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By Mae Marsh
Mr. Griffith and some of his methods of direction
: What everyone associated with the screen owes to him
: About
patience"He
gave us his genius and personality"
Also see
Louella Parsons interview
with Mae from the New York Telegraph,
April 15, 1923.
I have planned all along to dedicate this chapter to Mr.
David Wark Griffith, and now that I have arrived at it, I find that my pen is
unequal to the task. No mere chapter, nor book, could undertake to tell Mr.
Griffith's importance to motion pictures. The things that he has accomplished in
the past ten years, invariably in the face of great odds, almost pass belief.
For Mr. Griffith I have the strong and mixed feeling that the child has for
its benefactor, or the student for a beloved preceptor. At an age now where I
can more appreciate the many trials that he endured I look back fondly to those
days when Mary Pickford, Blanche Sweet, Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Robert Harron,
and myself were beginning our careers and at the same time founding what has
come to be known as the Griffith school.
Nor were we all. If the list of actresses, actors and directors who spent the
formulative days of their screen careers with Mr. Griffith were compiled I
believe it would be found to include many of those who have reached the heights.
Mr. George Loane Tucker, Mr. Thomas Ince, Mr. Marshall Neilan and Mr. Raoul
Walsh, to name but four, were directors that he started on the road to success.
Those were the days of the old Biograph. I am sure they were of the happiest
that any of us ever have spent. We made two-reelers then. But we made good
two-reelers. And the guiding genius of the organization was Mr. Griffith,
tireless in his quest for something new, something big, something that would
expand and elevate this new art to which he had pledged his very soul.
His energy in those days, just as it is now, was astounding. Traveling from
New York to Los Angeles not long ago, I happened to meet aboard the train Mr.
Griffith's private secretary.
"He seems never so unhappy," she said, "as when he is taking a day off. He
mopes around the studio, hands in his pockets, with an air almost comical. It is
as though he were silently resenting such foolishness as days off."
With this energy I remember those early days best for Mr. Griffith's infinite
patience. I can truly say that he had the patience to make us succeed. He never
despaired no matter how backward we might be. He kept at us constantly to bring
out the best that was in us. And even on those extraordinary occasions when he
seemed to lose patience- usually when we had worn his nerves to a frazzle- we
always had that wonderful feeling that he was intensely loyal to all of us.
Those were the days when in addition to schooling us to pictures Mr. Griffith
was constantly experimenting with such things as close-ups, fade-outs, etc.,
that were to revolutionize the entire picture drama and lift it above the
atmosphere of the nickelodeon.
For he did lift it. And he is still lifting it.
Not only those privileged few of us who consider ourselves of the Griffith
school are indebted to his genius. Every actress, or actor, or director, on the
screen today, who has a weekly salary that runs into three figures, can thank
Mr. Griffith for making motion pictures big and prosperous enough to so
recompense them.
It is not the money that Mr. Griffith has made possible, but the dignity that
he put into this new art for which we are most beholden to him. Motion pictures
were lightly held until "The Birth of a Nation" shook an entire continent and
showed the deep significance and possibilities of the screen art.
It took the courage of the born fighter and worlds of confidence to put on
such a picture as The Birth of a Nation. For here at one step he was
doing the unheard of thing, the thing almost everyone in the profession said was
impossible. But it wasn't impossible to Mr. Griffith. He did it.
He has continued to do things just as fine. And if there is one fault to
which the most of us are addicted, it is that we have come to expect more than
is humanly possible of this patient, humble genius.
In my correspondence I am often asked many questions regarding Mr. Griffith's
manner of directing. Wherein is it different from other directors? Wherein does
it excel? How is it possible to become associated with him? Can he make anyone a
star? And so on.
These questions are, in a way, difficult to answer. So far as I know Mr.
Griffith possesses no magic lamp by which he makes a star out of anyone. It is
not any one quality unless it be patience- but a combination of many that make
him the foremost of our directors.
Mr. Griffith is extremely human. There is no unnecessary flourish, or blowing
of trumpets, about his manner of direction. That has the simplicity of true
greatness. He never lords it over his players as I have seen some directors do.
He is kindly, sympathetic and understanding.
Perhaps we are about to do a very vital scene. Mr. Griffith tilts back in his
chair- he has a manner of directing while seated- and may say to the actress:
"You understand this situation. Now let us see what you would do with it."
Here is a direct challenge. The actress is put upon her metal. After giving
the matter careful consideration she plays the scene after her own idea. If she
does it well no one is quicker in his praise than Mr. Griffith. If otherwise, no
one is more kindly in pointing out the flaws.
In other words, Mr. Griffith gives the actress a chance. How different from
other directors I have seen. They might say under the same circumstances:
"You understand this situation. Now here is the way to do it. Follow me
closely."
With that the director will proceed to act out a scene according to his
notion of how a woman would conduct herself under given circumstances. The flaw
in this is obviously that a man and woman have a way of acting differently in
the same situation and Mr. Griffith, by letting the actress show what she would
do, is shrewd enough to profit by Nature. Our self-sufficient director, on the
other hand, wants us to act only as a man would think a woman ought to act in a
given situation.
In this way Mr. Griffith draws out the best that is in his players, and, by
seeming to depend upon them to stand upon their own feet, maintains an
enthusiasm among his players- a sort of big family spirit- that I never have
seen equalled in any other studio.
I hope no one understands me to say that the actress, under Mr. Griffith, has
the say of how she shall act. Quite the contrary! No one has a way of bringing a
player more abruptly to his or her senses when he or she is unqualifiedly in the
wrong.
And no matter how well we think we have outlined a scene Mr. Griffith may
entirely change it. When he does change it we know it is for a reason other than
a fondness for showing authority. In other words, he has built up among his
artists a great and abiding faith in his ability to do the right thing at the
right time, or, as importantly, have it done.
For another thing, Mr. Griffith is big enough not to be small about receiving
suggestions. His people know that, with the result that they are always thinking
up something to put into a scene that has not been written there. He listens
attentively to these suggestions, even though he knows in advance that he
probably cannot use one in a hundred of them. Yet that one may be important
enough to balance the patience expended in listening to the other ninety-nine.
To illustrate:
- In The Birth of a Nation, when the Cameron house was being mobbed by
frenzied negroes and the family had barricaded itself in the cellar it was a
matter of some moment how the little sister, which part I was fortunate enough
to play, would be affected.
I can hear your average director:
"Roll your eyes," he would say. "Cry! Drop to your knees in terror."
In other words, it would be the same old stuff. It is this same old stuff
that makes so many pictures positively deadly. The least that can be said about
this conventional style of doing things is that, if it cannot be criticized,
neither can it be applauded.
Mr. Griffith, when we came to the cellar scene, asked me if there had ever
been a time in my life when I had been filled with terror.
"Yes," I said.
"What did you do?" he inquired.
"I laughed," I answered.
He saw the point immediately.
"Good," he said. "Let's try it."
It was the hysterical laugh of the little girl in the cellar, with the
drunken mob raging above, that was, I am sure, far more effective than rolling
the eyes or weeping would have been.
Mr. Griffith is quick to appreciate the involuntary action of one of his
actresses while a scene is being played or rehearsed. As for instance, in the
court room scene in Intolerance (The Mother and the Law) when I
began unconsciously to wring my handkerchief and press it to my face.
"Good," he said, "keep it up!"
We are gratified when Mr. Griffith accepts any suggestion for business, etc.,
for we know he has a fine sense of distinction and, for every idea we give him,
he returns a hundred.
This system of suggestion extends beyond the players to the mechanical
department with the result that camera men and assistants, as well as assistant
directors, are always on the alert for something new. They know their suggestion
will be given due consideration. And for that reason to Mr. Griffith and his
staff we owe credit for most of the new inventions of telling a story by
pictures. This director is as expert in the mechanics of his art as he is bold
in story conception.
We are familiar with that smoky, hazy, beautiful close-up that Mr. "Billy"
Bitzer invented by using gauze or placing the camera slightly out of focus. In
some recent pictures bearing the "D.G." stamp I have seen some beautiful blue
values that I have not elsewhere observed.
I find the space allotted to this chapter beginning to dwindle with a sense
of having left unsaid so many important and interesting things about this
wonderful director and his methods. But someday someone will set down the true
estimate of the man who has done so much for the picture drama. And time will
write it even larger.
Many of us are deeply indebted to Mr. Griffith and none of us owe that which
can be repaid. For he gave us of his genius and personality and for these there
is no return coin.
Other directors I have had of many experiences and varied training. Sometimes
we have succeeded and sometimes we have failed, and success is made only the
more sweet by taste of failure. But whether we failed or succeeded we know, all
of us, that we did our level best. That is something.
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