Samuel Wanamaker, CBE, (born Samuel Wattenmacker; June 14, 1919 – December 18, 1993) was an American actor and director, whose career on stage and in film and television spanned five decades. He began his career on Broadway, but spent most of his professional life in the United Kingdom, where he emigrated after becoming fearful of being blacklisted in Hollywood due to his communist views in the 1950's.

Sam Wanamaker
Wanamaker in 1961
Born
Samuel Wattenmacker

(1919-06-14)June 14, 1919
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
DiedDecember 18, 1993(1993-12-18) (aged 74)
London, England
EducationGoodman School of Drama
Art Institute of Chicago
Drake University
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
Years active1934–1993
Spouse
Charlotte Holland
(m. 1940)
Children3, including Zoë
RelativesMarc Wanamaker (nephew)

Wanamaker became extensively involved in British theater, while continuing film and television work, eventually returning to some Hollywood productions while remaining based in the UK. There, he is also credited as the person most responsible for saving The Rose theatre, which led to the modern recreation of Shakespeare's Globe theatre in London, where he is commemorated in the name of the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, the site's second theatre. He was awarded an honorary knighthood for his work.

Wanamaker was the father of actress Zoë Wanamaker, and the uncle of film historian Marc Wanamaker.

Early life

edit

Wanamaker was born in Chicago, the son of tailor Maurice Wattenmacker (Manus Watmakher)[1] and Molly (née Bobele). His parents were both Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire.[2] His father Maurice was from Mykolaiv, in present-day Ukraine.[3] He was the younger of two brothers, the elder being William, a cardiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

He trained at the Goodman School of Drama, then at the Art Institute of Chicago (now at DePaul University) and at Drake University. He began working with summer stock theatre companies in Chicago and northern Wisconsin, where he helped build the stage of the Peninsula Players Theatre in 1937.

Career

edit

Wanamaker began his acting career in traveling shows and later worked on Broadway. In 1942, he starred with Ingrid Bergman in Joan of Lorraine and directed Two Gentlemen from Athens the following year.[4]

In 1943, Wanamaker was part of the cast of the play Counterattack at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C. During the play, he became enamored of the ideals of communism. He attended Drake University before serving in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1946, during World War II. In 1947, he returned to civilian life as an actor and director. In 1948, he starred in and directed the original Broadway production of Goodbye, My Fancy.[5]

 
As Stanley Goldblum in The Billion Dollar Bubble (1976)

In 1951, Wanamaker made a speech welcoming the return of two of the Hollywood Ten. In 1952, at the height of the McCarthy "Red Scare" period, Wanamaker, who was then acting in the UK, learned that despite his distinguished service in the Army during World War II, his years as a communist could lead to his being blacklisted in Hollywood.[a] He consequently decided to remain in England, where he reestablished his career as a stage and film actor, along with becoming a director and producer.[7] He explained:

In 1950 I went to England to do a play, and around that time the whole McCarthy witch-hunting era had taken hold in Hollywood—so I just stayed in Britain. I knew that because I had worked with actors who had problems in Hollywood, I might have difficulties.[8]

In 1952, he made his debut as both actor and director in London in Clifford Odets' Winter Journey. The play, which co-starred Michael Redgrave, was considered "sensational" by critics.[7] He later appeared in other plays, including The Big Knife, The Shrike, The Rainmaker, and A Hatful of Rain.[7] In 1956, he directed the British premiere of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's musical play The Threepenny Opera (revived in New York in 1954 in a translation by Marc Blitzstein.)[9]

In 1957, he was appointed director of the neglected New Shakespeare Theatre in Liverpool. He brought a number of notable productions to the theatre, such as A View from the Bridge, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, The Rose Tattoo and Bus Stop. It was also transformed into a lively arts centre as a result of including other cultural attractions, such as films, lectures, jazz concerts and art exhibits.[7]

As a result of all his various activities, Wanamaker became London's "favourite American actor and director", noted The Guardian.[7] In 1959, he joined the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre company at Stratford-upon-Avon, playing Iago to Paul Robeson's Othello in Tony Richardson's production that year.[10] In the 1960s and 1970s, he produced or directed several works at venues including the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and directed the Shakespeare Birthday Celebrations in 1974.[citation needed]

As a director and actor, he worked in films and television, with a role in The Spiral Staircase (1974). Wanamaker eventually returned to Hollywood films including Private Benjamin (1980), Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987), and Baby Boom (1987). He was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for his performance in the 1978 ABC television miniseries Holocaust.

In 1968, he produced and directed the pilot episode of the Western TV series Lancer; a fictionalized version of this is depicted in the 2019 film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, and 2021 novelization with Wanamaker portrayed by Nicholas Hammond in the film.

He also directed stage productions, including the world premiere production of Michael Tippett's opera The Ice Break.[11] In 1980, he directed Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida starring Luciano Pavarotti at San Francisco Opera (now broadcast version released as DVD). He was also featured as the widowed and ruthless department store owner Simon Berrenger on the short-lived television drama Berrenger's in 1985.

Restoring the Globe theatre

edit

He was a hard-headed romantic—and a genuinely courteous man—driven by a passion for Shakespeare. The Globe will be his lasting monument.

The Guardian, London[7]

In 1970 Wanamaker's career took a dramatic turn after he was annoyed that while a number of replicas of the Globe theatre existed in the United States, the site of the original in London was marked by only a plaque on a nearby brewery. He then made it his goal to restore an exact replica of the Globe to feature plays and a museum.[7]

It became Wanamaker's "great obsession" to restore Shakespeare's Globe at its original location. He secured financial support from philanthropists and fellow lovers of Shakespeare, such as Samuel H. Scripps, to see that it would be created.[7] Wanamaker then founded the Shakespeare Globe Trust, which raised well over ten million dollars.[7]

 
London's restored Globe theatre in 2014

Though, as in the late 16th and 17th centuries, the 20th century Royal family were more or less supportive, British officialdom was far less so, since they wanted to develop the site for new high-rise housing and commercial use.[7] English Heritage, which controlled the site, refused to give Wanamaker the precise dimensions of the original Globe.[12][13]

According to Karl Meyer of The New York Times:

The Shakespeare project helped Mr. Wanamaker keep his sanity and dignity intact. On his first visit to London in 1949, he had sought traces of the original theatre and was astonished to find only a blackened plaque on an unused brewery. He found this neglect inexplicable, and in 1970 launched the Shakespeare Globe Trust, later obtaining the building site and necessary permissions despite a hostile local council. He siphoned his earnings as actor and director into the project, undismayed by the scepticism of his British colleagues.[12]

On the south bank of the River Thames in London, near where the modern recreation of Shakespeare's Globe stands today, is a plaque that reads: "In Thanksgiving for Sam Wanamaker, Actor, Director, Producer, 1919–1993, whose vision rebuilt Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on Bankside in this parish".[12] There is a blue plaque on the river-side wall of the theatre,[14] and the site's Jacobean indoor theatre, opened in January 2014, is named the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse after him.[15]

 
Plaque honoring Wanamaker's restoration

For his work in reconstructing the Globe theatre, Wanamaker, in July 1993, was made an honorary Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE).[4] He was also honoured with the Benjamin Franklin Medal by the Royal Society of Arts in recognition of his contribution to theatre.

When multi-Tony Award-winning British actor Mark Rylance accepted his third Tony on stage in New York City during the televised ceremonies on June 8, 2014, he did so with a note of thanks to Wanamaker.

Personal life

edit

In 1940, Wanamaker married Canadian actress Charlotte Holland.

In the 1970s, he reportedly entered into a long-lasting personal relationship with the American actress Jan Sterling. In the 2014 memoir I Said Yes to Everything, Lee Grant claimed that during production of the film Voyage of the Damned (1976), Wanamaker engaged in an affair with British actress Lynne Frederick, who was 21 at the time.[16]

Actress Zoë Wanamaker is his daughter, and film historian Marc Wanamaker is his nephew.[17]

Death

edit

Wanamaker died of lung cancer in London on December 18, 1993, aged 74,[18][19] before the grand opening of the Globe by Queen Elizabeth II on June 12, 1997.[20] He was survived by three daughters, Abby, Zoë, and Jessica.

Filmography

edit

Actor

edit

Television

edit
  • Holocaust (1978 TV Mini-Series) as Moses Weiss
  • Cameo Theatre in "Manhattan Footstep" (episode # 1.4) June 7, 1950
  • Danger Man – as Patrick Laurence in "The Lonely Chair" (episode # 1.8) October 30, 1960
  • The Defenders – as Dr. Ralph Ames in "The Hundred Lives of Harry Simms" (episode # 1.7) October 28, 1961
  • The Defenders – as James Henry David in "A Book for Burning" (episode # 2.27) March 30, 1963
  • Man of the World – as Nicko in "The Bandit" (episode # 2.1) May 11, 1963
  • Espionage – as Sprague in "Festival of Pawns" (episode # 1.10) December 11, 1963
  • The Outer Limits – as Dr. Simon Holm in "A Feasibility Study" (episode # 1.29) April 13, 1964
  • The Defenders – as Edward Banter in "Hollow Triumph" (episode # 3.35) June 20, 1964
  • The Defenders – as United States Attorney Brooker in "A Taste of Ashes" (episode # 4.8) November 12, 1964
  • The Wild Wild West – as Dr. Arcularis in "The Night of the Howling Light" (episode # 1.14) December 17, 1965
  • Gunsmoke – as Asa Longworth in "Parson Comes to Town" (episode # 11.31) April 30, 1966
  • Run for Your Life – as Major Joe Rankin in two episodes
  • The Baron – as Sefton Folkard in "You Can't Win Them All" (episode # 1.19) February 1, 1967
  • Judd for the Defense – as Shelly Gould in "The Gates of Cerberus" (episode # 2.8) November 15, 1968
  • Thirty-Minute Theatre in "A Wen" (episode # 1.233) December 27, 1971
  • Rafferty – as Hollander in "Rafferty" (Pilot) (episode # 1.1) September 5, 1977
  • Return of the Saint – as Domenico in "Dragonseed" (episode # 1.22) February 25, 1979

Director

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ The BBC documentary Who Do You Think You Are? broadcast on February 24, 2009, revealed that the FBI had kept a substantial investigation file for him, including incriminating witness statements, and that the House Un-American Activities Committee had intended to subpoena him as a witness. His activities were also reportedly monitored by MI5.[6]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Who do you think you are – Zoë Wanamaker" BBC/2008.
  2. ^ "Obituaries: Sam Wanamaker". The Daily Telegraph. December 20, 1993. p. 21. Retrieved May 26, 2023 – via Newspapers.com. The son of Russian Jews who had fled the 1905 pogrom and found work in the Chicago rag trade, he was born Sam Watenmaker on June 14 1919...
  3. ^ "'Madam Hooch' rides her broomstick in from Odessa: Actress Zoë Wanamaker offers a glimpse into her family history" Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b "Actor Sam Wanamaker, 74; rebuilt Globe Theater", Chicago Tribune, December 19, 1993
  5. ^ Hobe (November 24, 1948). "Legitimate: Play on Broadway – Gooodbye My Fancy". Variety. 172 (12): 50.
  6. ^ Michael Buchanan (August 31, 2009). "Sam Wanamaker 'monitored by MI5'". BBC News.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Hard-headed Romantic", The Guardian, London, December 20, 1993
  8. ^ "The McCarthy Era Kept Him Away", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 23, 1985
  9. ^ "Threepenny Opera". Archived from the original on April 30, 2006.
  10. ^ Martin Duberman, Paul Robeson, The New Press, New York, 1989, p. 476.
  11. ^ Inlay notes to recording on Virgin Classics VC 7 91448-2.
  12. ^ a b c Edward Chaney, "Sam Wanamaker's Global Legacy", Salisbury Review, June 1995, pp. 38–40.
  13. ^ "Sam Wanamaker's Great Obsession", by Karl E. Meyer, The New York Times, December 29, 1996.
  14. ^ Louise Jury (February 24, 2012). "Globe theatre appeal … stage two". Evening Standard. Archived from the original on February 26, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  15. ^ Moore, Rowan (January 12, 2014). "Sam Wanamaker Playhouse – review". The Observer. Retrieved January 21, 2014.
  16. ^ Grant, Lee (2014). I said yes to everything : a memoir (1st ed.). Plume. p. 302. ISBN 9780147516282.
  17. ^ "Marc Wanamaker". IMDB.com. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved June 2, 2019.
  18. ^ "SAM WANAMAKER, ACTOR AND DIRECTOR, DIES AT 74". Washington Post. January 5, 2024. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved June 10, 2024.
  19. ^ Obituary for Sam Wanamaker, The New York Times, December 19, 1993.
  20. ^ "Shakespeare's Globe :: Sam Wanamaker". Archived from the original on August 7, 2008. Retrieved September 12, 2007.
edit
  NODES
eth 1
News 2
orte 2
see 3
Story 1