JULES DASSIN, FILMMAKER (1911-2008)
Jules Dassin, an American director, screenwriter and actor who found success making movies in Europe after he was blacklisted in the United States because of his earlier ties to the Communist Party, died Monday in Athens, where he had lived since the 1970s. He was 96.
A spokeswoman for Hygeia Hospital confirmed his death but did not give a cause, The Associated Press reported.
Mr. Dassin is most widely remembered for films he made after he fled Hollywood in the 1950s, including âNever on Sundayâ (1960), with the Greek actress Melina Mercouri, whom he later married; âTopkapiâ (1964), with Ms. Mercouri, Peter Ustinov and Maximilian Schell; and the 1954 French thriller âRififi.â
But before his blacklisting he had also carved out a successful Hollywood career making noir movies like âBrute Forceâ (1947), a prison drama starring Burt Lancaster and Hume Cronyn; âThe Naked Cityâ (1948), an influential New York City police yarn that won Academy Awards for cinematography and editing; and âThievesâ Highwayâ (1949), about criminals who try to coerce truckers in California.
Mr. Dassinâs last major effort before his exile was âNight and the Cityâ (1950), a film shot in London starring Richard Widmark (who died last Monday) as a shady but naĂŻve wrestling promoter and Francis L. Sullivan as a predatory nightclub owner. Some critics called it Mr. Dassinâs masterpiece.
âDassin turned Londontown into a city of busted dreams and nightmare alleys,â Michael Sragow wrote on salon.com in 2000. âHe mixed the fantastic and the real with masterly ease.â
The producer Darryl F. Zanuck had assigned the film to Mr. Dassin just as Mr. Dassin was to appear before the House Un-American Activities Committee. He never did testify, but testimony by the directors Edward Dmytryk and Frank Tuttle, who recalled Mr. Dassinâs Communist Party membership in the 1930s, was damning enough to sink his career.
Mr. Dassin left the United States for France in 1953 because, he said, he was âunemployableâ in Hollywood. In Paris, unable to speak much more than restaurant French when he arrived, he encountered hard times and remained largely unemployed for five years. In need of money, he agreed to direct âRififi,â a low-budget production about a jewelry heist. A memorable sequence is of the robbery itself, lasting about a half-hour and filmed without music or dialogue.
Mr. Dassin also acted in the movie, under the name Perlo Vita, playing an Italian safe expert. He won a best-director award for the film at the 1955 Cannes Film Festival. By the time he wrote and directed âNever on Sunday,â a comedy about a good-hearted prostitute (Ms. Mercouri), the anti-Communist witch hunt in the United States had been discredited, and he had been accepted again.
Mr. Dassin also had a role in the movie, as a bookish American from â like Mr. Dassin himself â Middletown, Conn., who tries to reform the prostitute. His directing and screenwriting were nominated for Academy Awards.
The movie was a moneymaker and its title song was a hit, though some critics found the script predictable. Ms. Mercouri became Mr. Dassinâs second wife in 1966, two years after he directed her in âTopkapi,â another film about jewel thieves, the prize in this case being gems from the Topkapi Palace Museum in Istanbul.
Jules Dassin was born in Middletown on Dec. 18, 1911, one of eight children of Samuel Dassin, an immigrant barber from Russia, and the former Berthe Vogel. Shortly after Jules was born, his father moved the family to Harlem. Jules attended Morris High School in the Bronx.
He joined the Communist Party in 1930s, a decision he recalled in 2002 in an interview with The Guardian in London. âYou grow up in Harlem where thereâs trouble getting fed and keeping families warm, and live very close to Fifth Avenue, which is elegant,â he told the newspaper. âYou fret, you get ideas, seeing a lot of poverty around you, and itâs a very natural process.â
He left the party in 1939, he said, disillusioned after the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression pact with Hitler.
In the mid-1930s, Mr. Dassin studied drama in Europe before returning to New York, where he made his debut as an actor in the Yiddish Theater. He also wrote radio scripts.
He went to Hollywood shortly before World War II erupted in Europe and was hired as an apprentice to the directors Alfred Hitchcock and Garson Kanin. Soon he was directing films for MGM, including âReunion in France,â a Joan Crawford vehicle with John Wayne in which her character comes to believe that her fiancĂ© is a Nazi collaborator.
His later movies were often joint efforts with Ms. Mercouri. They included âHe Who Must Dieâ (1957), about life overtaking a Passion play in a village on Crete; and âLa Leggeâ (1959), a noirish melodrama with Gina Lollobrigida, Marcello Mastroianni and Yves Montand.
One film without Ms. Mercouri was âUp Tight!â (1968), a remake of a John Ford classic, âThe Informer,â set in a poor black neighborhood, with a script by its star, Ruby Dee. It was Mr. Dassinâs first film in the United States since he had left.
The year before, Mr. Dassin had directed the Broadway musical comedy âIllya Darling,â based on âNever on Sunday,â for which Ms. Mercouri was nominated for a Tony Award. The couple lived in Manhattan during the run.
The same year, 1967, Ms. Mercouri, an ardent anti-Facist, lost her Greek citizenship for engaging in what Greeceâs rightist government called âanti-national activities.â In 1970, Mr. Dassin was accused of sponsoring a plot to overthrow the junta. The charges were later dropped.
When the regime lost power in 1974, he and Ms. Mercouri returned from exile, which had been spent mainly in Paris. Ms. Mercouri entered politics, becoming a member of Parliament and later culture minister. They had homes in Athens and on the Greek island of Spetsai. Ms. Mercouri died in 1994. They had no children.
Mr. Dassinâs first marriage, to Beatrice Launer, from 1933 to 1962, ended in divorce. Their son, Joseph, who became a popular French singer, died in 1980. Mr. Dassin is survived by two other children from his first marriage, Richelle and Julie Dassin, an actress, as well as grandchildren.
Toward the end of his life, Mr. Dassin ran the Melina Mercouri Foundation, which tried to induce the British Museum to return the Elgin Marbles, sculptures taken from the Parthenon nearly 200 years ago. In September, a museum is set to open at the foot of the Acropolis displaying plaster casts of the works.
Mr. Dassin ended his directing career in his late 60s on a disheartened note, when his film âCircle of Twoâ (1980) â about an aging artist (Richard Burton) who is infatuated with a teenage student (Tatum OâNeal) â did poorly at the box office. Mr. Dassin never made another film.
He had always been demanding of himself and often critical of his own work. In 1962, with his best films largely behind him, Mr. Dassin told Cue magazine: âOf my own films, thereâs only one Iâve really liked â âHe Who Must Die.â That is, I like what it had to say. But that doesnât mean Iâm completely satisfied with it. Iâd do it all over again, if I could.â
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: April 2, 2008
An obituary on Tuesday about the filmmaker
