Jenkins, George
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
JENKINS, George
Art Director. Nationality: American. Born: Baltimore, Maryland, 19 November 1908. Education: Studied architecture at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1931. Family: Married Phyllis Adams, 1955; one daughter by a previous marriage, and one stepdaughter. Career: Interior designer and engineer; 1937–41—assistant to the stage designer Jo Mielziner; 1943—first Broadway play as stage designer, Early to Bed, followed by a series of plays including I Remember Mama, Lost in the Stars, The Bad Seed, and The Miracle Worker ; 1946—first film as art director, The Best Years of Our Lives ; 1953–54—worked for TV; art director in charge of color, CBS; consultant in theater, University of Pennsylvania; 1985–88, professor of motion picture design, University of California, Los Angeles. Awards: Academy Award, for All the President's Men, 1976.
Films as Art Director:
- 1946
The Best Years of Our Lives (Wyler)
- 1947
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (McLeod); The Bishop's Wife (Koster)
- 1948
A Song Is Born (Hawks); Enchantment (Reis)
- 1949
Little Women (LeRoy) (uncredited); Roseanna McCoy (Reis)
- 1950
At War with the Army (Walker)
- 1952
The San Francisco Story (Parrish)
- 1953
Monsoon (Amateau)
- 1962
The Miracle Worker (A. Penn) (co)
- 1965
Mickey One (A. Penn)
- 1967
Up the Down Staircase (Mulligan); Wait until Dark (Young)
- 1968
No Way to Treat a Lady (Smight); The Subject Was Roses
(Grosbard)
- 1969
Me, Natalie (Coe)
- 1970
The Angel Levine (Kadar)
- 1971
The Pursuit of Happiness (Mulligan); Klute (Pakula)
- 1972
1776 (Hunt)
- 1973
The Paper Chase (Bridges)
- 1974
The Parallax View (Pakula)
- 1975
Funny Lady (Ross); Night Moves (A. Penn)
- 1976
All the President's Men (Pakula)
- 1978
Comes a Horseman (Bridges); The China Syndrome (Bridges)
- 1979
Starting Over (Pakula)
- 1980
Power (Shear)
- 1981
Rollover (Pakula); The Postman Always Rings Twice (Rafelson)
- 1982
Sophie's Choice (Pakula)
- 1984
The Dollmaker (Petrie—for TV)
- 1986
Dream Lover (Pakula)
- 1987
Orphans (Pakula)
- 1989
See You in the Morning (Pakula)
- 1990
Presumed Innocent (Pakula)
Publications
By JENKINS: article—
Film Comment (New York), May/June 1978.
On JENKINS: article—
Skoop, August-September 1976.
* * *
During a 45-year career that began with the prestigious The Best Years of Our Lives, George Jenkins specialized in creating environments which define "realism." This "realism" most obviously manifests itself in the numerous sets which reflect actual locations: Louisa May Alcott's childhood home for Little Women, the fifth-floor newsroom of the Washington Post for All the President's Men, and a Harvard law classroom for The Paper Chase. Less obviously, but just as convincingly, Jenkins could recreate a lost or fictional setting by combining various sources of information: visiting many small newspapers for The Parallax View, locating a Victorian house that resembled Helen Keller's home in Georgia for The Miracle Worker, adapting the layouts of several nuclear power plant control rooms for The China Syndrome (which earned him an Academy Award nomination), and condensing World War II concentration camp photographs for Sophie's Choice. Whatever the situation, his designs concretely visualize and authenticate a film's space and time.
Although best known for transforming the everyday into a gritty screen equivalent, Jenkins also successfully accomplished more colorful or idiosyncratic works. While still sharply delineating a film's setting and always matching design to story, he also moved the "real" into purely cinematic style. Jenkins created the bright musical worlds of 1776 and Funny Lady ; the cool, sleek urban settings of Rollover and Power ; the claustrophobic working-class homes of The Subject Was Roses and The Postman Always Rings Twice ; and the dark, frightening visions of Wait until Dark and No Way to Treat a Lady. Two of the three films he designed for Arthur Penn best demonstrate this facet of his talent. Mickey One established and maintained the black-and-white location of a surrealistic city, continually threatening to disappear into the dark and fog of a nightmare. Jenkins said it was an opportunity to do sets where there really weren't any sets at all. Night Moves employed vivid primary colors to transform the apparently tedious detective work of the protagonist into an interior reevaluation of his life. The film's colors are not necessarily symbolic, but their placement in an otherwise dreary environment generates a disturbing space of doubt and confusion. More recently, Presumed Innocent 's courtroom and law offices seem almost banal, but their darkness and heavy furnishings generate an ominous claustrophobia that perfectly reflects Rusty Savage's predicament.
Jenkins prided himself on his thorough research, precision, and an exacting use of props and set decorations. For example, he shipped three months of news-desk paperwork from the Washington Post to Hollywood for All the President's Men. This fastidious attention to detail rewarded him with an Oscar. Jenkins also firmly believed in filmmaking as a collaborative art, consulting with director, actor, and cinematographer before drafting a final design. This attitude explains why he designed ten films for Alan J. Pakula, a director known for cinematic "texture" (on all levels). In a similar (and typical) manner, Jenkins worked closely with Jane Fonda on Klute as she decided which props of her character's apartment she would use. Acutely aware that his sets must pass through the eyes of the cinematographer, he designed with the cinematographer in mind. The first to construct sets of normal size and perspective, he removed some of the cinematographer's bothersome responsibilities.
Jenkins worked with many first-level cinematographers: Gregg Toland (The Best Years of Our Lives ), Charles Lang (Wait until Dark ), Nestor Almendros (Sophie's Choice ), Ghislain Cloquet (Mickey One ), and Sven Nykvist (Starting Over, The Postman Always Rings Twice, and Dream Lover ). His six collaborations with Gordon Willis (Klute, The Paper Chase, The Parallax View, All the President's Men, Comes a Horseman, and Presumed Innocent ) proved to be amongst his (and Willis's) finest works.
—Greg S. Faller
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
A balancing act: the Missouri Compromise.
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...understand the Compromise of 1850, it is...compromise. The Missouri Compromise of 1820...opportunity for compromise. Maine was admitted...free state, while Missouri was authorized...believed the Missouri Compromise deepened the hostility...realized. The Missouri ...
|
|
The Missouri Compromise and Its Aftermath: Slavery and the Meaning of America
Magazine article from: The Arkansas Historical Quarterly; 4/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; The Missouri Compromise and Its Aftermath: Slavery...congressional debates over Missouri, which Robert Pierce...silence created by the 1820 Compromise with respect to slavery...the early stages of the Missouri debate is briefly mentioned...
|
|
The Missouri Compromise and Its Aftermath: Slavery and the Meaning of America.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Journal of Southern History; 5/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; The Missouri Compromise and Its Aftermath: Slavery...telling the story of the Missouri Compromise--not just...forces from having to compromise on the slavery issue...overdramatized" the Missouri Compromise "and underemphasized...
|
|
Missouri Compromise a godsend?; At least it delayed the Civil War
Newspaper article from: Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque); 2/25/2007; ; 598 words
; ...several detours and one was the Missouri Compromise, which was agreed to this week...To set the stage, by 1818 the Missouri Territory finally had gained...residents were mostly southerners, Missouri petitioned Congress for entrance...
|
|
Crafting the compromise.(Missouri Compromise)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...slavery." Failure to adopt the compromise, Clay implied, could destroy...The debates surrounding this compromise were dramatic. South Carolina...believed that to succeed, the compromise must maintain necessary...when a Democratic colleague, Missouri's Thomas Hart Benton, suddenly...
|
|
The Missouri Compromise
Map from: Maps.com U.S. History Maps; 1/1/1999; 255 words
; 00-00-0000 Map of The Missouri Compromise Pacific Ocean Atlantic Ocean L. Michigan L...Superior Colorado R. Rio Grande Mississippi R. Missouri R. Ohio R. Gulf Of Mexico Missouri (Admitted As Slave State In 1821) Illinois Louisiana...
|
|
Missouri compromise on credit union legislation
Magazine article from: Bank News; 5/1/1998; ; 422 words
; A Missouri compromise has been reached on credit union legislation under consideration by the Missouri General Assembly. HB 1323 as introduced...occupation and geographic common bonds. The Missouri legislation would grandfather all existing...
|
|
Missouri Compromise: state legislature will raise brewpub production ceiling to 10,000 barrels.
Magazine article from: Modern Brewery Age; 5/24/1993; 700+ words
; ...Brewery) recently ended in compromise, as the Missouri legislature prepared to approve...off, and quietly negotiated a compromise level of 17,500 barrels with...off their lobbyists. When the Missouri state Senate approved a house...
|
|
A Missouri Compromise with an eye on future
Newspaper article from: Columbia Daily Tribune; 9/7/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...get Gabbert snaps all season. Missouri blew out a lot of opponents last...is finding a way to make this Missouri Compromise work so Daniel gets enough stats...head start on the next era of Missouri football. Reach Joe Walljasper...
|
|
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE.(Editorial)(Editorial)(Editorial)
Newspaper article from: St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO); 4/25/2001; 687 words
; ...research facilities and the Missouri Catholic Conference was critical...different version favored by Missouri Right to Life was so restrictive...aborted or miscarried. The compromise amendment was offered by Sen...the abortion debate, the Missouri Senate has taken a step in...
|
|
Missouri Compromise of 1820
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
...this change Missouri and Maine were...Union. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 merely...Union, new compromises with slavery...necessary. The compromise of 1850 redrew...prescription of the Missouri Compromise...
|
|
The Missouri Compromise
Book article from: American Eras
The Missouri Compromise Slavery in Missouri. When Missouri applied for admission to the Union as a state in 1819, slavery was already a way of life there. Even before the United States acquired the Louisiana Territory (including the parts that...
|
|
Missouri Compromise (1820)
Book article from: Major Acts of Congress
Missouri Compromise (1820) James L. Huston Excerpt from the Missouri Compromise And be it further enacted, That in all that territory ceded...Senate and the House on final versions of the bill, Congress passed the Missouri Compromise
|
|
Missouri Compromise
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
Missouri Compromise The Missouri Compromise of 1820 was a congressional agreement...1878), pp. 1107 – 1108. Missouri Compromise An Act to Authorize the People of the Missouri Territory to Form a Constitution and State Government...
|
|
Compromise of 1850
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to United States History
Compromise of 1850, a series of laws...tradition of complex federal compromises over slavery's expansion...Washington, D.C. , a compromise between antislavery forces...Although each element of the compromise garnered a majority vote...the reversal of the 1820 Missouri Compromise and ...
|