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Billy Wilder.

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Billy Wilder.
Billy Wilder (1906-2002), American motion-picture director, writer, and producer, whose best films--usually comedies--employ his distinctive dialogue to elucidate a
darkly satirical view of human nature. Born Samuel Wilder in Vienna, Austria, he later moved to Berlin, Germany, where he worked first as a journalist and then as a
screenwriter. Wilder left Germany after Adolf Hitler's rise to power in 1933, and in 1934 he immigrated to the United States, later becoming a U.S. citizen. Beginning in
1937, Wilder found his initial niche in Hollywood, California, as a screenwriter. From 1938 he teamed with American screenwriter Charles Brackett, with whom he was to
carry on a long and successful collaboration until 1950. Together they wrote such memorably sophisticated screenplays as those for Midnight (1939), Ninotchka (1939),
Arise, My Love (1940), Hold Back the Dawn (1941), and Ball of Fire (1941). Although the screenplays were well received, Wilder was increasingly dissatisfied with the
way they were directed, so, following in the footsteps of American director Preston Sturges (who had also begun as a writer), he succeeded in persuading the studio to
let him direct his own scripts.
Wilder's American directorial debut, The Major and the Minor (1942), was a success, leading to a series of impressive films made by Wilder and Brackett in the 1940s:
Five Graves to Cairo (1943), Double Indemnity (1944), The Lost Weekend (1945), A Foreign Affair (1948), and Sunset Boulevard (1950). The Lost Weekend won
Academy Awards for best picture, best director, and best screenplay, and Sunset Boulevard won an Academy Award for best screenplay (which Wilder and Brackett
shared with D. M. Marshman, Jr., their collaborator on the Sunset Boulevard script). Sunset Boulevard is often acclaimed as Wilder's greatest film, and it represented
the culmination of his work with Brackett.
For a few years, Wilder wrote and directed his own screenplays (many of them adaptations of theatrical material), including The Big Carnival (1951), Stalag 17 (1953),
Sabrina (1954), The Seven Year Itch (1955), The Spirit of St. Louis (1957), and Witness for the Prosecution (1957; based on a courtroom drama by English writer
Agatha Christie). For all of these films--and those that followed--he was his own producer. He then collaborated with screenwriter I. A. L. Diamond. After an homage to
Wilder's idol, German-born director Ernst Lubitsch, with Love in the Afternoon (1957), the two created a series of brilliant comedies that continued to display Wilder's
cynical, disenchanted view of both human nature and modern life in general: Some Like It Hot (1959), The Apartment (1960), One, Two, Three (1961), Irma La Douce
(1963), and The Fortune Cookie (1966). By the 1970s Wilder began to experience difficulties with studio interference and with unsympathetic audiences. The Private
Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) was poorly received, as were his remake The Front Page (1974), Fedora (1978), and Buddy Buddy (1981). In the 1980s, Wilder retired
to tend his impressive art collection, but his reputation as the last great survivor of Hollywood's golden age remained. He was honored with the American Film Institute's
Life Achievement Award in 1986 and with the Irving Thalberg Award of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1987. In 1993 Wilder was awarded the
National Medal of Arts for his lifetime body of work.

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