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A horrible man and the Hollywood casting couch

Before Harvey Weinstein, there was Jack Warner. Jenni Frazer reviews a book about an unpleasant movie mogul and his brothers

October 17, 2017 13:07
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2 min read

David Thomson is one of the world’s leading writers on cinema, the author of more than 20 books, including The Biographical Dictionary of Film. And there is much fine writing in this book, part of Yale’s Jewish Lives series. But I was little wiser at the end, having read a reiteration of much of what I already knew.

Jack Warner, the driving force and the youngest of the Bros — there were six in all, and a further five or six sisters — is universally described as a horrible man. Constitutionally unfaithful and in charge of the studio’s casting couch, he still managed to marry only twice. Yet he remains a curiously flat presence in the book, with Thomson reserving both his firepower and his enthusiasm for the actors and the films that made the Warner brothers famous.

Thomson is at pains to tell us how alienated Jack Warner was from his Jewish identity. He cites the film, Gentleman’s Agreement, starring Gregory Peck, made at another studio in 1947 about a journalist who pretends to be Jewish in order to report on antisemitism. The film won 1947’s Best Picture Oscar but, before that, Thomson tells us, “someone organised a gathering of Hollywood elders to impress upon Darryl Zanuck, the film’s producer, that it was ill-advised and unduly provocative to stir up this issue. The instigator of that meeting was Jack Warner, who preferred to make Jewishness go away as a brand image”.

At this point, I expected to find out more about Jack and the other Warners but Thomson veers off into a long disquisition about Zanuck — who was not Jewish. And the next chapter is devoted to Casablanca and whether or not it could be described as a Jewish film.