Andrew Marton

Andrew Marton

director, second unit director or assistant director, editor

Andrew Marton was born on Jan 26, 1904 in Austria-Hungary. Andrew Marton's big-screen debut came with The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg directed by Ernst Lubitsch in 1927. Andrew Marton is known for The Message directed by Moustapha Akkad, Anthony Quinn stars as Hamza and Irene Papas as Hind. Andrew Marton has got 2 awards and 1 nominations so far. The most recent award Andrew Marton achieved is Golden Globes, USA. The upcoming new movie Andrew Marton plays is The Message which will be released on Jan 31, 1977.

Budapest-born Endre Marton began in the film industry as an editor and assistant director with Vita and Sascha Films in Vienna. Following a brief sojourn in Hollywood with Ernst Lubitsch in 1923, he returned to Germany, having being signed as chief editor by the Tobis company. He made his directorial debut with an independently produced British mystery, La maison des alarmes (1928). As a Jew, he was one of many talented film makers forced to flee Germany after the Nazis rose to power.Marton had spent much of his youth in the Tyrolean Alps, nurturing an adventurous spirit and developing a fondness for spectacular mountain scenery and skiing. This was certainly a contributing factor to his being hired by MGM, initially to direct the ski sequences for Greta Garbo's La femme aux deux visages (1941). Later, his work was increasingly typified by outdoor adventure subjects, like Au pays de la peur (1952), L'Émeraude tragique (1954) and Tempête sur le Tibet (1952) (a remake of his earlier effort Le démon de l'Himalaya (1935), a Swiss production shot on location in Tibet). Taking risks was always inherent in Marton's preoccupation with achieving suspense and an authentic feel for location. For instance, during the filming for 'The Wild North' in Sun Valley, Idaho, he and actor Stewart Granger fell into an icy crevice and were trapped there for more than two hours. One of his more prestigious assignments came about by chance, when he was tasked with replacing Compton Bennett as director of Les mines du roi Salomon (1950), after the latter had been taken ill.His chief claim to fame, however, lay in some excellent work as second-unit director, notably in charge of the chariot race for William Wyler's Ben-Hur (1959), as well as of the Normandy invasion sequences for the World War II epic Le jour le plus long (1962). After his contract with MGM expired in 1954, Marton founded his own production company in conjunction with fellow Hungarian émigrés Ivan Tors and Laslo Benedek. He later concentrated on TV adventure series, helming the pilots, respectively for Daktari (1966) and Cowboy in Africa (1967).

  • Birthday

    Jan 26, 1904
  • Place of Birth

    Budapest, Austria-Hungary

Known For

Awards

2 wins & 1 nominations

Golden Globes, USA
1960
Ben-Hur (1959)
Winner - Special Award
National Board of Review, USA
1959
Ben-Hur (1959)
Winner - Special Citation

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies