Billy Wilder

Billy Wilder

Weitere Namen: Billie Wilder (Weiterer Name); Samuel Wilder (Geburtsname)
Darsteller, Regie, Drehbuch, Schnitt, Musik, Produzent
*22.06.1906 Sucha, Galizien, Österreich-Ungarn (heute Sucha Beskidizka, Polen); †27.03.2002 Beverly Hills, Kalifornien, USA

Biografie

Billy Wilder was born as Samuel Wilder on June 22nd 1906 in Sucha (Galicia, Austria-Hungary). During WWI, the family relocated to Vienna, where Samuel graduated from school and started out as a journalist. In 1926, he moved to Berlin, and began working on the side as an uncredited scriptwriter. Wilder"s contribution to Robert Siodmak"s "Menschen am Sonntag" established him in the film industry, and he collaborated on the scripts to "Emil und die Detektive" and "Ein blonder Traum".


Shortly after Hitler was elected, Wilder emigrated to Paris where he co-directed the feature film "Mauvaise Graine". In 1934, he travelled to the United States and participated in the production of Joe May"s "Music in the Air". After being put under contract by Paramount, Wilder teamed up with fellow writer Charles Brackett, and together they developed some of the most memorable stories in comedy history: They wrote the screenplays for "Bluebeard"s Eighth Wife" and "Ninotchka" – both directed by Ernst Lubitsch – and for Mitchell Leisen"s "Midnight".

In 1942, he made his Hollywood debut as a director with the screwball comedy "The Major and the Minor". He then directed Erich von Stroheim as German General Rommel in the war movie "Five Graves to Cairo" and collaborated with Raymond Chandler on the script to Wilder"s seminal contribution to the Film Noir, "Double Indemnity". Next, he went on to win his first Academy Awards for the drama "The Lost Weekend". In the autumn of 1946, Wilder, whose family members were murdered in Auschwitz, came to Germany in the rank of a colonel of the US Army. In this function he oversaw the post-production of Hans Burger"s documentary "Die Todesmühlen", which showed the liberation of the Nazi death camps by the Allied forces.


Wilder ironically captured the moral ambiguities and contradictions in post-war Germany in "A Foreign Affair", which starred Marlene Dietrich and was shot on location in Berlin. He followed with "Sunset Boulevard", a scathing satire on Hollywood"s obsession with glamour and fame, which won Wilder and Brackett an Oscar.

From 1951 on, Wilder also produced many of his films and proved himself as a master of all genres. The bittersweet romance "Sabrina" was followed by the court room drama "Witness for the Prosecution", but it were his brilliant comedies like "Some Like It Hot" and "The Appartment", which cemented Wilder"s now legendary status as an exceptional filmmaker.

With "The Fortune Cookie", Wilder paired the comical talents Jack Lemmon and Walther Matthau for the first time, and he later also directed the iconic duo in "The Front Page" and "Buddy, Buddy". His Cold War-comedy "One, Two, Three" was a commercial flop due to the geopolitical escalation after the construction of the Berlin wall, but later became a cult classic in its own right.

Retiring from directing in the early 1980s, the multiple-Award winning filmmaker and sophisticated storyteller continued to work as an advisor for United Artists and became a much-sought interview partner for admiring colleagues like Volker Schlöndorff and Cameron Crowe.

Billy Wilder passed away in Beverly Hills on March 28th 2002.

Filmografie

1994/1995 A Personal Journey With Martin Scorsese Through American Movies
Mitwirkung
 
1993/1996 Billy Wilder über Billy Wilder
Mitwirkung
 
1989 Aspekte: Wilder-Auktion
Mitwirkung
 
1989 The Exiles
Mitwirkung
 
1988-1992 Billy, How Did You Do It?
Mitwirkung
 
1987-1989 "Herr Ober, bitte einen Tänzer"
Mitwirkung
 
1981 Buddy Buddy
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1977/1978 Fedora
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1975 Eugen Schüfftan, Kameramann
Mitwirkung
 
1974 The Front Page
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1972 Avanti!
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1972 Alexander Trauner: Filmarchitekt
Mitwirkung
 
1969/1970 The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1965/1966 The Fortune Cookie
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1965 Ates gibi kadin
Vorlage
 
1964 Kiss Me, Stupi
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1962/1963 Irma la Douce
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1961 One, Two, Three
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1960 Ninotchka
Vorlage
 
1959/1960 The Apartment
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1958/1959 Some Like It Hot
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1957/1958 Witness for the Prosecution
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1957 Silk Stockings
Vorlage
 
1956/1957 Love in the Afternoon
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1956/1957 The Spirit of St. Louis
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1954/1955 The Seven Year Itch
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1954 Emil und die Detektive
Idee
 
1953/1954 Sabrina
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1952/1953 Stalag 17
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1950/1951 Ace In the Hole
Regie, Drehbuch, Produzent
 
1949/1950 Sunset Blvd.
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1948 A Song Is Born
Vorlage
 
1947/1948 A Foreign Affair
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1947 The Bishop's Wife
Drehbuch
 
1946-1948 The Emperor Waltz
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1945 Die Todesmühlen
Schnitt
 
1944/1945 The Lost Weekend
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1943/1944 Double Indemnity
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1943 Five Graves to Cairo
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1942 The Major and the Minor
Regie, Drehbuch
 
1942 Tales of Manhattan
Vorlage
 
1941 Ball of Fire
Drehbuch, Vorlage
 
1941 Hold Back the Dawn
Drehbuch
 
1940 Arise, My Love
Drehbuch
 
1940 Rhythm on the River
Vorlage
 
1939 Ninotchka
Drehbuch
 
1939 What a Life
Drehbuch
 
1938/1939 Midnight
Drehbuch
 
1938 That Certain Age
Drehbuch-Mitarbeit
 
1937/1938 Bluebeard's Eighth Wife
Drehbuch
 
1936/1937 Champagne Waltz
Vorlage
 
1935/1936 First Offence
Vorlage, Idee
 
1935 Thunder In the Night
Dramaturgie
 
1934/1935 Lottery Lover
Drehbuch
 
1934/1935 Under Pressure
Drehbuch-Mitarbeit, Dialoge
 
1934/1935 Emil and the Detectives
Vorlage
 
1934 Music In the Air
Drehbuch
 
1934 One Exciting Adventure
Originalgeschichte
 
1934 Mauvaise graine
Regie, Drehbuch, Idee
 
1933 Adorable
Vorlage
 
1933 Was Frauen träumen
Drehbuch
 
1932/1933 Un peu d'amour
Drehbuch
 
1932/1933 Madame wünscht keine Kinder
Drehbuch
 
1932 Madame ne veut pas d'enfants
Drehbuch
 
1932 Das Blaue vom Himmel
Drehbuch
 
1932 Where Is This Lady?
Vorlage
 
1932 Scampolo, ein Kind der Straße
Drehbuch
 
1932 Ein blonder Traum
Drehbuch
 
1932 Es war einmal ein Walzer
Drehbuch
 
1932 Happy Ever After
Vorlage
 
1932 Un rêve blond
Drehbuch
 
1931/1932 Der Sieger
Drehbuch
 
1931 Emil und die Detektive
Drehbuch
 
1931 Princesse! à vos ordres!
Drehbuch
 
1930/1931 Der falsche Ehemann
Drehbuch
 
1930/1931 Seitensprünge
Idee
 
1930/1931 Ihre Hoheit befiehlt
Drehbuch
 
1930 Der Mann, der seinen Mörder sucht
Drehbuch, Liedtexte
 
1930 Ein Burschenlied aus Heidelberg
Drehbuch-Mitarbeit
 
1930 Der Kampf mit dem Drachen oder: Die Tragödie des Untermieters
Idee
 
1929/1930 Menschen am Sonntag
Drehbuch
 
1929 Der Teufelsreporter. Im Nebel der Großstadt
Darsteller, Drehbuch