Jack Garfein  

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Jack Garfein (2 July 1930 – 30 December 2019) was an American film director, writer, teacher producer, and key figure of the Actors' Studio.

Garfein was once married to actress Carroll Baker, with whom he had two children: actress Blanche Baker and Grammy-Award-winning American composer Herschel Garfein. Garfein's second marriage was to Anna Laretta, with whom he had two children: Rela Garfein (scholarship graduate of HEC in Paris) and Elias Garfein (scholarship graduate of Sorbonne).

He lived for the last four years of his life with Natalia Repolovsky, a pianist and technical writer, whom he married in August 2019.

Contents

Life

As a director and an acting teacher, Gerfein actively participated in the development of the Actors Studio work and collaborated with famous filmmakers such as Elia Kazan, John Ford, and George Stevens. He was a teacher to actors Sissy Spacek, Ron Perlman, Irène Jacob, James Thierrée, Laetitia Casta, Samuel Le Bihan, and Bruce Dern, among others. He directed Uta Hagen, Herbert Berghof, Shelley Winters, Jessica Tandy, Hume Cronyn, Ralph Meeker, Mark Richman, Mildred Dunnock, Elaine Stritch, Malick Bowens and discovered Ben Gazzara, Steve McQueen, George Peppard, Bruce Dern, Pat Hingle, Albert Salmi, and Paul Richards. He also gave James Dean his first acting role in the Actors Studio production of End as a Man. left|thumb|220x220px|Carroll Baker in Garfein's Something Wild (1961)Garfein was an interdisciplinary artist and is the author of two both politically and artistically challenging films that did not spare Hollywood's conservatism and led to censorship. In The Strange One (1957), he tackled the question of racism in America. As a Jew who survived the Holocaust, he was deeply shocked by the segregation at his arrival in the UnitedStates and he fought for the right for African-American actors to be featured in the film. The Strange One was censored by the Motion Picture Production Code for general "homosexual overtones", and "excessive brutality and suggestive sequences [that] tend to arouse disrespect for lawful authority". In his second film, Something Wild (1961), derived from Alex Karmel's novel Mary Ann, he similarly tackled the studios' conventions by formally depicting rape. The film, starring Garfein's then wife Carroll Baker, was described by Garfein as a metaphor for his spiritual journey. The film also raises questions of race and class in America. Something Wild features an original score by Aaron Copland, the title sequence by Saul Bass, and photography by Eugen Schüfftan.thumb|The Strange One |One-sheet for The Strange One, 1957Aside from participating in the revolutionary acting process of the Actors' Studio, Garfein also created a unique acting technique, which he described in his book Life and Acting: Techniques for the Actor (2010). In 1966, he, in collaboration with Paul Newman, created the second branch of the Actors' Studio in Los Angeles. Garfein was one of the co-founders of Hollywood Theatre Row, where in 1974 he created the Harold Clurman Theater and later the Samuel Beckett Theater.

In 1974 he was the creator of the Harold Clurman Theater of which he was also the director, as well as the Samuel Beckett Theater and he opened the Actors and Directors Lab in New York, a new drama school where writer and scenarist Paul Schrader (Taxi Driver) and Tom Schulman (Dead Poets Society) mingled with director Phil Alden Robinson (Field of Dreams) and actress Sissy Spacek.

He directed and produced multiple plays and paid particular attention to the recognition of his friends' work. His experience made him an exceptional director and supervisor. He directed numerous plays by Samuel Beckett, John McLiam, Richard Nash, Sean O'Casey, Eugene O'Neil, Calder Willingham and others.

In 1984, the Cinémathèque Française paid tribute to Garfein's work by screening his two films, presented by Costa-Gavras upon the occasion. Following those first screenings, that were followed by a second session at the filmoteca española in Madrid, Garfein decided to open a Studio (Le Studio Jack Garfein) in Paris in 1985.

Garfein lived and worked between New York and Paris where he continued to teach at the Studio Jack Garfein.

Early years

Garfein was the elder son of a family of two children and multiple cousins. He grew up in the (now former) Czechoslovakia where his father ran an industrial concern. His entire family was killed during Holocaust, but he survived 11 concentration camps.

At the end of the war, he was in the Bergen-Belsen camp which was liberated by the British army. He weighed just 48 pounds and was sent to Sweden where he was cured by a nun, Hedvig Ekberg, whom he paid visit to years later. In 1946, he was among the first five Holocaust survivors to arrive in the United States.

There he joined his uncle who lived in New York and was taken care of by the Jewish Child Care Association that helped him to realize the dream he had been developing since his arrival in New York City: to become an actor.

In 1947, the Jewish Childcare Association sent Garfein to study at the Dramatic Workshop of which he had won a scholarship and who was part of the New School of Social Research at that time and became an independent school in 1949.

Garfein took classes in acting at the Dramatic Workshop of The New School in New York with the influential German director Erwin Piscator. Among his classmates were Walter Matthau, Tony Curtis and Rod Steiger. During those years, he created The New Horizon Players with whom he learned the art of directing and acting. In the following years Garfein was involved in such productions as Home of the Brave by Arthur Laurents, Birthday of the Infanta, Wolf Are You Ready?, and others.

In 1948, Piscator cast him as the lead in his production of "The Burning Bush", the story of a young boy from an Orthodox Jewish family instigated by the antisemitic members of the Hungarian aristocracy to accuse his father and the Jewish community of committing the "blood libel".

Encouraged by Piscator and Lee Strasberg, Garfein joined the American Theater Wing to study directing with Strasberg. After graduating at the age of 20, he was hired to direct 15-minute dramatic segments on television with Barry Nelson, Phyllis Love and Donald Buka, who were the new actors of Broadway at the time. One leading critic called the performances "the most poetically realistic since The Group Theater".

Garfein was naturalized as an American citizen in 1952 at the age of 22.

Early works

left|thumb|Playbill for End as a Man, 1953|320x320px

In order to enter the Actors Studio, Strasberg demanded that Garfein direct a full theater production in New York City. He directed "Camille" ("La Dame aux camélias) by Alexandre Dumas. After seeing the production, Strasberg invited Garfein to attend the Actors Studio for a year during which time he was to direct and produce a full-length play at the Actors Studio. He directed "End as a Man" by Calder Willingham with Studio members. Praised by Strasberg and Kazan, the play was the first full Actors Studio production to open on off-Broadway.

The critical acclaim was so astonishing that the play was moved to Broadway, the first such transfer since O'Neill's play a quarter of a century earlier. The critic Stark Young hailed the acting as "the best ensemble work in the American theater. Superior to the Group Theater. " Garfein won the Show Business Award as the best director on Broadway.

A number of months later, Garfein directed the first color television series The Marriage with Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn.

In June 1955, Garfein received a letter informing him he had been invited by the board of directors to become a member of the Actors' Studio. It was there that he met Carroll Baker, who was his fellow student and whom he married.

Baker and Garfein had one daughter, actress Blanche Baker, and a son, composer Herschel Garfein.[1]

Career as a producer and theatre director

Garfein was a founder and the artistic director of the Harold Clurman Theatre (1978) as well as the Samuel Beckett Theater. [[File:Ben Gazzarra in The Strange One.jpg|thumb|Ben Gazzara in the Strange One]] Notably, Garfein produced two plays by Arthur Miller, The Price and The American Clock, and went on to direct other Broadway productions such as The Sin of Pat Muldoon, and Girls of Summer. His Off-Broadway credits include The Lesson and Rommel's Garden (1985), Childhood with Glenn Close (1985), For No Good Reason by Nathalie Saurraute (1985), Kurt Weill Cabaret with Alvin Epstein and Marta Schlamme (1985), Endgame (1984), The Beckett Plays (Ohio Impromptu, Catastrophe, What Where) (1983–84), Anton Chekhov's Sketchbook with Joseph Buloff and John Heard (1981), California Reich and The Lesson by Eugène Ionesco (1978–79), as well as The Beckett Plays in The Warehouse Theatre in London (1984).

He directed the French premiere of "Master Harold"...and the Boys in Paris, and the world premiere of Nacht und Träume by Samuel Beckett in Austria. He also was an important admirer and friend of Samuel Beckett whose plays he directed in New York City and Europe.

He also counted plays from Canadian author John McLiam, Richard Nash (Girls of Summer), Sean O'Casey (Shadow of a GunMan), Calder Willingham (End as a Man), Garbor Harvey (Rommel's Garden), Gastón Salvatore (Stalin), Eugene O'Neil (Anna Christie), Ionesco (The Lesson), Athold Fugard (Master Harold) Franz Kafka (An Address to the Academy), Richard Nash and Eckehard Schall of the Brecht theater, and others. Brooks Atkinson, a critic of The New York Times called his direction of Shadow of a Gunman by O'Casey "a prologue to greatness". Beckett gave him the world premiere stage rights to Nacht unt Traume. He also produced and directed plays by Alvin Epstein (End Game) and Alan Schneider (Catastrophe) in his repertoire as a director.

In 2013, Garfein adapted and directed Franz Kafka's Address to the Academy at the Théâtre des Maturins in Paris.

Career as a film director

[[File:FRM JACK NYC FILMS SOMETHING WILD TOURNAGE GRAND 20.jpg|thumb|335x335px|Carroll Baker on the set of Something Wild|left]] Garfein's film directorial debut of The Strange One is an ensemble piece set in a sadistic Southern military academy. It was released without an ending – leaving audiences bewildered and critics annoyed. A crucial scene involved black actors and, in racially segregated America of 1957, the studio objected on the grounds that to use black actors would mean commercial failure. Garfein refused to bow down and filmed the scene anyway. It was denounced by a U.S. Congressman as an "un-American" film, but in Paris, a critic wrote that if anyone doubted that America was a free country, then they should see the film.

Garfein directed two other films. One was the 1961 independent film, Something Wild, which starred Baker as a young rape victim held captive by the man who rescued her from suicide. The film includes a score by Aaron Copland. It was panned by many U.S. critics. His documentary The Journey Back chronicles his return to Auschwitz.

His life and journey has been explored in Brian McKenna's documentary The Journey Back. The movie was screened during a tribute to Garfein at the Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles in 2010.

Television career

Garfein directed The Marriage that aired on NBC from July to August 1954. The series starred Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn. The Washington Post called it among the best of the summertime replacement series, praising its "adult approach to situation comedy," with believable situations and intelligent characters.[6]

Teaching career

One of a select group of non-performers awarded membership in The Actors Studio, Garfein became director of the Studio's Los Angeles branch founded in 1966, and created The Harold Clurman Theatre on Theatre Row in New York City. Instructing for more than 40 years, he was one of the most experienced teachers of Method Acting. Garfein offered acting and directing classes in Paris at Le Studio Jack Garfein, London, Budapest, New York, and Los Angeles. He has written Life and Acting - Techniques for the Actor, published in paperback in 2010.




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