John M. Stahl Movies
After a cursory public school education, 16-year-old
John Stahl became a stage actor. Entering films as a bit player in 1913, he was hired by Vitagraph's Brooklyn studio as a director one year later. Most of his work under the Vitagraph banner has been lost to the ages, though it has been confirmed that he directed a series of historical shorts under the umbrella title
The Lincoln Cycle. In 1917, he moved to the New York studios of producer
Louis B. Mayer, and a few years later was on the ground floor when
Mayer's operation was absorbed into the new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios. After several years as an MGM director, he became vice president and "directional producer" of his own company, Tiffany-Stahl, in 1927. When talkies arrived, he sold his interest in Tiffany-Stahl to sign with Universal. His major works at this studio included such theatrical and literary derivations as
Strictly Dishonorable (1931),
Back Street (1932),
Imitation of Life (1934), and
Magnificent Obsession (1935). It was during this period that
Stahl developed his directorial "signature": a deft blend of sentimentality, hothouse melodrama, and baroque romanticism, with emphasis on strong, self-reliant female characters. His career suffered a setback in 1936 when he produced and directed MGM's
Parnell, notorious as
Clark Gable's worst and least successful starring feature.
Stahl bounced back in 1938 with another producer/director gig,
A Letter of Introduction, wherein he successfully melded such highly individualized stars as
Adolphe Menjou,
Andrea Leeds, and
Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy. Freelancing during the early '40s, he moved to 20th Century Fox in 1943, where for the next six years he turned out such solid box-office attractions as
Keys to the Kingdom (1943) and the classic "I love you to death" soaper
Leave Her to Heaven. He retired in 1949, and died one year later. In his heyday,
John Stahl was a major influence on those directors specializing in what were then called "women's pictures": None, apparently, were more influenced than the equally skilled
Douglas Sirk, who during the 1950s and early '60s, directed remakes of three of
Stahl's most popular films:
Magnificent Obsession (1956),
Interlude (the 1957 remake of 1939's
When Tomorrow Comes), and
Imitation of Life (1959). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide