In 1961, producer Ismail Merchant and director
James Ivory formed Merchant Ivory Productions, a
film company that would become highly celebrated for
its elegant literary adaptations, which were produced
on modest budgets yet achieved grandeur through the
pair's ingenuity and imagination. The company,
known for its close-knit family atmosphere, attracted
some of the most illustrious talents in the film world,
including screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, who
scripted many of the Merchant Ivory films; such performers
as Maggie Smith, Anthony Hopkins, Emma
Thompson, Daniel Day-Lewis and Vanessa Redgrave;
and an imposing array of designers and technicians.
"It is a strange marriage we have at Merchant
Ivory," Merchant once remarked. "I am an Indian
Muslim, Ruth is a German Jew and Jim is a
Protestant American." The company was founded
with the intent of making English-language films in
India aimed at an international market, although it
became more famous for Edwardian-era British
dramas, often based on the works of Henry James
and E.M. Forster. Among its masterpieces, shown in
their TCM premieres, are adaptations of James's The
Europeans (1979) and The Bostonians (1984), and
Forster's Maurice (1987) and Howards End (1992).
Ivory and the late Merchant were personal as well
as professional partners. The festival includes such
early films as their first collaboration, The Householder
(1963), with a script by Jhabvala, based on her own
novel; and Shakespeare Wallah (1966). These are also
among the numerous TCM premieres, which include
short subjects and made-for-television films.
Also showing are such major Merchant Ivory
successes as A Room with a View (1985), which won
Oscars® for its art direction/set decoration, costume
design and Jhabvala's screenplay (based on the
Forster novel), along with five other nominations
including those for Best Picture and Director; and
The Remains of the Day (1993), which earned eight
Oscar® nominations including Best Picture,
Director, Screenplay, Actor (Hopkins) and Actress
(Thompson).
by Roger Fristoe
Introduction to 50 Years of Merchant Ivory - Thursdays in September
by Roger Fristoe | August 22, 2011
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