Pictures from Google Image Search

Mulligan, Robert

International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers | 2001 | | Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

MULLIGAN, Robert



Nationality: American. Born: The Bronx, New York, 23 August 1925. Education: Attended theological seminary; studied radio communications, Fordham University, New York. Military Service: Marine radio operator, World War II. Career: Worked in editorial department of the New York Times, late 1940s; began working in TV as messenger for CBS, then TV director on Suspense, TV Playhouse, Playhouse 90, and others, mid-1950s; directed first feature film, Fear Strikes Out, 1957; founded Pakula-Mulligan Productions with Alan J. Pakula, 1962 (dissolved 1969). Awards: Academy Award nomination for Best Director, for To Kill a Mockingbird, 1962. Agent: Robert Stein, United Talent Agency, 9560 Wilshire Boulevard, 5th Floor, Beverly Hills, California 90210, U.S.A. Address: c/o J. V. Broffman, 5150 Wilshire Boulevard #505, Los Angeles, California 90036, U.S.A.


Films as Director:

1957

Fear Strikes Out

1960

The Rat Race

1961

The Great Imposter ; Come September

1962

The Spiral Road ; To Kill a Mockingbird

1963

Love with the Proper Stranger

1965

Baby the Rain Must Fall

1966

Inside Daisy Clover

1967

Up the down Staircase

1968

The Stalking Moon

1971

The Pursuit of Happiness ; Summer of '42

1972

The Other (+ pr)

1975

The Nickel Ride (+ pr)

1978

Blood Brothers

1979

Same Time, Next Year (+ co-pr)

1982

Kiss Me Goodbye (+ co-pr)

1988

Clara's Heart (+ co-pr)

1991

Man in the Moon

Publications


By MULLIGAN: articles

Interview with Michel Ciment, in Positif (Paris), January 1973.

Interview with J. A. Gili, in Ecran (Paris), October 1974.

"Time for Thought," an interview with R. Appelbaum, in Films and Filming (London), January 1975.

"Je n'ai pas peur du silence," an interview with M. Henry and A. Garsault, in Positif (Paris), December 1991.

"Entretien avec Robert Mulligan," with H. Merrick, in Revue du Cinéma, January 1992.


On MULLIGAN: book

Belton, John, Cinema Stylists, Metuchen, New Jersey, 1983.

On MULLIGAN: articles

Godfrey, Lionel, "Flawed Genius: The Work of Robert Mulligan," in Films and Filming (London), January 1967.

Taylor, John, "Inside Robert Mulligan," in Sight and Sound (London), Autumn 1971.

Falonga, M., "Mysterious Islands: Summer of '42," in Film Heritage (New York), Fall 1972.

"TV to Film: A History, a Map, and a Family Tree," in Monthly Film Bulletin (London), February 1983.

Barra, Allen, "Distant Replay," in Village Voice (New York), 17 May 1988.

Walker, M., "Robert Mulligan," in Film Dope, March 1991.

Edinger, Catarina, "Dona Flor in Two Cultures," in Literature/Film Quarterly, vol. 4, 1991.

Kelleher, E., "Mulligan Addresses the Heart via MGM's Man in the Moon," in Film Journal, October/November 1991.

Garsault, A., "L'amer paradis de l'enfance," in Positif (Paris), December 1991.

Piazzo, P., "Un artisan sensible," in Jeune Cinema, February/March 1992.

Strick, Philip, "The Man in the Moon," in Sight and Sound (London), March 1992.

Kimmel, Daniel M., "Boxed," in Variety (New York), 13 October 1997.


* * *

In an era in which consistent visual style seems perhaps too uniformly held as the prerequisite of the valorized auteur, one can all too easily understand why Robert Mulligan's work has failed to evince any passionate critical interest. His films all look so different; for instance, To Kill a Mockingbird, with its black-and-white measured pictorialism; Up the down Staircase, photographed on location with a documentary graininess; The Other, with its heightened Gothic expressionism rather conventional to the horror genre, if not to Mulligan's previous work; and The Summer of '42, with a pastel prettiness that suffuses each image with the nostalgia of memory. If some would claim this visual eclecticism reflects the lack of a strong personality, others could claim that Mulligan has too much respect for his material to impose arbitrarily upon it some monolithic consistency and instead brings to his subjects the sensibility of a somewhat self-effacing Hollywood craftsman. Yet there are certainly some sequences in Mulligan's work that spring vividly to mind: the silent, final seduction in The Summer of '42 ; the almost surreal walk home by a child dressed as a ham in To Kill a Mockingbird ; the high school dance in Up the down Staircase ; the climactic camera movement in The Other, from Niles to that empty space where Holland, were he not imaginary, would be sitting.

Even Mulligan's two biggest critical successes, To Kill a Mockingbird and The Summer of '42, both examples of the kind of respectable Hollywood filmmaking which garners Academy Award nominations, have not yet been greeted by any significant critical cult. And yet, if Mulligan's good taste has been steadfastly held against him, it must be noted that his films, albeit generally ignored, hold up remarkably well. Mulligan has a strong sense of narrative; and all his films are imbued with human values and a profound compassion which make for compelling audience identification with Mulligan's characteristic protagonists. Mulligan's tendency is to work in less familiar movie genres (such as Hollywood exposé, the family drama, the teacher film, the cinematic Bildungsroman ), but to avoidthrough sincerity and human insightthat emphasis on the purely formal which sometimes makes genre works "go dead" for their audiences upon repeated viewings. Perhaps it is American mistrust of male emotional expression which contributes to Mulligan's facile dismissal by many; certainly it appears that those critics who attacked as sentimental The Summer of '42, Mulligan's tasteful and bittersweet paean to lost virginity, failed to assess negatively those same qualities in so many of the French New Wave films, especially, for instance, the Antoine Doinel cycle by François Truffaut, which were instead praised for their lyrical and compassionate exploration of human interaction. Is nostalgia somehow more acceptable when it is French?

Certainly Mulligan seems especially interested in the deviant, the outsider, the loner: the mentally unbalanced Jimmy Peirsall in Fear Strikes Out ; the enlightened attorney whose values put him in conflict with a bigoted community in To Kill a Mockingbird ; the ex-convict trying to accustom himself to life outside the penitentiary in Baby the Rain Must Fall ; the character of Ferdinand Demara, based on real life, who, in The Great Imposter, succeeds by the sheer force of his skillful impersonations in insinuating himself into a variety of environments in which he would otherwise never be accepted; the students in Up the down Staircase who, psychologically stunted and economically deprived, mayeven with a committed teacher's helpnever fit into mainstream society. Like Truffaut, Mulligan has an extraordinary insight into the world of the child or adolescent and the secret rituals of that world.

Mulligan's children never display that innocence conventionally associated with children, instead participating in often traumatic ceremonies of passage. One thinks of the child through whose eyes the innate racism of small-town America is seen in To Kill a Mockingbird ; the precocious child-star in Inside Daisy Clover ; the lost and often already jaded students in Up the down Staircase ; the pubescent adolescents who learn about sex and morality in The Summer of '42 ; and the irrevocably evil child, Niles, and his twin, Holland, in The Other. Unfortunately, despite the high quality of Robert Mulligan's films, there has been not even a minor re-evaluation of the director as a significant artist who has a consistency of themes (such as his association of puberty with violence)this neglect despite the fact that To Kill a Mockingbird remains one of the most well-respected and emotionally engaging films in the American cinema, a movie which continues to please audiences whether they remember it from their past or whether they see it today for the first time. Not even the consistently fine performances elicited by Mulligan from his players (Anthony Perkins in Fear Strikes Out, Gregory Peck and Mary Badham in To Kill a Mockingbird, Sandy Dennis in Up the down Staircase, Jennifer O'Neil in The Summer of '42, Richard Gere in Blood Brothers, Neil Patrick Harris in Clara's Heart, and indeed, all the children and adolescents who populate Mulligan's world) have served to summon ongoing critical attention. Ultimately, Mulligan's taste may be too fine and his feelings too sentimental to attract contemporary regard in a culture which thrives on the sexy, profane conflicts of a Pulp Fiction. And certainly, even at Mulligan's best or near-best, one sensed a subtlety or indirection when he dealt with things sexual: such as the homosexual orientation of Robert Redford's character in the underrated and fascinating Hollywood exposé Inside Daisy Clover. One suspects that if Mulligan may have never really had the gusto to publicize himself in the Sammy Glick-style, he neither had the opportunism or hypocrisy to jump on any passing bandwagon.

In any case, his recent films, though laudable and interesting, are hardly the works that would attract critical or popular attention. In 1982's curiously unengaging Kiss Me Goodbye, a reworking of the Brazilian film Donna Flor and Her Two Husbands, Mulligan does not seem to be especially inspired by the romantic comedy form, despite the film dealing with typical Mulligan themes of loss and grief. Clara's Heart, in 1988, reprised Mulligan's coming-of-age theme and, like To Kill a Mockingbird, dealt with personal relationships between whites and blacks, in this case, the friendship of a young white boy and the black woman who becomes his nanny. Although the narrative develops with surprising turns, the film was unjustly ignored, with Whoopi Goldberg giving a sensitive, often surprising, performance. Ultimately, Clara's Heart had too much heart and not enough cynicism to be successful; even though it dealt (if gently) with violence, divorce, rape, and incest, Clara's Heart faded in the glare of more trendy and explicit contemporary films like Do the Right Thing. Mulligan's final film to date, Man in the Moon, which had a few ardent critical supporters in 1991, is once again a coming-of-age story imbued with feelings of hopefulness and loss, nostalgia and regret. Although beautifully photographed in an older, Hollywood style by Freddie Francis, Man in the Moon though a period pieceseems almost purposely set in a cultural vacuum so that Mulligan can avoid dealing with a contemporary America from which he seems rather alienated. The result is a film which, despite good performances from everyone, particularly the adolescent leads, seems somewhat dead and unconnected, certainly not the film to ignite a critical reevaluation of Mulligan's work.

Charles Derry

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Derry, Charles. "Mulligan, Robert." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 8 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Derry, Charles. "Mulligan, Robert." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (December 8, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406801321.html

Derry, Charles. "Mulligan, Robert." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Retrieved December 08, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3406801321.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Culture: Victorian revival throws up many unseen magnificent paintings; Visual arts.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 6/17/2008; 683 words ; ...Sat 10am-5pm; admission free). CAPTION(S): Amy Robsart by William Frederic Yeames, 1884 (c) Wolverhampton Art Gallery; Amy Robsart by William Frederic Yeames, 1884 (c) Wolverhampton...
Elizabeth the Queen.(Review)
Magazine article from: History Today; 7/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...has baffled four centuries with the novel theory that Amy Robsart was murdered by Sir William Cecil. This is based on the argument that Cecil knew that Amy Robsart was dying, and, worried by the possibility that Elizabeth...
Dissing Elizabeth.(Review)
Magazine article from: History Today; 7/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...has baffled four centuries with the novel theory that Amy Robsart was murdered by Sir William Cecil. This is based on the argument that Cecil knew that Amy Robsart was dying, and, worried by the possibility that Elizabeth...
Scott's Pageants: The Example of Kenilworth.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in Romanticism; 3/22/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...domestic drama in the form of the marital tribulations of Amy Robsart and the Earl of Leicester, but it is just about as dull...learn is that few readers have ever found the Leicester-Robsart plot terribly compelling or have made the mistake of...
Gregory, Philippa. The virgin's lover.(Young adult review)(Brief article)(Audiobook review)
Magazine article from: Kliatt; 5/1/2007; ; 659 words ; ...109.75. Vinyl; plot notes. SA Amy Robsart, the favorite daughter of a wealthy...affections. Times change, however, and Amy's loyalty is tested severely, enduring...doesn't make the heart grow fonder, Amy denies how far apart she and her husband...
Elizabeth & Leicester: Power, Passion, Politics.
Magazine article from: British Heritage; 3/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...he had wed a noblewoman from Norfolk named Amy Robsart. Two years into Elizabeth's reign, Amy died mysteriously, prompting cruel speculation...that they could wed. Gristwood contends that Amy was most likely killed by an accidental fall...
A woman with a past and a masterpiece with a future
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 11/23/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...common mistake in modern British opera.) The death of Amy Robsart (Amy Carson), wife of Elizabeth I's favourite, Robert...more than a few screens and some clever lighting, as Amy's brief candle was snuffed out before the watchful eyes...
The proof the Virgin Queen had a secret love child? A new TV documentary reveals evidence that could shatter one of the enduring myths about the British monarchy ...
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 6/14/2006; 700+ words ; ...from childhood. Although Dudley married a woman called Amy Robsart - a union of convenience between two wealthy families...year later on September 8, 1560, when Dudley's wife Amy died in suspicious circumstances at the couple's Oxfordshire...
The Unruly Queen: The Life of Queen Caroline.
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 4/20/1996; 700+ words ; ...Master of Horse. He was reasonably aristocratic and extremely attractive. Unfortunately, he already had a wife, Amy Robsart. Amy's convenient death--she apparently fell downstairs and died without even disturbing her head-dress--ironically...
Monarchy and Matrimony: The Courtships of Elizabeth I.
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 4/20/1996; 700+ words ; ...Master of Horse. He was reasonably aristocratic and extremely attractive. Unfortunately, he already had a wife, Amy Robsart. Amy's convenient death--she apparently fell downstairs and died without even disturbing her head-dress--ironically...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Amy Robsart
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Amy Robsart , 1532-60, maiden name of the wife of Robert Dudley, later earl of Leicester , a favorite of Queen Elizabeth I of England...
Robsart, Amy
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature Robsart, Amy, a character in Scott's Kenilworth . (See Dudley, Sir Robert .)
Earl of Leicester
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography ...reign of Edward VI. Marriage to a Norfolk heiress, Amy Robsart, followed. The Dudley family and its fortunes were...rumor inevitably linked the two romantically. Thus when Amy Robsart died in a fall late in 1560, Dudley was widely suspected...
Haunted Houses
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology ...apparitions and among these is the ghost of Amy Robsart, which haunts the manor of Cumnor, in Oxfordshire. Amy was a real woman, not a mere creation of...and recalling an authentic portrait of Amy, which depicts her as a woman of charm and...
Leicester, Robert Dudley, earl of
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature Leicester, Robert Dudley, earl of (?1532–88), the favourite of Elizabeth I , figures in Scott's Kenilworth as the husband of the unfortunate Amy Robsart.

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: