From
"Hibernian Chronicle" a weekly
history
column in the Irish Echo by
Edward
T. O'Donnell
48 Years Ago:
"The Quiet Man" Sweeps the Oscars
Edward T. O'Donnell * The Irish Echo * March 14, 2001
Forty-eight years ago this week, on March 19, 1953, director John
Ford did it again. The scene was the Academy Awards ceremonies for
the films of 1952, held at the RKO Pantages Theater in Los Angeles and
broadcast live on NBC. Top honors for Best Picture went to Cecil
B. DeMille’s film The Greatest Show on Earth. Best Director went
to John Ford for his film, The Quiet Man. For Ford, it was his fourth
Oscar, cementing his reputation as one of America’s greatest directors.
Although he liked to amplify his Hibernian roots by claiming he
was born Sean Alosius O’Fearna, John Ford’s birth certificate reads John
Martin Feeney. Born in Cape Elizabeth, Maine to Irish immigrant parents
from Galway and the Aran Islands, he grew up in middle-class comfort.
His father, a saloonkeeper and local political chieftain, wanted him to
go to Annapolis, but Ford scored too low on the entrance exam. In
1913, at the age of 19, he followed his brother and headed for California
and the budding film industry.
For several years he worked in all manner of jobs associated with
filmmaking. By 1917, having taken his brother’s advice and changed
name to Ford, he was directing and acting in short silent films, mostly
westerns. In 1924 Ford got his chance to direct his first full-length
feature film, The Iron Horse. The film’s success led to more opportunities.
Ford won his first Academy Award for Best Director for The Informer,
a 1935 film about a man who betrays his best friend and the IRA.
Ireland was a subject close to Ford’s heart, for he was proud of his Irish
heritage and took a keen interest in Ireland’s struggle to free itself
from British rule. Indeed, some years before while on a trip to Ireland,
he ran afoul of the authorities for giving money to the IRA. Later,
in 1940, he opined to Eugene O’Neill, while discussing the film adaptation
of the latter’s play The Long Voyage Home, “If there is any single thing
that explains either of us, it’s that we’re Irish.”
Some biographers have noted Irish themes in several of Ford’s
major movies. He once said he was motivated to direct The Grapes
of Wrath (for which he won his second Oscar), because the suffering of
the landless Okies recalled the fate of his Irish ancestors.
Still, the most enduring image of John Ford is the Western.
In 1939 (considered by many the greatest year in Hollywood history) he
directed Stagecoach, a film that challenged Gone with the Wind and the
Wizard of Oz for Best Picture honors. More important, Stagecoach
commenced the relationship between Ford and his most memorable leading
man, John Wayne. Together they would make 9 films, including The
Quiet Man.
The Quiet Man was the first full-length Hollywood movie filmed
on location in Ireland. It featured an all-star cast of Irish American
silver screen talent. John Wayne (yes, his roots reach back to Ulster)
starred as Sean Thornton, a boxer who’s returned from America to retire
in his hometown. He meets and quickly falls in love with Mary Kate
Danaher, the fiercely independent woman played to perfection by Maureen
O’Hara. Their stormy courtship is managed by the town matchmaker
(and bookkeeper and IRA operative) Barry Fitzgerald in the role of Michaeleen
Flynn. Complicating matters for Sean is Red Will Danaher, Mary Kate’s
brute of a brother played by Victor McLaglen. Despite the film’s
many compelling love scenes, it’s the day-long brawl between Sean and Will
that people most remember.
Purists and humorless critics never tire of trashing the film.
They note, for example, that it’s long (over three hours), shamelessly
full of Irish stereotypes (fighting and drinking galore), and diminished
by John Wayne’s less-than-convincing brogue. Yet they forget that
it’s a feature film, not a documentary. More precisely it’s a compelling
love story. And despite the fact that it’s fiction, the film does
manage to tell us a good deal – not about the Irish, but Irish Americans.
For Ford’s depiction of Ireland as a land of green hills, witty men, and
feisty colleens conformed to the dreamy image many Irish Americans held
(and still hold, despite books like Angela’s Ashes) of the dear “ould sod.”
Ford continued to direct films long after The Quiet Man, though
none would ever match the success of his earlier works. His last
feature film was Seven Women (1965). In 1973, the year Ford died
at age 79, the American Film Institute awarded him its first Life Achievement
Award.
HIBERNIAN HISTORY WEEK
Mar 14, 1991: After 16 years in prison for their alleged role in two
pub bombings in Birmingham, England, the “Birmingham Six” are released
after serious questions are raised about the evidence used to convict them.
Mar 15, 1875: Archbishop John McCloskey of New York is invested as the
first American Cardinal.
Mar 17, 1737: the Boston Charitable Irish Society holds the first recorded
celebration of St. Patrick’s Day in America.
HIBERNIAN BIRTHDATES:
Mar 15, 1767: President Andrew Jackson, in Waxhaw, SC
Mar 15, 1852: Playwright Lady Gregory in Roxborough, Co. Galway
Mar 16, 1828: Confederate General, Patrick Cleburne, in Ovens Township,
Co. Cork
Mar 16, 1927: Senator Daniel Patrrick Moynihan, in Tulsa, OK
(c) Edward T. O'Donnell, 2001
|