still, he was proud to be associated with the British New Wave; the last film on which he worked as executive producer was Tom Jones (1963), after which he continued to encourage young directors, serving as chairman of the British Film Institute production board and funding low-budget experimental work.

Balcon was an avid theatre and opera goer, loved travel (especially to Italy), and had a wide circle of friends. In 1977, he died peacefully at Upper Parrock, the 15th century house set on a Sussex hilltop near the Kent border where he and his wife had lived since the Second World War. He was cremated and his ashes buried there.

A pub in Ealing, "The Sir Michael Balcon" is named in his honour.

Personal life

On 10 April 1924, Balcon married Aileen Freda Leatherman (1904–1988), daughter of Max Jacobs and Beatrice Leatherman, born in Middlesex, but brought up in Johannesburg. In 1946, Aileen was appointed an MBE for her war work. Their marriage was happy and lasted until Balcon's death. They had two children: Jill (1925–2009), and Jonathan (1931-2012). His daughter Jill Balcon became an actress, his son-in-law Cecil Day-Lewis was an Irish-born Poet Laureate, and his grandson is the thrice Oscar-winning actor Daniel Day-Lewis. His granddaughter is the television chef Tamasin Day-Lewis.

Selected filmography

Producer

YearFilmNotes
1933I Was a Spy
1933Leave It to Smith
1933The Constant Nymph
1934Princess Charming
1934Evergreen(uncredited)
1934Along Came Sally(uncredited)
1935The 39 Steps
1935Stormy Weather
1935Things Are Looking Up
1936The First Offence
1936Secret Agent
1936Tudor Rose
1937Doctor Syn(uncredited)
1938A Yank at Oxford
1940The Proud Valley
1941The Ghost of St. Michael's
1941Turned Out Nice Again
1942The Foreman Went to France
1942Went the Day Well?
1944For Those in Peril
1944Champagne Charlie
1944The Halfway House
1945Dead of Night
1945Pink String and Sealing Wax
1946The Captive Heart
1946The Overlanders
1947Hue and Cry
1947It Always Rains on Sunday
1948Saraband for Dead Lovers
1948Scott of the Antarctic
1949Whisky Galore!
1949A Run for Your Money
1949Kind Hearts and Coronets
1949Passport to Pimlico
1950The Magnet
1950The Blue Lamp
1951The Lavender Hill Mob
1951The Man in the White Suit
1952Mandy
1953The Cruel Sea
1953The Ladykillers
1954The Maggie
1955The Night My Number Came Up
1956The Long Arm
1957The Shiralee
1957All at Sea
1958Dunkirk
1959The Siege of Pinchgut
1959The Scapegoat
1961The Long and the Short and the Tall
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Michael Balcon is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Michael Balcon
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes