Robert Flaherty
Robert Flaherty
Robert Flaherty (1884-1951) was an American documentary filmmaker who, beginning with Nanook of the North, created a vision of human good will, curiosity, and ingenuity in adapting to nature and civilization.
Robert J. Flaherty was born in Iron Mountain, Michigan, on February 16, 1884, the son of a mining engineer who took the boy along on prospecting expeditions and to gold mines that he managed in northern Canada. Flaherty had little formal education, starting late and finishing early. He was expelled from the Michigan College of Mines after seven months, during which he spent much of his time camping in the woods. But at the college he met Frances Hubbard, a Bryn Mawr College graduate and the daughter of a distinguished academic geologist. He later married her, and she became his lifelong collaborator.
Flaherty spent the years between 1900 and 1920 as an explorer and prospector, making several hazardous expeditions to northern Canada. From 1913 to 1915, on two expeditions, Flaherty shot 70,000 feet of motion picture film of Eskimo life. The negative of this film was destroyed in a darkroom fire when Flaherty dropped a cigarette; the one surviving positive print has been lost.
In 1920 Flaherty secured the backing of a fur-trading company, Revillon Freres, to return to the north and make a film about Eskimo life. The result, Nanook of the North, was released in June 1922 to modest reviews and box office receipts but has for many decades been regarded as a classic. The film shows Nanook, an Eskimo hunter, and his family as they travel by kayak and dogsled through a frozen wasteland, surviving by hunting, fishing, and trapping.
Hollywood, which had been disinterested in Nanook, now sought Flaherty out, and in 1923 Jesse Lasky commissioned Flaherty to produce a film for Paramount Pictures. Lasky told Flaherty to "make me another Nanook. Go where you will, do what you like." Flaherty chose American Samoa. In February 1926 the resulting film, Moana, opened in New York City. It was in a review of Moana that John Grierson, later the father of the British documentary film movement, first applied the term "documentary" to a motion picture. Moana is a film of great visual beauty in which Flaherty explored the possibilities of a newly developed panchromatic film stock and with it recorded the textures of sea and skin in a Polynesian paradise. Some reviewers objected that Flaherty inappropriately included a long sequence of body-tattooing to give his film an element of conflict and suffering.
Flaherty's next major film, Man of Aran (1934), described the hard life of fishing and farming on the Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland. Flaherty had by this time become a world figure, generally recognized as the originator of documentary film, and Man of Aran was voted the best film of the year at the Venice Film Festival of 1934. His work, however, was becoming controversial within the documentary community and awkward for the film industry. The documentary movement that grew up in 1930s in Great Britain under the leadership of John Grierson was devoted to the capacity of film to describe and influence the social conditions of modern, industrial democracies. For these filmmakers, who were also articulate theorists and critics of documentary at the time, Flaherty's work seemed to have petrified into a romantic vision that evaded the real issues of the 20th century. And for the film industry, Flaherty was difficult in other ways. He preferred to work with a small crew and to shoot enormous amounts of film over an extended period of residence and reflection, which made him an awkward problem for the system of studio production.
Flaherty's last finished work was Louisiana Story (1945), which describes, from the point of view of a Cajun boy, the introduction of oil drilling in the bayous of Louisiana. The film, sponsored by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, was photographed by Richard Leacock, later a major figure in American documentary, and edited by Helen van Dongen.
Flaherty's films endure, largely because of their great visual beauty, the genuine respect he showed for his subjects, and their vision of the largeness of the human spirit. The people in his films know how to cooperate, how to laugh, and how to survive both permanent hardship and the mysteries of change.
Further Reading
Among the best works on Flaherty are Paul Rotha, Robert J. Flaherty: A Biography (1983); Arthur Calder-Marshall, The Innocent Eye: The Life of Robert J. Flaherty (1963); Frances Flaherty, The Odyssey of a Film-Maker (1960); and Richard Griffith, The World of Robert Flaherty (1953). For a guide to other sources, see William T. Murphy, Robert Flaherty: A Guide to References and Resources (1978). For a discussion of Flaherty's place in documentary film, see Erik Barnouw, Documentary: A History of the Non-Fiction Film (1974) and Richard M. Barsam, Nonfiction Film: A Critical History (1973).
Additional Sources
Rotha, Paul, Robert J. Flaherty, a biography, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983. □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
FISKE STARTING IN A TOUGH SPOT; NORTHRIDGE QB DOESN'T DWELL ON REPLACING RECORD-SETTING PASSER.(SPORTS)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 9/25/1997; 700+ words
; ...Quarterbacks have no such luxury. Josh Fiske is replacing the injured Aaron...quarterback controversy.'' JOSH FISKE Year: Sophomore Height: 6...Wears No. 7 in honor of NFL QB John Elway, his favorite player...Box Photo: no caption (Josh Fiske) Myung J. Chun / Daily News...
|
|
FISKE QUESTIONS CLINTONS.(MAIN)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 6/14/1994; 700+ words
; ...said in a statement. He said Fiske had requested that there be no...Kendall, attended the session with Fiske and another attorney in Fiske's office. It is unusual but...former National Security Adviser John M. Poindexter. Walsh also interviewed...
|
|
THE METALWORK OF J. W. FISKE AND COMPANY.
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 3/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...120 Nassau Street and 52 John Street (see Pl.IV). [7] The early years of Fiske's company may well be...relationships between himself, John Winn (probably a relative...Brown, irongds, 52 John," one of the two addresses given in 1864 for Fiske. The 1864 Boston directory...
|
|
Clintons Interviewed About Whitewater; Fiske Nearly Done With Washington Phase of Probe, White House Says
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 6/14/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...said in a statement. He said Fiske had asked that there be no further...the White House session with Fiske and another attorney from Fiske's office. It is unusual but...former national security adviser John M. Poindexter. Walsh also interviewed...
|
|
Queries about his Whitewater links foreshadowed Fiske's removal
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 8/6/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...decided yesterday to remove Fiske to avoid any possible appearance...was surprised to learn that Fiske had connections to any parties...case in any way," said Sen. John F. Kerry, who is a member...General Janet Reno appointed Fiske in January, his job was to...
|
|
JURY DUTY ENDS; JORDAN FISKE RETIRES AS HEAD OF GRAND JURY UNIT.(Local)
Newspaper article from: The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY); 12/27/2002; 700+ words
; ...t embarrass the office,"' Fiske said. There was that one time...mistake never occurred again, Fiske said. "We never had to worry...Jordan was in charge," said John Cirando, the second-in...attorney from 1977 through 1987. Fiske was hired by District Attorney...
|
|
Poised Over Whitewater; Special Counsel Robert Fiske, Calmly Plumbing the Depths
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/4/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...response to an inquiry that yes, Fiske used to coach the New Canaan...mannered, 63-year-old Bob Fiske is - as Muller puts it - "grimly...how competitive he is," says John "Rusty" Wing, one of eight...attorneys who play tennis with Fiske regularly. "If he couldn...
|
|
Starr Says He Plans to Build on Fiske's Whitewater Work
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/11/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...urging the replacement of Fiske. In a two-paragraph...the D.C. Circuit, John D. Butzner Jr. of the...Congress who criticized Fiske's role as a special...Baker (R-Calif.), John J. Duncan Jr. (R...legislators argued that Fiske's conflicts included...
|
|
Judges Replace Fiske as Whitewater Counsel; Ex-Solicitor General Starr to Take Over Probe
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/6/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...over the past two months that Fiske has exercised virtual veto power...congressional Whitewater hearings. Fiske is widely respected as a skilled...Whitewater investigation. Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) called...publicly complained this week that Fiske lacked aggressiveness. Sens...
|
|
Fiske, Hill Negotiate On Hearings; Whitewater Counsel Gets GOP Senators To Adjust Time Line
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 3/10/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...can live with," he said. As Fiske was meeting with leaders on...and Treasury were warned by Fiske and his associates not to characterize...White House staff secretary John Podesta, in charge of the search...grand jury this afternoon. Fiske, appointed after Republicans...
|
|
Minnie Maddern Fiske
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...United States, Minnie Maddern Fiske (1865-1932) became known...playwright Ibsen. Minnie Maddern Fiske was born Mary Augusta Davey...that of Prince Arthur in King John, then gracefully graduated...had been her idol. In 1882 Fiske fell in love with and married...
|
|
John Fiske
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
John Fiske John Fiske (1842-1901), American philosopher and historian, was responsible for applying the Darwinian theory of evolution to philosophical and historical studies in the United States. Born Edmund Fisk Green (he later changed...
|
|
Fiske, Mrs. Minnie Maddern
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Theatre
Fiske, Mrs. Minnie Maddern [ n...Cabin , Prince Arthur in King John , and other youthful parts...she married Harrison Grey Fiske and announced her retirement...returned to the stage as Mrs. Fiske in Hester Crewe , followed by...
|
|
Fiske, Minnie Maddern
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Fiske, Minnie Maddern [ Marie Augusta Davey...York in Richard III and Prince Arthur in King John . At 13 she graduated to adult parts, being...stage in 1890 on her marriage to Harrison Grey Fiske, writing several plays before returning to...
|
|
Fiske, John
Book article from: The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military
Fiske, John (1744–97) naval officer and merchant seaman, born in Salem, Massachusetts. Fiske led numerous successful expeditions against enemy shipping as part of a...
|