Blake Edwards Movies
American filmmaker
Blake Edwards was the grandson of
J. Gordon Edwards, director of such silent film epics as
The Queen of Sheba (1922).
Blake started his own film career as an actor in 1943; he played bits in A-movies and leads in B-movies, paying his dues in such trivialities as
Gangs of the Waterfront and
Strangler of the Swamp (both 1945). He turned to writing radio scripts, distinguishing himself on the above-average
Dick Powell detective series
Richard Diamond. As a screenwriter and staff producer at Columbia,
Edwards was frequently teamed with director
Richard Quine for such lightweight entertainment as
Sound Off (1952),
Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder (1953), and
Cruisin' Down the River (1953). He also served as associate producer on the popular syndicated
Rod Cameron TV vehicle City Detective the same year. Given his first chance to direct a movie in 1955,
Edwards turned out a
Richard Quine-like musical,
Bring Your Smile Along; ironically, as
Edwards' prestige grew, his style would be imitated by
Quine. A felicitous contract at Universal led
Edwards to his first big box-office successes, including the
Tony Curtis film
Mister Cory (1957) and
Cary Grant's
Operation Petticoat (1959).
In 1958,
Edwards produced, directed, and occasionally wrote for a hip TV detective series,
Peter Gunn, which was distinguished by its film noir camerawork and driving jazz score by
Henry Mancini. A second series, Mr. Lucky (1959), contained many of the elements that made
Peter Gunn popular, but suffered from a bad time slot and network interference. (Lucky was a gambler, a profession frowned upon by the more sanctimonious CBS executives.) The show did, however, introduce
Edwards to actor
Ross Martin, who later appeared as an asthmatic criminal in
Edwards' film
Experiment in Terror (1962). Continuing to turn out box-office bonanzas like
Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) and
Days of Wine and Roses (1962),
Edwards briefly jumped on the comedy bandwagon of the mid-'60s with the slapstick epic
The Great Race (1965), which the director dedicated to his idols, "Mr.
Laurel and Mr.
Hardy." (
Edwards' next homage to the duo was the far less successful 1986 comedy
A Fine Mess). In 1964,
Edwards introduced the bumbling Inspector Clouseau to an unsuspecting world in
The Pink Panther, leading to a string of money-spinning Clouseau films starring
Peter Sellers; actually,
The Pink Panther was
Edwards' second Clouseau movie, since
A Shot in the Dark, although released after
Panther, was filmed first.
Despite the carefree spirit and great success of his comedies,
Edwards hit a snag with
Darling Lili (1969), a World War I musical starring
Edwards' wife
Julie Andrews. The film was a questionable piece to begin with (audiences were asked to sympathize with a German spy who cheerfully sent young British pilots to their deaths), but was made incomprehensible by Paramount's ruthless editing.
Darling Lili sent
Edwards career into decline, although he came back with the 1979 comedy hit
10 and the scabrous satirical film
S.O.B. (1981).
Edwards' track record in the 1980s and '90s was uneven, with such films as
Blind Date (1987),
Sunset (1988), and
Switch (1991). The director was also unsuccessful in his attempts to revive the
Pink Panther comedies minus the services of
Sellers (who had died in 1980) as Clouseau. Still,
Edwards always seemed able to find someone to bankroll his projects. And he left something of a legacy to Hollywood through his actress daughter
Jennifer Edwards and screenwriter son
Geoffrey Edwards.
In 2004, just when the world began to think it might never again hear from
Edwards, the filmmaker gave a slapsticky acceptance speech in response to an honorary Academy Award. He died six years later, of complications from pneumonia, at the age of 88. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi