Cecil B. DeMille





























































Cecil B. DeMille

Demille - c1920.JPG
Cecil B. DeMille, c. 1920

Born
Cecil Blount DeMille


(1881-08-12)August 12, 1881

Ashfield, Massachusetts, U.S.

Died January 21, 1959(1959-01-21) (aged 77)

Hollywood, California, U.S.

Resting place Hollywood Forever Cemetery
Nationality American
Alma mater
Pennsylvania Military College
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
Occupation Producer, director, editor, screenwriter, actor
Years active 1899–1958
Political party Republican
Spouse(s)

Constance Adams DeMille (m. 1902)
Children Cecilia DeMille
Katherine DeMille
John DeMille
Richard de Mille
Parent(s)
Henry Churchill de Mille
Matilda Beatrice deMille
Relatives
William C. deMille (brother)
Agnes de Mille (niece)
Website Official website

Cecil Blount DeMille (/dəˈmɪl/;[1] August 12, 1881 – January 21, 1959) was an American filmmaker. Between 1914 and 1958, he made a total of 70 features, both silent and sound films.[2] He is acknowledged as a founding father of the cinema of the United States and the most commercially successful producer-director in film history.[3] His films were distinguished by their epic scale and by his cinematic showmanship. He made silent films of every genre: social dramas, comedies, Westerns, farces, morality plays, and historical pageants.


DeMille began his career as a stage actor in 1900.[4] He later moved to writing and directing stage productions, some with Jesse Lasky, who was then a vaudeville producer. DeMille's first film, The Squaw Man (1914), was also the first feature film shot in Hollywood. Its interracial love story made it a phenomenal hit and it "put Hollywood on the map".[5] The continued success of his productions led to the founding of Paramount Pictures with Lasky and Adolph Zukor. His first biblical epic, The Ten Commandments (1923), was both a critical and financial success;[6] it held the Paramount revenue record for twenty-five years.[7]


In 1927, he directed The King of Kings, a biography of Jesus of Nazareth, which was acclaimed for its sensitivity and reached more than 800 million viewers.[8]The Sign of the Cross (1932) was the first sound film to integrate all aspects of cinematic technique.[9]Cleopatra (1934) was his first film to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. After more than thirty years in film production, DeMille reached the pinnacle of his career with Samson and Delilah (1949), a biblical epic which did "an all-time record business".[10] Along with biblical and historical narratives, he also directed films oriented toward "neo-naturalism", which tried to portray the laws of man fighting the forces of nature.[11]


He went on to receive his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Director for his circus drama The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), which won both the Academy Award for Best Picture and the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. His last and most famous film, The Ten Commandments (1956), also a Best Picture Academy Award nominee, is currently the seventh-highest-grossing film of all time, adjusted for inflation.[12] In addition to his Best Picture Award, he received an Academy Honorary Award for his film contributions, the Palme d'Or (posthumously) for Union Pacific, a DGA Award for Lifetime Achievement, and the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. He was also the first recipient of the Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award, which was later named in his honor.[13]




Contents






  • 1 Name


  • 2 Family, childhood, youth


  • 3 Career


    • 3.1 Broadway


    • 3.2 Moving pictures


    • 3.3 Silent era


    • 3.4 Sound era


    • 3.5 Showmanship as director


    • 3.6 The Ten Commandments


    • 3.7 Unfulfilled projects




  • 4 Personal life


  • 5 Politics


  • 6 Race and religion


  • 7 Death


  • 8 Legacy


    • 8.1 Posthumous honors




  • 9 Filmography


    • 9.1 Director


    • 9.2 Actor




  • 10 Awards


  • 11 See also


  • 12 References


    • 12.1 Notes


    • 12.2 Sources




  • 13 External links





Name


There are several variants of his surname. His family's Dutch surname was originally spelled de Mil and then became de Mille. As an adult, he adopted the spelling DeMille for professional purposes but continued to use de Mille in private life. The family name de Mille was used by his children Cecilia, John, Richard, and Katherine. DeMille's brother, William, and his daughters, Margaret and Agnes, as well as DeMille's granddaughter, Cecilia de Mille Presley, also used the de Mille spelling.[14]



Family, childhood, youth


Cecil Blount DeMille was born in Ashfield, Massachusetts, while his parents were vacationing there, and grew up in Washington, North Carolina. His father, Henry Churchill de Mille (1853–1893), was a North Carolina-born dramatist and lay reader in the Episcopal Church, who had earlier begun a career as a playwright, writing his first play at age 15. His mother was the playwright and script writer Matilda Beatrice DeMille (née Samuel), whose parents were both of German Jewish heritage. She emigrated from England with her parents in 1871 when she was 18, and they settled in Brooklyn. Beatrice grew up in a middle-class English household.[15] DeMille's mother was related to British politician Herbert Louis Samuel.[16][17]


DeMille's parents met as members of a music and literary society in New York. Henry was a tall, red-headed student. Beatrice was intelligent, educated, forthright, and strong-willed. They were both born in 1853 and both loved the theater. When they married, Beatrice converted to Henry's faith.[15] Henry worked as a playwright, administrator, and faculty member during the early years of The American Academy of Dramatic Arts, established in New York City in 1884. He built a house for his family in Wayne, New Jersey.[18]


The family spent time in Pompton Lakes, New Jersey, operating a private school in that town and attending Christ Episcopal Church. DeMille recalled that this church was the place where he visualized the story of his 1923 version of The Ten Commandments.[19] Henry read to his children nightly, both from the classics and from the Bible. DeMille studied Scripture his entire life and read the Bible during lunch in the studio commissary.[20][21] He was the first to admit that he did not attend church services but he did profess an unshakable belief in prayer.[22] He stated that his films were a continuation of his father's work. "My ministry," said DeMille, "has been to make religious movies and to get more people to read the Bible than anyone else ever has."[23]


In 1893, at the age of forty, Henry de Mille contracted typhoid fever and died suddenly, leaving Beatrice with three children, a house, and no savings. Beatrice had "enthusiastically supported" her husband's theatrical aspirations. In his eulogy, she wrote:


May your sons be as fine and as noble and good and honest as you were. May they follow in your steps.[15]


Within eight weeks of Henry's death, Beatrice opened an acting workshop in her home, the Henry C. De Mille School for Girls. She later became the second female play broker on Broadway.[24] DeMille attended Pennsylvania Military College in Chester, Pennsylvania from the age of fifteen. Both DeMille (Class of 1900) and his brother William (Class of 1901) also attended and graduated from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, which they attended on scholarship. The Academy later honored DeMille with an Alumni Achievement Award.



Career



Head shot of a young-looking DeMille

c. 1904



Broadway


DeMille began his career as an actor on the Broadway stage in the theatrical company of Charles Frohman in 1900. His brother William was establishing himself as a playwright and sometimes invited him to collaborate. DeMille performed on stage with actors whom he would later direct in films: Charlotte Walker, Mary Pickford, and Pedro de Cordoba. DeMille also produced and directed plays.[25] DeMille found success in the spring of 1913 producing Reckless Age by Lee Wilson, a play about a high society girl wrongly accused of manslaughter starring Frederick Burton and Sydney Shields.[26][27] DeMille and his brother at times worked with the legendary impresario David Belasco, who had been a friend and collaborator of their father. Changes in the theater rendered DeMille's melodramas obsolete before they were produced, and true theatrical success eluded him. By 1913 he was having difficulty supporting his wife and baby daughter.



Moving pictures


In July 1913 DeMille, Jesse Lasky, Sam Goldfish (later Samuel Goldwyn), and a group of East Coast businessmen created the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company. On December 12, 1913, DeMille, his cast, and crew boarded a Southern Pacific train bound for Flagstaff via New Orleans. His tentative plan was to shoot a film in Arizona, but he disliked the quality of light he saw there.[28] He continued to Los Angeles. Once there, he chose not to shoot in Edendale, where many studios were, but in Hollywood. He also flouted the dictum that a film should run twenty minutes. He made his first film run sixty minutes, as long as a short play. The Squaw Man (1914), co-directed by Oscar Apfel, was a sensation and it established the Lasky Company.



Silent era




Advertisement (1919)


The first few years of the Lasky Company (soon to become Famous Players-Lasky) were spent in making films nonstop, literally writing the language of film. DeMille adapted Belasco's dramatic lighting techniques to film technology, mimicking moonlight with U.S. cinema's first attempts at "motivated lighting" in The Warrens of Virginia.[24]


After five years and thirty hit films, DeMille became the American film industry's most successful director. In the silent era, he was renowned for Male and Female (1919), Manslaughter (1921), The Volga Boatman (1926), and The Godless Girl (1928). DeMille's trademark scenes included bathtubs, lion attacks, and Roman orgies. A number of his films featured scenes in two-color Technicolor.


The immense popularity of DeMille's silent films enabled him to branch out into other areas. The Roaring Twenties were the boom years and DeMille took full advantage, opening the Mercury Aviation Company, one of America's first commercial airlines. He was also a real estate speculator, an underwriter of political campaigns, and a Bank of America executive, approving loans for other filmmakers.



Sound era


When "talking pictures" were innovated in 1928, DeMille made a successful transition, offering his own innovations to the painful process; he devised a microphone boom and a soundproof camera blimp. He also popularized the camera crane.


DeMille made stars of unknown actors: Gloria Swanson, Bebe Daniels, Rod La Rocque, William Boyd, Claudette Colbert, and Charlton Heston. He also cast established stars such as Gary Cooper, Robert Preston, Paulette Goddard and Fredric March in multiple pictures. DeMille displayed a loyalty to his performers, casting them repeatedly. They included Henry Wilcoxon, Julia Faye, Joseph Schildkraut, Ian Keith, Charles Bickford, Theodore Roberts, Akim Tamiroff and William Boyd. DeMille was credited by actor Edward G. Robinson with saving his career following his eclipse in the Hollywood blacklist.[29]




DeMille directing, 1920


DeMille had a reputation for autocratic behavior on the set, singling out and berating extras who were not paying attention. A number of these displays were thought to be staged, however, as an exercise in discipline.[30] He despised actors who were unwilling to take physical risks, especially when he had first demonstrated that the required stunt would not harm them. This occurred with Victor Mature in Samson and Delilah. Mature refused to wrestle Jackie the Lion, even though DeMille had just tussled with the lion, proving that he was tame. DeMille told the actor that he was "one hundred percent yellow".[31]Paulette Goddard's refusal to risk personal injury in a scene involving fire in Unconquered cost her DeMille's favor and a role in The Greatest Show on Earth.[32]


DeMille was adept at directing "thousands of extras", and many of his pictures include spectacular setpieces: the toppling of the pagan temple in Samson and Delilah; train wrecks in The Road to Yesterday, Union Pacific and The Greatest Show on Earth; the destruction of an airship in Madam Satan; and the parting of the Red Sea in both versions of The Ten Commandments.


DeMille first used three-strip Technicolor in North West Mounted Police (1940). Audiences liked its highly saturated color, so DeMille made no further black-and-white features.



Showmanship as director




DeMille as producer of the CBS Radio Theatre, 1937


DeMille was one of the first directors to become a celebrity in his own right. He cultivated the image of the omnipotent director, complete with megaphone, riding crop, and jodhpurs. From 1936 to 1944, DeMille hosted Lux Radio Theater, a weekly digest of current feature films.


DeMille was respected by his peers, yet his individual films were sometimes criticized. "Directorially, I think his pictures were the most horrible things I've ever seen in my life", said director William Wellman. "But he put on pictures that made a fortune. In that respect, he was better than any of us."[33]
Producer David O. Selznick wrote: "There has appeared only one Cecil B. DeMille. He is one of the most extraordinarily able showmen of modern times. However much I may dislike some of his pictures, it would be very silly of me, as a producer of commercial motion pictures, to demean for an instant his unparalleled skill as a maker of mass entertainment."[34]


DeMille appeared as himself in numerous films, including the M-G-M comedy Free and Easy. He often appeared in his coming-attraction trailers and narrated many of his later films, even stepping on screen to introduce The Ten Commandments. DeMille was immortalized in Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard when Gloria Swanson spoke the line: "All right, Mr. DeMille. I'm ready for my closeup." DeMille plays himself in the film.


In the 1940s, DeMille continued to please the public. He averaged one film a year; most of them centered on historical figures or Bible stories. His first attempt at a drama set within a semi-documentary frame was The Greatest Show on Earth, a saga of circus performers released in 1952. His experiment gained him a nomination for best director and won an Academy Award for Best Picture that year.



The Ten Commandments


In 1954, DeMille began his last film, the production for which he is best remembered, The Ten Commandments.


On November 7, 1954, while in Egypt filming the Exodus sequence for The Ten Commandments, DeMille (who was seventy-three) climbed a 107-foot (33 m) ladder to the top of the massive Per Rameses set and suffered a serious heart attack. Ignoring his doctor's orders, DeMille was back directing the film within a week. DeMille's longtime friends Raymond Arnold Disney and his wife Meredith A. Disney and their son Charles Elias Disney were visiting the set in Egypt when DeMille suffered his near-fatal heart attack.[35] Although DeMille completed the film, his health was diminished by several more heart attacks. This film would be his last.



Unfulfilled projects


Because of his illness, DeMille asked his son-in-law, actor Anthony Quinn, to direct a remake of his 1938 film The Buccaneer. DeMille served as executive producer. Despite a cast led by Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner, the 1958 film The Buccaneer was a disappointment.[36]


In the months before his death, DeMille was researching a film biography of Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, the founder of the Scout Movement. DeMille asked David Niven to star in the film, but it was never made. DeMille also was planning a film about the space race as well as another Biblical epic about the Book of Revelation.[37]



Personal life




DeMille's tomb at Hollywood Forever Cemetery


DeMille married Constance Adams on August 16, 1902 and had one child, Cecilia. The couple also adopted an orphan child, Katherine Lester, in the early 1920s; her father had been killed in World War I and her mother had died of tuberculosis.


Katherine became an actress at Paramount Pictures, ultimately gaining his approval. In 1937 she married actor Anthony Quinn. In the 1920s the DeMilles adopted two sons, John and Richard, the latter of whom became a notable filmmaker, writer, and psychologist.


DeMille was a Freemason and a member of Prince of Orange Lodge #16 in New York City.[38]


Cecil had an older brother William, and a sister Agnes who died in childhood. William later named a daughter after her, Agnes de Mille, the famed dancer-choreographer.



Politics


DeMille was a lifelong conservative Republican activist. He greatly admired Herbert Hoover. In 1944, he was the master of ceremonies at the massive rally organized by David O. Selznick in the Los Angeles Coliseum in support of the Dewey-Bricker ticket as well as Governor Earl Warren of California, who would become Dewey's running mate in 1948 and later the Chief Justice of the United States. The gathering drew 93,000, with short speeches by Hedda Hopper and Walt Disney. Among those in attendance were Ann Sothern, Ginger Rogers, Randolph Scott, Adolphe Menjou, Gary Cooper, and Walter Pidgeon. Though the rally drew a good response, most Hollywood celebrities who took a public position sided with the Roosevelt-Truman ticket.[39]


In 1954, Secretary of the Air Force Harold E. Talbott asked DeMille for help in designing the cadet uniforms at the newly established United States Air Force Academy. DeMille's designs, most notably his design of the distinctive cadet parade uniform, won praise from Air Force and Academy leadership, were ultimately adopted, and are still worn by cadets.[40]


In the early 1950s, DeMille was recruited by Allen Dulles and Frank Wisner to serve on the board of the anti-communist National Committee for a Free Europe, the public face of the organization that oversaw the Radio Free Europe service.[41]



Race and religion


DeMille drew on his Christian and Jewish heritage to convey a message of tolerance. The Crusades was the first film to show accord between Christians and Muslims. DeMille received more than a dozen awards from Jewish religious and cultural groups, including B’nai B’rith.


In 1954, he was seeking approval for a lavish remake of his 1923 silent film The Ten Commandments. He went before the Paramount board of directors, which was mostly Jewish-American. The members rejected his proposal, even though his last two films, Samson and Delilah and The Greatest Show on Earth, had been record-breaking hits. Adolph Zukor, the chairman of the board, rebuked the members, saying:


We have just lived through a war where our people were systematically executed. Here we have a man who made a film praising the Jewish people, that tells of Samson, one of the legends of our Scripture. Now he wants to make the life of Moses. We should get down on our knees to Cecil and say "Thank you!"


DeMille did not have an exact budget proposal for the project, and it promised to be the most costly in U.S. film history. Still, the members unanimously approved it.[42]



Death


In the early hours of January 21, 1959, DeMille died of a heart ailment.[43]


DeMille's funeral was held on January 23 at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. He was entombed at the Hollywood Memorial Cemetery (now known as Hollywood Forever).[44]



Legacy




DeMille in 1952


DeMille received hundreds of awards, commendations, and honors in his lifetime.



Posthumous honors


For his contribution to the motion picture and radio industry, DeMille has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The first, for radio contributions, is located at 6240 Hollywood Blvd. The second star is located at 1725 Vine Street.[45]


Two schools have been named after him: Cecil B. DeMille Middle School, in Long Beach, California, closed and demolished in 2009 to make way for a new high school; and Cecil B. DeMille Elementary School in Midway City, California.


The former film building at Chapman University in Orange, California is named in honor of DeMille. The Lawrence and Kristina Dodge College of Film and Media Arts now resides in Marion Knotts Studios.


The Golden Globe's annual Cecil B. DeMille Award recognizes lifetime achievement in the film industry.


The moving image collection of Cecil B. DeMille is held at the Academy Film Archive and includes home movies, outtakes, and never-before-seen test footage.[46]


During the Apollo 11 mission, Buzz Aldrin refers to himself in one instance as "Cecil B. DeAldrin", as a humorous nod to DeMille.[47]



Filmography


DeMille made seventy features. In spite of careful storage in his film vaults, seven films—the early silents: The Arab, The Wild Goose Chase, Chimmie Fadden, The Dream Girl, We Can't Have Everything, The Devil Stone, and the 1918 remake The Squaw Man—were lost to nitrate decomposition. Roughly twenty of his silent features are available in commercial DVD format.


The sound films are in three groups:


1. The three films DeMille produced at M-G-M are now owned by Warner Bros. (through Turner Entertainment).


2. The films he made at Paramount between 1932 and 1947 were sold by that company to EMKA, Ltd. in 1957, and are available through the television division of NBCUniversal.


3. DeMille's last three films were not sold to EMKA, and at present remain with Paramount. Television distribution for those films is handled by Trifecta Entertainment & Media. The Ten Commandments is broadcast every Easter Sunday in the United States on the ABC Television Network.



Director


Silent films





  • The Squaw Man (1914)


  • Brewster's Millions (1914, Lost)


  • The Master Mind (1914)


  • The Only Son (1914, Lost)


  • The Man on the Box (1914)


  • The Call of the North (1914)


  • The Virginian (1914)


  • What's His Name (1914)


  • The Man from Home (1914)


  • Rose of the Rancho (1914)


  • The Ghost Breaker (1914, Lost)


  • The Girl of the Golden West (1915)


  • After Five (1915)


  • The Warrens of Virginia (1915)


  • The Unafraid (1915)


  • The Captive (1915)


  • The Wild Goose Chase (1915, Lost)


  • The Arab (1915, Lost)


  • Chimmie Fadden (1915)


  • Kindling (1915)


  • Carmen (1915)


  • Chimmie Fadden Out West (1915)


  • The Cheat (1915)


  • Temptation (1915, Lost)


  • The Golden Chance (1915)


  • The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1916)


  • The Heart of Nora Flynn (1916)


  • Maria Rosa (1916)


  • The Dream Girl (1916, Lost)


  • Joan the Woman (1917)


  • Lost and Won (1917)


  • A Romance of the Redwoods (1917)


  • The Little American (1917)


  • The Woman God Forgot (1917)


  • Nan of Music Mountain (1917)


  • The Devil-Stone (1917)


  • The Whispering Chorus (1918)


  • Old Wives for New (1918)


  • We Can't Have Everything (1918, Lost)


  • Till I Come Back to You (1918)


  • The Squaw Man (1918, Lost)


  • Don't Change Your Husband (1919)


  • For Better, for Worse (1919)


  • Male and Female (1919)


  • Why Change Your Wife? (1920)


  • Something to Think About (1920)


  • Forbidden Fruit (1921)


  • The Affairs of Anatol (1921)


  • Fool's Paradise (1921)


  • Saturday Night (1922)


  • Manslaughter (1922)


  • Adam's Rib (1923)


  • The Ten Commandments (1923)


  • Triumph (1924)


  • Feet of Clay (1924, Lost)


  • The Golden Bed (1925)


  • The Road to Yesterday (1925)


  • The Volga Boatman (1926)


  • The King of Kings (1927)


  • The Godless Girl (1929)



Sound films





  • Dynamite (1929)


  • Madam Satan (1930)


  • The Squaw Man (1931)


  • The Sign of the Cross (1932)


  • This Day and Age (1933)


  • Four Frightened People (1934)


  • Cleopatra (1934)


  • The Crusades (1935)


  • The Plainsman (1936)


  • The Buccaneer (1938)


  • Union Pacific (1939)


  • North West Mounted Police (1940)


  • Reap the Wild Wind (1942)


  • The Story of Dr. Wassell (1944)


  • Unconquered (1947)


  • Samson and Delilah (1949)


  • The Greatest Show on Earth (1952)


  • The Ten Commandments (1956)


  • The Buccaneer (1958, Producer)




Actor





  • The Squaw Man (1914) as Faro Dealer (uncredited)


  • Hollywood (1923) as Himself


  • Free and Easy (1930) as Himself


  • Estrellados (1930) as Himself (Guest Appearance)


  • Madam Satan (1930) as Radio Newscaster (voice, uncredited)


  • The Last Train from Madrid (1937) as Crowd Member (uncredited)


  • North West Mounted Police (1940) as Narrator (voice, uncredited)


  • Glamour Boy (1941) as Movie Director (uncredited)


  • Reap the Wild Wind (1942) as Prologue Speaker (voice, uncredited)


  • Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) as Himself


  • The Story of Dr. Wassell (1944) as Narrator (uncredited)


  • Variety Girl (1947) as Himself


  • Unconquered (1947) as Narrator (uncredited)


  • Jens Mansson in America (1947) as Himself


  • Samson and Delilah (1949) as Narrator (uncredited)


  • Sunset Boulevard (1950) as Himself


  • The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) as Narrator (voice, uncredited)


  • Son of Paleface (1952) as Photographer (uncredited)


  • The Ten Commandments (1956) as Narrator (uncredited)


  • The Buster Keaton Story (1957) as Himself


  • The Buccaneer (1958) as Himself - Prologue (uncredited) (final film role)




Awards

























































Year
Award
Category
Title of work
1950

Academy Award

Academy Honorary Award


1953
Academy Award

Best Picture

The Greatest Show on Earth
1953
Academy Award

Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award


1939

Palme d'Or



Union Pacific
1953

Directors Guild of America Award
Lifetime Achievement Award


1952

Golden Globe Award

Cecil B. DeMille Award


1953
Golden Globe Award

Best Director

The Greatest Show on Earth
1958

Laurel Awards
Top Producer/Director




See also




References



Notes





  1. ^ "De Mille". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.


  2. ^ "Cecil B. DeMille Obituary", Variety, January 28, 1959.


  3. ^ Presley, Cecilia de Mille, and Mark Alan Vieira, Cecil B. DeMille: The Art of the Hollywood Epic, Running Press, 2014, p. 12.


  4. ^ Hull, Betty Lynne, "Denver's Elitch Gardens: Spinning a Century of Dreams," Big Earth Publishing, 2003, p. 49.


  5. ^ Lowe, Walter (October 22, 1956). "DeMille At 75 Still Creating". Kentucky New Era. Retrieved April 29, 2014..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  6. ^ "Review: 'The Ten Commandments'". Variety. December 31, 1923. Retrieved April 29, 2014.


  7. ^ "He Himself Was "Colossal"". The Montreal Gazette. January 22, 1959. Retrieved April 29, 2014.


  8. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 10.


  9. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 198.


  10. ^ "'Samson' Champion at Boxoffice". The Pittsburgh Press. March 26, 1950. Retrieved April 29, 2014.


  11. ^ Watkins, Daniel. "'Reap the Wild Wind'...or Don't: Cecil B. DeMille, the Evolving Neo-Naturalist", MUBI, March 10, 2015


  12. ^ "All Time Box Office - Domestic Grosses: Adjusted for Ticket Price Inflation". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 29, 2014.


  13. ^ Beachum, Zach Laws,Chris (October 17, 2017). "Golden Globes: 75-year history of all Cecil B. DeMille Award recipients includes Meryl Streep, Denzel Washington, George Clooney".


  14. ^ DeMille, Cecil B. Autobiography of Cecil B. DeMille. New York: Prentice Hall, 1959.


  15. ^ abc Easton, Carol (1996). No Intermissions: The Life of Agnes de Mille. New York: Da Capo Press. p. 6-8
    ISBN 978-0-306-80975-0.



  16. ^ Weiss, Marshall (December 5, 2003). "How DeMille Created a Sanctuary Out of the Exodus". Forward.com. Retrieved February 21, 2014.


  17. ^ Kozlovic, Anton Karl (March 2013). "Cecil B. DeMille". Senses of Cinema. Retrieved February 21, 2014.


  18. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 24, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2017.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)


  19. ^ LaPlaca, Bryan (September 19, 2011). "Back in the Day - Sept. 18, 1991: De Mille's Pompton Lakes roots recalled". NorthJersey.com. Retrieved April 21, 2014.


  20. ^ "One Minute Testimonial: Cecil B. DeMille, "Founder Of Hollywood"". charactercincinnati.org.


  21. ^ Interview with Debra Paget - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKK8nX9jkMI


  22. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 401.


  23. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 402.


  24. ^ ab Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 47.


  25. ^ "Cecil B. DeMille plays". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved: December 8, 2011.


  26. ^ "News of Other Cities, Atlantic City". New York Dramatic Mirror, May 14, 1913.


  27. ^ Birchard, Robert S. (2004). Cecil B. DeMille's Hollywood. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. p. 2.
    ISBN 978-0-8131-2324-0.



  28. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille;;, p. 29.


  29. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 375.


  30. ^ Presley, "Cecil B. DeMille", p. 259.


  31. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 344.


  32. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 363.


  33. ^ Brownlow, K. (1976). The Parade's Gone by... Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 185.
    ISBN 978-0-520-03068-8.



  34. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 357.


  35. ^ Jones, Steve (April 1, 2011). "DVD extra: 'Ten Commandments' gets HD treatment". usatoday.com. Retrieved December 19, 2012.


  36. ^ "The Buccaneer (1958)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2017-10-31.


  37. ^ Eyman, Scott. Empire of Dreams: The Epic Life of Cecil B. DeMille. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2010. p. 494–496, 500.
    ISBN 0-7432-8955-2.



  38. ^ "Famous Masons". MWGLNY. January 2014. Archived from the original on November 10, 2013.


  39. ^ David M. Jordan, FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944 (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2011), pp. 231–232.


  40. ^ Radford, Bill. "A Digger, A Director and A Practical Joker". Colorado Springs Gazette, USAF Academy 50th Anniversary Edition, Spring 2004.


  41. ^ Weiner, Tim (2007). Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. New York: Doubleday. p. 36.
    ISBN 978-0-3855-1445-3



  42. ^ Presley, Cecil B. DeMille, p. 371.


  43. ^ "Cecil De Mille, 77, Pioneer of Movies, Dead in Hollywood". nytimes.com. January 22, 1959. Retrieved December 19, 2012.


  44. ^ Donnelley, Paul (2004). Fade to Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries (3rd ed.). Omnibus Press. p. 318.
    ISBN 1-844-49430-6.



  45. ^ Blake, Gene. "Hollywood Star Walk: Cecil B. DeMille". latimes.com. Retrieved December 19, 2012.


  46. ^ "Cecil B. DeMille Collection". Academy Film Archive.


  47. ^ "Apollo 11-Technical Air to Ground Voice Transcription". Nasa Lunar Surface Journal.




Sources


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  • Higham, Charles. Cecil B. DeMille: A Biography of the Most Successful Film Maker of them All. New York, Scribner's Sons, 1973

  • Orrison, Katherine. Written in Stone: Making Cecil B. DeMille's Epic, The Ten Commandments. New York: Vestal Press, 1990.
    ISBN 1-879511-24-X.

  • Louvish, Simon. Cecil B. DeMille and the Golden Calf. London, Faber & Faber, 2007 (reprinted as Cecil B. DeMille: A Life in Art by Thomas Dunne Books, 2008)

  • Presley, Cecilia de Mille, and Mark Alan Vieira. Cecil B. DeMille: The Art of the Hollywood Epic. Philadelphia: Running Press, 2014.
    ISBN 978-0-7624-5490-7.




External links







  • Official website


  • Cecil B. DeMille at the Internet Broadway Database Edit this at Wikidata


  • Cecil B. DeMille on IMDb


  • Cecil B. DeMille at the TCM Movie Database Edit this at Wikidata


  • Works by or about Cecil B. DeMille at Internet Archive


  • Works by or about Cecil B. DeMille in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

  • Cecil B. DeMille at Virtual History


  • Cecil B. DeMille's Early Films' Costs and Grosses by David Pierce - Silent Film Bookshelf


Criticism and commentary



  • Higashi, Sumiko. Cecil B. DeMille and American Culture: The Silent Era. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1994 1994. - Free Online - UC Press E-Books Collection


  • Bibliography of books and articles about Demille via UC Berkeley Media Resources Center

  • Newsweek, September 2010, How Cecil B. DeMille Created Modern Hollywood


Archival materials




  • The Mary Roberts Rinehart Papers - includes conversations with DeMille about her plays

  • Finding aid author: Garrett Schroath (2014). "Cecil B. DeMille papers". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved May 16, 2016.

  • Finding aid authors: J. Norm Gillespie and Geoff McLaughlin (2010). "Cecil B. DeMille Productions records". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved May 16, 2016.

  • Finding aid author: John N. Gillespie (2013). "Cecil B. DeMille correspondence". Prepared for the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Provo, UT. Retrieved May 16, 2016.











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