Background
Lupino, Ida was born on February 4, 1918 in London. The daughter of comedian Stanley Lupino and Constance (O'Shea).
Lupino, Ida was born on February 4, 1918 in London. The daughter of comedian Stanley Lupino and Constance (O'Shea).
She added to her family’s vaudeville heritage a formal training at RADA.
She was on the fringe of the British film industry when the visiting Allan Dwan gave her a small part in Her First Affaire (33). She made several more films and Paramount signed her up (she was still only fifteen) with the idea of her playing Alice in Wonderland. That fell through, but she appeared in Come On, Marines! (34. Henrv Hathawav); Paris in Spring (35, Lewis Milestone); Smart Girl (35, Aubrey Scottio); Peter Ibbetson (35, Hathaway); and Anything Goes (36, Milestone). Her career faltered, picked up with The Gay Desperado (36, Rouben Mamoulian), but lapsed again with Sea Devils (37, Ben Stoloff) and Artists and Models (37, Walsh). She was even out of work for some time, but returned with The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt (39, Peter Godfrey), The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (39, Alfred Werker), and The Light that Failed (39, William Wellman).
Warners then signed her as the mollish interest for gangster films and she flourished in They Drive by Night and High Sierra (41, Walsh) as well as the Jack London-based The Sea Wolf (41, Michael Curtiz). A variety of good, tough parts followed in which she seemed more worldly-wise than her age might have suggested: Out of the Fog (41, Anatole Litvak); Ladies in Retirement (41, Charles Vidor); Moontide (42, Archie Mayo); The Hard Way; Forever and a Day (43, Frank Lloyd et al.); In Our Time (44, Sherman); Devotion (46, Curtis Bernhardt), playing Emily Bronte; The Man I Love (46, Walsh), with its great opening, and then the sentimental camp of Deep Valley (47, Negulesco); Escape Me Never (47, Peter Godfrey); and Road House, in which she credibly stills the assembly with a husky performance of several songs. Her delivery was randy and bossy', and in Hemingway’s Across the River and Into the Trees his Italian heroine had copied Lupino’s way of talking.
Finished with Warners and turned to writing, directing, and producing. She produced Not Wanted (49, Elmer Clifton), and directed Never Fear and Outrage, two minor but interesting films. She played the blind woman in Nicholas Ray’s On Dangerous Ground (51) and reportedly did some directing while Ray was ill. As an actress, she worked in Woman in Hiding (49, Michael Gordon); Beware, My Lovely (52, Harry Horner); Private Hell 36 (54, Don Siegel); The Big Knife (55, Robert Aldrich); Women s Prison (55, Lewis Seiler); While the City Sleeps (56, Fritz Lang); and Strange Intruder (56, Irving Rapper).
She proved herself a competent director of second features, and an early discoverer of feminist themes. Thus The Bigamist is not just melodrama, but a critique of woman’s vulnerability. Married again, this time to actor Howard Duff, she turned to TV but directed again, in 1966, The Trouble with Angels—which gathered together Rosalind Russell, Hayley Mills, and Gypsy Rose Lee in a convent, showing that idiosyncrasy was not dead yet. She directed for TV, and was outstanding as a man’s woman fed up with the man in Junior Bonner (72, Sam Peckinpah). She also appeared in The Devil’s Bain (75, Robert Fuest); The Food of the Gods (76, Bert I. Gordon); and My Boys Are Good Boys (78, Bethel Buckalew).
Ida Lupino had not worked in fifteen years. Nor did she seem inclined to come out for tributes. Surely she had been inxited. For she was a woman director of real personality; her pictures are as tough and quick as those of Samuel Fuller. She was a pioneer for women, especially because she carved out her own territory instead of just waiting to be asked. But her own movies should not obscure Ida Lupino the actress. She knew how to play routine roles and play them well. But there are a few occasions when she had an out-of-the- ordinary part, and then she was riveting.
For instance, when her character turns nasty and crazy in They Drive By Night (40, Raoul Walsh), there is nothing to do hut sit back and watch an astonishing emotional explosion. In The Hard Way (42, Vincent Sherman), as the strong sister driving Joan Leslie into show business, she senses a movie unknown to the other players. She is a demon, so forceful we have to realize how often in her career she kept the brakes on. In the first few scenes of Road House (48, Jean Negulesco), we could be meeting a woman from Jim Thompson—burned, dangerous, impatient, and pitiless. But then she sees tha she has only a dud script and plain guys to work with. She decities to behave and the film goes downhill. “If only,” you say so often with Ida Lupino. If onlv she and Gloria Grahame could have played wicked sisters— they looked alike, and they were both too odd for placid movies.
After the divorce with her first husband, actor Louis Hayward, she married the Columbia executive Collier Young.