Stephen B. Grimes

Production designer

Stephen B. Grimes
Born(1927-04-18)18 April 1927
Weybridge, Surrey, England
Died12 September 1988(1988-09-12) (aged 61)
Positano, Italy
Occupation(s)Production designer
Art director
Years active1944-1988

Stephen B. Grimes (18 April 1927 – 12 September 1988) was an English production designer and art director. He won an Oscar and was nominated for two more in the category Best Art Direction.[1]

Starting work in the British film industry after the Second World War as a sketch-artist, from the mid-1950s to the late 1960s Grimes worked almost exclusively with John Huston, a collaboration that resulted in 14 films in over 30 years. Grimes also had a fruitful long-term working relationship with Sydney Pollack, making seven films with him, and he was also employed by directors such as David Lean, Peter Yates, Mark Rydell and Ulu Grosbard.

One of his great strengths as a production designer was his skill as an artist: in researching and preparing a film he would produce many beautiful, dramatic and atmospheric sketches. These would help the director, director of photography and other key personnel to create the visual style and look of a film. Grimes understood the importance of light, space and texture – he put more into his sketches than most art directors – and tended to make sketches as much as or more than take photographs. He was not lavish; he liked the challenge of getting a good visual look with essentials, combining observation and imagination. Grimes was conscientious with high standards, and poured himself into his work.

Biography

Stephen B. Grimes was born in Weybridge, the second of seven children of Leslie and Nancy Grimes. Leslie was an artist and cartoonist. Three of his brothers, Michael, Bruce and Colin, also worked in the British film and TV industry as art directors or assistant art directors. Colin Grimes sometimes assisted Stephen.

Grimes grew up in Haslemere, Surrey, Peldon in Essex, and Lansdowne Road, Notting Hill Gate, London. He went to St Martin's School of Art in the late 1940s, where he met and then married Kathleen Grimes (née Sanders). They had five children. Grimes was in the British Army at the tail-end of the Second World War.

After a forty-year career in film, Grimes died in Italy in September 1988 while supplying preparatory work for Axel Corti's film The King's Whore.

Work as sketch artist or draughtsman

After leaving art school Grimes was told that they were employing sketch artists at Denham Studios. He went along with a portfolio of work and was taken on. Carmen Dillon took him 'under her wing' and he also worked alongside Oliver Messel, Vertchinsky, Paul Sheriff, Hein Heckroth, Ivor Beddoes, John Box and Ralph Brinton. From the mid-1940s to mid-1950s Grimes worked as a sketch artist or draughtsman on a variety of films made at Denham and Pinewood Studios, including:

Work as art director or production designer

Unrealised or unfinished projects

  • Typee (1955) - to have been directed by John Huston. Grimes did pre-production work and went on a trip to Tahiti with Huston to scout locations.
  • The Man Who Would Be King (1956) – to have been directed by John Huston. Grimes went on a location trip with Huston to Afghanistan, making many preparatory sketches. In the early 1960s both men also collaborated on a revised script. This long-time cherished project of Huston's was originally to have starred Humphrey Bogart and Clark Gable, but only in 1975 did he finally make the film, with Sean Connery and Michael Caine in the lead roles. Alexandre Trauner was the production designer, as Grimes was not available by this time.
  • A Farewell to Arms (1957); directed by Charles Vidor. Huston began directing this film but soon left. Grimes stayed on as associate art director but also didn’t complete it. David O. Selznick was the producer.
  • Red, White and Zero (1967) – a portmanteau film which was shelved, with sections directed by Peter Brook, Lindsay Anderson and Tony Richardson.
  • The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969); directed by Bryan Forbes. The film was begun by John Huston, but he eventually left the production and took Grimes with him.
  • The Last Run (1971); directed by Richard Fleischer. The film was started by John Huston with Grimes as art director, but Huston walked off and Grimes left too. Locations: Spain, Portugal.
  • The Bounty (1978). An unrealised project, to have been directed by David Lean. Grimes undertook preparatory work. The film was eventually made by Roger Donaldson in 1984.
  • Rain Man (1988), directed by Barry Levinson. Grimes provided preliminary work for the film, which was originally to have been directed by Sydney Pollack. After Levinson took over Ida Random was hired as production designer.
  • The King's Whore (1990), directed by Axel Corti. Grimes was working on the preliminary sketches for this film at the time of his death.

Awards

Grimes won an Academy Award for Best Art Direction, and was nominated for two more:

Won
  • Out of Africa (1985)
Nominated

See also

References

  1. ^ "IMDb.com: Stephen B. Grimes - Awards". IMDb.com. Retrieved 25 December 2008.

External links

  • Stephen B. Grimes at IMDb
  • Stephen B. Grimes at AllMovie
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