Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Cinema. arts. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Cinema. arts. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Κυριακή 24 Νοεμβρίου 2024

Dimitris Papamichael

 

 

Dimitris Papamichael                                     ΔΗΜΗΤΡΗΣ  ΠΑΠΑΜΙΧΑΗΛ                 

Born  August 1934                                               Died  August 2004


 

Section 4, Number 467

 

The name Dimitris Papamichael may not fire up the neurons in foreign lovers of cinema but it can still short circuit the synapses of any Greek fan, - even 50 years after his last appearance in a Finos Film blockbuster.


 

He was astoundingly handsome as a young man and as famous for his 10 year marriage to Greece’s favourite cinema heroine Aliki Vougiouklaki as for any role he played.  In their films together he was the ‘teacher’, the ‘shepherd’ the ‘poor fisherman’, the ‘industrialist’, the ‘worker’, the ‘sailor’, the ‘soldier’ or whoever was required to be the foil and love interest of Aliki.  Theirs was a winning combination that may have lasted even longer if their marriage had not self destructed. 

The ‘Aliki years’ were a strange interlude for someone who would rather have been remembered for his serious roles in drama, whether ancient or  modern. That was the career path he had been on before he became Greece’s cinema heartthrob and one he would continue to pursue in later life.  In spite of that, much of his fame and popularity was based on the public’s affection for him as Aliki’s prince charming. Their relationship in films defined an entire era of Greek culture – for better or worse.


 

Who was he really? It is hard to know. People like Papamichael live in a cultural milieu where public and personal personas fuse, partly by their own design and partly because the public sees what it wants to see. He lived long enough to become an icon and for interviewers to treat him like a ‘grand old man’ and not probe too deeply.  Fair enough. That he was complicated there is no doubt, and he was truly talented.  It is impossible to say what trajectory his career might have taken had he not met Aliki Vougiouklaki.

 

His Life

Papamichael was the third child of Ioannis Papamichael and the first of his second wife Eleni.  His parents had a coffee shop in the heart of the Piraeus peninsula in an area called  Hatzikyriakeio (Χατζηκυριάκειο).(1)  His childhood was marred by the Second World War and especially by the 1941 bombing of the city. His parents sent him to Kranidi on the Peloponnese for the last two years of the war to keep him safe. He never forgot those war years and, like many children traumatized by the German occupation, vowed to become a pilot and bomb Germans when he grew up.   His family were not well off and, as a student, he helped out in the café. Their hopes for him were modest. The Greek textile firm Piraeus Patraiki was expanding after the Greek civil war and offering scholarships to students willing to study in England. Dimitris was one of these students, so his decision in 1952 to enrol in the Drama School of the National Theatre instead did not sit well with his parents. His determination to attend finally persuaded his father to relent. Apparently he and Aliki Vougiouklaki auditioned on the same day and were accepted but their relationship, other than the usual jostling of students to be noticed, did not develop at this point.

He graduated from the drama school with a grade of ‘excellent’ (‘aριστα’) and was almost immediately taken under the wing of actor Despo Diamantidou who was already a star in the National Theatre and, according to some articles,  one of his teachers at the Drama School. It was a relationship that would last a decade in spite of the difference in their ages. He was 21; she was 39.

 


 

A Word About Despo

Despo Diamantidou is perhaps best known today as the closest friend of Melina Mercouri and a feisty prostitute in Never on Sunday.  But she too had started out in serious theatre, playing in National Theatre productions as well as roles in the Art Theatre of Karolos Koun (Θέατρο Τέχνης «Κάρολος Κουν).  Her first role in the National Theatre had been in Medea in 1942. She returned to the National Theatre between the years 1954 and 1963. Dynamic, well read, and independent, she was in a perfect position to mentor the young actor and help his career choices.

The Beginning

His first significant role was in Chekov’s The Seagull. He played the ghost of Polydoros in Euripedes’ Hecuba (Εκάβη) in 1955, in the first year of the now famous Epidauros Festival. With Despo, he worked in the Art Theatre of Karolos Koun and independently in other productions involving Greek stars such as Givelli, Katina Paxinou and Alexis Minotis. He was on the fast track to theatrical success and living in Kolonaki in the same building as Despo. By all accounts, it was an affectionate and happy relationship.

1957 saw him awarded the prestigious Kotopouli award (2) (Βραβείο Κοτοπούλη) and, in the same year he played the god Apollo in the Oresteia of Aeschylus while Despo played the prophetess Pythia:

 


Papamichael on the left and Despo dressed as Pythia

The Middle

Then, Dimitris got a part in the 1959  Finos Film  Το ξύλο βγήκε από τον παράδεισο,(3) a title almost impossible to translate and a plot even harder to fit into the norms of 2024. He played Panos Floras, a serious minded teacher in a private girl’s school full of exceptionally nubile and spoiled young women more interested in humiliating him than learning. Aliki Vougiouklaki was the  leader of the spoiled girls. There is quite a lot of cheek slapping and melodrama but, of course they fall in love and all ends well. It was voted the best film between the years 1955-60 at the Thessaloniki Film Festival. You can form your own opinion of that assessment either with excerpts on youtube or by waiting to catch it on one of its many reruns on Greek television. (4)

Their charisma and chemistry on screen took Greece by storm. They would make more than a dozen films together, mostly comedies, and mostly involving songs that are still popular today. (5) They did not fall in love immediately.

 


Note who gets top billing, an issue that irritated Papamichael from the get go.

Despo’s influence no doubt got him a role in Jules Dassin’s  Never on Sunday (Ποτέ την Κυριακή) in 1960. (6)

 


And, in 1963 he appeared in the star studded film The Red Lanterns (Τα κόκκινα φανάρια) in which he plays Petros, the innocent love interest; Despo is the madam of a brothel. This film was billed as a serious film, but I will leave it to you to be the judge of that. It can be watched on youtube in its entirety.

 

Despo’s friends were already telling her to keep her partner away from Aliki. But that would not likely have been in her character or her power.

The fact that Papamichael proposed to Aliki on stage during a theatrical performance in 1964 before telling Despo does not do him much credit. That is how she learned their affair was over. (7)

She sent them flowers…

Aliki and Papamichael married in Delphi on January 18, 1965 and had a son, Ioannis, in 1969.

 


It was not only a cinematic partnership; they played together in theatre as well. One of their most popular productions was Shaw’s My Fair Lady.

It was a stormy marriage from the beginning, involving arguments and physical violence. Playing second fiddle to Aliki in life or on film could not have been easy and, although Papamichael had no problem holding his own in the films and, in fact, was often very, very good, he was not the star. She knew it and so did Filopoimin Finos, their producer, who would side with Aliki when an argument about precedence or favour broke out.

Everyone has a favourite Aliki-Papamichael film. Mine was 1968’s Τhe Lady and the Tramp (Η αρχόντισσα κι ο αλήτης) in which a wealthy  Aliki masquerades as a boy in order to escape an unsuitable marriage and Dimitris, a poor, honest lad (of course) helps her, unaware that she is a woman until quite a way through the film!

 


Aliki as a boy

It is a variation on a well worn theme and kitsch to boot, but they both did it well and it was good fun.

By 1968, it was not even necessary to name the stars in an advertisement. They were that famous:

 

 


 

In 1971, Papamichael branched out without Aliki, to star in Pappaflessas, a film about one of the great heroes of the Greek revolution.

 


Where he did get top billing

It was an expensive blockbuster by Greek standards and won acclaim at the 12th annual Thessaloniki Film Festival where many hailed it as the greatest moment in his career thus far.  In later interviews, he would agree.

July 20th 1974 saw the police called to their home where Papamichael was beating his wife. Only the fact that it was the same day Turkey invaded Cyprus and that all Greek men of military age, including him, had been called up to active duty, stopped the police from arresting him.  It was the beginning of an end that many had been predicting for years.  They divorced in 1975. He remarried in the same year to Nana Elikrini (Νανά Ειλικρινή).

The Rest

Papamichael returned to playing the serious roles and the ancient dramas of his early career. In 1978, He played an actor playing Jason in the Jules Dassin film A Dream of Passion (Κραυγή Γυναικών) about a production of Medea. In it, Papamichael is reunited with, not just Melina Mercouri, but also with his former lover Despo who plays Melina’s best friend. (I get the oddest feeling the actors were simply playing themselves.) You can see it in its entirety on youtube. Dassin considered it his best film.

 In 1981, Papamichael played Macbeth in a National Theatre production. 


 

 And yet…

 

Unfinished Business…

Aliki’s influence in his life never really faded, nor did her stellar career. She continued to wow audiences at her theatre night after night. He did choose to play opposite her again in the theatre productions of Educating Rita in 1984 and Filumena in 1986. The public still wanted to see them together but his reason for reuniting with Aliki are probably very complicated indeed. During a television talk show when both were present, she maintained perfect control of her image, but Papamichael’s body language exuded discomfort. Aliki complimented his then wife saying that she had had the ‘code’ for Dimitris but that she herself could never find the right ‘button’. She is smiling about something in her past; he is not smiling at all. (8)

In 1988, Papamichael appeared once more in Epidauros, this time in the Agamemnon of Aeschylus.

He also played in the Britannia Theatre of Mimi Denissis (Μιμή Ντενίση)(9)  in lighter fare. By the early 90s he had become so obese that he was scarcely recognizable when he came on stage; the crowd didn’t care. They gave him a standing ovation. I know because I was there.

 


Papamichael with Mimi Denissis

Aliki’s sudden death from cancer in 1996 was a blow. And, like thousands of others, he attended her funeral and mourned.


 

 His final years were full of health issues. He last appeared on stage in 2004, two years before his death from a heart attack. 

Afterword

In one of his last interviews he said the role he would have liked to play but never did was as King Lear. Did he feel some empathy for a man who had alienated himself from his family and was lost on a storm of his own making? I wonder…

In a deliberate snub to his son, he disinherited him in what can only be described as a very nastily worded clause in his will. Many have tried to figure out why. His own son believed that it was a kind of transference onto him after his mother died – that he then became the target of his father’s complicated feelings. Still, it is a rather sad coda to a long and successful career.

 

The Grave

 

He is all alone here. Most theatre and film stars, including Aliki, are in the Plaza or gathered all together in Section 14.

Section 4, Number 467

Footnotes

(1)  In homage to his city of birth, he became a city council member for Piraeus  between 1986 and 1990.

(2) This theatrical award was named in honour of Marika Kotopouli. Receiving it was a great honour. Melina Mercouri won it in 1953.

(3) Χylo apo Paradisos literally means  Beating comes from Paradise.  To ‘eat wood’(xylo)  in Greece is to be beaten. It suggests that getting slapped, as so many do in the film, was god given! Well! It was a striking title that got changed to Maidens Cheek in English.

(4) Finos film digitized its productions and rents them out – hence, no free look on youtube,

(5)  Both were good singers and excellent composers would be hired to write songs for their films. Aliki is more well known for this talent but if you google the songs of Dimitris Papamichael, a list of his hits comes up.

(6)  This was not a Finos Film production. Finos passed it up. He did not think Melina could ever be a star. Her mouth was too big.

(7) Despo seems to have been very forgiving and, in old age, she and Dimitris were friends, each praising the other publically.

 (8)  See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=T4xqjr76aaA&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2F35.210.164.199%2F&feature=emb_imp_woyt

(9)  Mimi Denissi was something of a rival of Aliki although much younger. She had her own theatre near Syntagma Square and tells the story of how insecure Dimitris was as an actor. She had a tough time talking him out of leaving a few days before an opening. His image always mattered to him.

Sources

Sources: https://www.pontosnews.gr/737595/ellada/dimitris-papamichail-synarpastiki-zoi-kai-kariera-gia-ton-aionio-magka/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=T4xqjr76aaA&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2F35.210.164.199%2F&feature=emb_imp_woyt

And innumerable sites, even in English. I do not list all of his appearances in films and theatre because this information is easily available on the internet and it would be a very long list.

 

Σάββατο 17 Αυγούστου 2024

Filopoimin Finos

 

             Filopoimin Finos                                         ΦΙΛΟΠΟΙΜΗΝ  ΦΙΝΟΣ                                                                                       

               Born 1908                                                   Died January 26, 1977

The Father of Greek Cinema

 



Section 14, Number 118A

When I first came across the grave of Filopoimin Finos I was a tad disappointed. It seemed too modest for a man whose production company had dominated the Greek film industry from 1943 to 1977. I had at least hoped for a semi-circle, a stone version of the famous Finos Film logo, something grand that would signify the end, not just of his personal story, but of a cinematic era.


 

Filopoimin Finos created the biggest and most prolific film production company in Greece, indeed, in all of southeast Europe. He produced 187 (1) films and personally oversaw each production from start to finish. He was an innovator, building the first sound recording device in Greece, and shooting the first colour film with stereophonic sound. It is an amazing story, a love story really, from its start to its surprising finish.

 


 

 

His Life:

Filopoimin was born Tithorea, in the foothills of Mount Parnassos but his family came to Athens before he reached school age.  His father, Ioannis, was a doctor by profession but also a businessman who also owned cinemas in the provinces and the Alcazar (2) in Athens near the Larissa train station.  In the earliest days, such venues presented live shows with cinematic reels available as an intermission and an extra incentive to bring in customers.

 


Open air cinemas are still a favourite summer pastime in Athens

As a child and young man Filopoimin spent a lot of time at the Alcazar watching movies, helping around, and even as a projectionist. He was especially fascinated by cinematic machinery and eventually became so adept at tinkering with their inner workings that he was nicknamed  “The screwdriver man”. (A colleague would later comment that from the years 1930 to 1960, if any sound, camera, or lighting mechanism did not meet his needs, he fixed it  or invented some variation of it until it did).

As so often happens, his father had a different future planned for his son. He sent him to the Ionian School, to high school in Pangrati, on to Law School in Athens and then on to post graduate studies in political science in Germany.

To no avail.

His father should never have let him loose in the Alcazar.  Filopoimin was hopelessly hooked on cinema.

The Thirties and Tzella

In the early 1930s Filopoimin’s aim was to add sound to movies and by 1935, he, with the help of friends, introduced a modern sound system that obviated the need for dubbing. It was a huge step forward for cinema.

In 1936, he met Tzella, a well known singer at the famous Mandra of Attik, (3). He contrived to meet her and they fell in love but the affair ended quickly, apparently because of his intense commitment to film.  But they reunited after her short and disastrous marriage to someone else.


 

 

They became lifelong partners and soul mates until his death. It is an unusual story for many reasons. Firstly, they did not marry until 1947. That in itself would have set them apart from the Greek norms of the 30s. Secondly, her devotion and belief in Filopoimin was so great that she decided to end her own career in 1939 in order to assist him.

In 1938 Filopoimin and colleagues founded the Greek Cinema Studio «Ελληνικά Κινηματογραφικά Στούντιο» (ΕΚΣ) and almost immediately they began filming The Song of Separation (Το Τραγούδι Του Χωρισμού) with Filopoimin directing. Tzella helped as did his parents and, it being the depression, a lot of communal pots with beans or lentils were cooked up for the entire crew.

Unfortunately, it was a flop, a fact that had Filopoimin wondering if he should quit altogether. He did not, but chose never to direct a movie again and to stay wholly on the production side of things.


 

Song of Separation can be seen on youtube and, failure or not, its plot is pure Finos: a poor fisherman with a great voice loves a local girl but is persuaded to go to Athens to find fame by a sophisticated Athenian woman, changes his mind, and returns to the island and his first love. Naturally, there are songs throughout.

The Forties: The War Years and the Birth of Finos Film

 


When the Greco-Italian war broke out in 1940, Finos enlisted in the geographical branch of the army and filmed the war effort on the Albanian front.

 


When the Germans invaded in 1941, he was back in Athens and released from the army. He did film the German occupation of Athens but the Germans confiscated his film and destroyed it. (4)  In spite of that and the horrors of the occupation, he somehow managed to found Finos Film. He rented a building on Stournara Street and began filming Voice of the Heart (Φωνη της Καρδιας).  

 


Success and then Tragedy

In spite of the German occupation (or maybe because of it) Voice of the Heart was an astounding success. It starred Aimilios Veakis and premiered at the Rex Theatre (5) near Omonia Square on March 29, 1943.   The plot was simple: an old man after many years in prison for killing his wife’s lover, returns in the hopes of being reunited with his daughter.

 Apparently the line ups to see the film stretched all the way past Syntagma Square.    

Months later Filopoimin and his father were arrested by the Gestapo and held in its notorious cells on Merlin Street in the centre of Athens.(6) The charge against his father was being an ‘active communist’ because he was charged with giving wheat from properties he owned to the resistance.  Tzella would later say: My father in law was a patriot - who should he feed – the Germans or the Greeks? If that made him a communist, then he was.  Tzella managed to bribe a guard and send encouraging letters. Filopoimin was released but his father was hung in July 1944 with other ‘traitors’ - just a few months before Athens was liberated. 

Filopoimin was in front of the Grande Bretagne hotel to film the liberation of Athens and to record the devastation the Germans left in their wake. No doubt with his father’s fate in mind, and his own brush with the Nazis, he weathered the turbulent civil war years by staying out of the fray. Who can blame him?

In 1947, he and Tzella married. Apparently his friend Alekos Sakellarios, thinking it was time, brought a priest to the studio to marry the couple. Filopoimin was willing, but told the priest to keep it short, because he had work to do.  (Τέλειωνε, παπά, γιατί έχουμε δουλειές).  He was, of course, a workaholic and, happily, Tzella had the knack to meld their domestic life with his professional one.

 


 

 

 

The Rest

In 1953 the offices of Finos films were founded in a neoclassical building at 53 Chiou Street in Metaxourgiou. It was both his office and his home. Every aspect of a film (displays, editing, mixing etc) passed through this building - from preproduction to the final copy.

 


53 Chiou Street

It was not exclusively used for his own productions. For example, his studio aided in the production of Kakoyiannis’ Electra, the 1962 classic starring Irene Pappas. It won many awards, including one for Finos for sound.

 


Irene Pappas with Tzella and Filopoimin

The way in which Finos chose to work is one reason why Hollywood never tempted him as it did so many other Greek entrepreneurs. He said: In Hollywood they would not let me dig around in the cameras with my screwdriver. There they make films with their head. I make them with my heart. (7)  His life style was simple.  He literally lived over his work. Tzella made sure he was looked after domestically and except for his love of fine cars, he poured all of his money into his next film.

Finos and Tzella never had children of their own but they did not lack family. Over the years, they employed over 12,000 actors and technicians and many would work again and again for Finos Film: actors such as Aliki Vougiouklaki, Dimitris Papamichael, Thanasis Vengos, Rena Vlackopoulou and  Kostas Voutsas , just to name a few.  Voutsas has the record. He appeared in 30 Finos productions. Finos was godfather to Aliki and Dimitris Papamichael’s  son and so on. Many actors and technicians, not to mention writers and musicians, became close friends.

 


He was not always correct in his choices. He did not believe Melina Mercouri had a future in cinema; her mouth was too big and he passed up the opportunity to co-produce Never on Sunday. She was the one of the few who got away!

By 1958 there was a growing need for new stages and sets and a new one began operating in Agios Anargyros, a suburb of Athens. It had two stages, a carpentry shop, dressing rooms, a ‘city’ set and so on. It was on these stages that many of his so-called ‘Golden Age’ films were made

Filopoimin continued to innovate. Κορίτσια για φίλημα  (Kiss the Girls)  which premiered in 1965 was the first Greek colour film in stereophonic sound. The company seemed poised to go from strength to strength.  

1970 saw a new and larger studio being completed in Spata outside of Athens. Finos wanted to create a Greek Cinecittà. He even sent his architects to Rome to get ideas. The new studio had two stages and all the necessary attendant spaces. The Spata venue is still one of the biggest in Greece.



 

Spata Studio on Finos Film Street (of course!) is now used mainly for television

 .

But trouble was coming with the advent of television, his struggle with cancer,  and his own inability to work with financial partners. His lifelong friend Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis offered Finos a government subsidy and his refusal amazed Aliki Vougiouklaki: He wanted not just veto power but also the risk,( "ήθελε να έχει όχι μόνο το βέτο αλλά και το ρίσκο").

His own assessment of his difficulties was as laconic as it was perceptive: as a producer I am a real success; as a businessman, no. (8)

He died in debt in 1977.


 

His funeral was attended by actors all across the spectrum. The line between serious theatre, art film, and popular film has always been a permeable one for actors in Greece.

 

Tzella struggled to keep his name and contribution to film alive. She succeeded. Finos Film has now digitized all of the films and is doing well with rentals.  

Tzella died in 2010.

 

Afterword

For the body of his work (drama, melodrama, comedy, farce, (sometimes in the same film!) Finos has drawn criticism over the years: his films are not serious, the plots are unreal and avoid serious themes. I admit to many of these feelings but enjoy a good many of them for precisely those reasons. (9)

Cinema has always been the popular medium of the people: everyday lives viewed from inexpensive seats in cinematic Alcazars all over Greece - little fortresses from which some of the harsh realities of life can be ignored or at least filtered through rose coloured glasses for an hour or so - and endings can be satisfying.

In reality, Finos’ output was only about 20% of the films made in that era. And yet his name defines it because he had his finger on the pulse of ordinary people and his characters touched a chord in Greek hearts. That was his genius; he produced what people wanted to see more successfully and more consistently than anyone else.

His films can be called classics today because people still want to see them.

 

The Greek Ministry of Culture and mayor of Athens recognized his contribution in 2023 with a marble stele topped by his bust in a park hard by Stathmos Larissa not far from where his beloved Alcazar once stood.


 

Yes, People still leave roses…

 

The Grave

Section 14, Number 118A


 

ΤΕΛΟΣ

Footnotes

 (1)  For a complete list of his films and the actors in them see the Finos Film website: https://finosfilm.com/  Each film is shown alphabetically with its    poster. The text is in Greek.

(2)  The name ‘Alcazar’ comes from the Arabic “al-qaṣr” meaning a palace or a castle. It was a popular name for early cinemas worldwide and, in fact, very apt. These venues were palaces for the people.

(3) Attik was a cosmopolitan composer and entrepreneur who, after many years abroad, started his club in Athens.

(4 For what is left, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4OWmBiiLl0  from ERT Archives.

 

(5) The Rex on Panapistimiou Street was built between 1935and 1937 and was inspired by American Art Deco. The cinema was on the ground floor. The building is still there and quite a landmark.

 

 

(6) During this terrible period with the Nazis in charge and successive quisling governments attempting to appease them, many people found themselves in Merlin Street cells and many never knew why or who had betrayed them.  Sometimes they were kept, and sometimes they were freed, perhaps just because of chaos, a whim, or sometimes a judicious bribe. It was a terrible period in Greek history and left its scars on all who lived through it.

 

(7): «Στο Χόλιγουντ δεν θα με άφηναν να σκαλίζω τις κάμερες με το κατσαβίδι μου, εκεί κάνουν σινεμά με το μυαλό, εδώ κάνουμε με την καρδιά».

 

(8) «ως παραγωγός, πράγματι είμαι πετυχημένος. Ως επιχειρηματίας, όχι» and "ήθελε να έχει όχι μόνο το βέτο αλλά και το ρίσκο" from (https://www.athensvoice.gr/politismos/kinimatografos/719015/finos-films-giati-oi-tainies-toy-finoy-skorpoyn-akoma-gelio/ )

(9)  I have come to admire almost all of the Aliki - Papamichael films, and the comedies but have a little more difficulty with his musicals.  Just last night, Skai showed Κορίτσια για φίλημα (Kiss the Girls) and I found it cringe-worthy except… the sets were sometimes real blockbusters and the costumes just over the top and pretty fabulous. Finos Film today guards his legacy so only bits can be found on youtube. They are, however,  reproduced often Greek television.

 

 

 

Sources

https://finosfilm.com/tainies/  For a list of every movie he produced

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4OWmBiiLl0  a documentary on F inos