Ken Hughes

Ken Hughes

writer, director, producer

Ken Hughes was born on Jan 19, 1922 in UK. Ken Hughes's big-screen debut came with Heat Wave directed by Ken Hughes in 1954. Ken Hughes is known for The Ipcress File directed by Sidney J. Furie, Michael Caine stars as Harry Palmer and Nigel Green as Major Dalby. Ken Hughes has got 2 awards and 8 nominations so far. The most recent award Ken Hughes achieved is Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Ken Hughes plays is Night School which will be released on Sep 11, 1981.

Ken Hughes was an award-winning writer and director who flourished in the 1950s and 1960s, though he continued directing into the early 1980s. Born in Liverpool, England, on January 19, 1922, Hughes decided early in his life that he wanted to be a filmmaker. When he was 14 years old he won an amateur movie-making contest.In 1952 his first feature, the crime drama Wide Boy (1952), was released. By 1955 he was working with imported American character actor Paul Douglas in the quirky Joe Macbeth (1955), a retelling of William Shakespeare's tragedy recast as a modern film noir. Hughes directed the movie and wrote the screenplay. That film led to his directing more English pictures with imported Hollywood B-list stars, including Arlene Dahl and Victor Mature. In a reverse of the Atlantic trade, he exported a script to the US, which was picked up by "Alcoa Theater" and aired as Alcoa Theatre: Eddie (1958), starring Mickey Rooney and directed by Jack Smight. It brought Hughes an Emmy Award for his teleplay.His favorite of his many movies was Les procès d'Oscar Wilde (1960), starring Peter Finch as the doomed writer. He was nominated for three BAFTA Awards and Finch took home the BAFTA as Best Actor. It also won the Samuel Goldwyn Award for Best English-Language Foreign Film at the Golden Globes.During the 1960s Hughes worked on A-List pictures, including L'ange pervers (1964), an adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's book, but it did not make anyone forget the Bette Davis-Leslie Howard classic of 30 years earlier (L'Emprise (1934)). He also toiled as one of the five directors on the cinematic mishmash Casino Royale (1967), which was a box-office smash but a critical bomb.His greatest hit was the adaptation of another Ian Fleming work, his children's book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968). The movie was a huge hit, but Hughes was dissatisfied with it. His next picture, the historical epic Cromwell (1970) (1970), got good reviews, but did not burn up the turnstiles at theaters.His career slowed down in the 1970s, the low point of which was undoubtedly his directing 83-year-old Mae West, vamping eternally as the 30-something sexpot she imagined herself in her mind, in the Golden Turkey Sextette (1977), a critical and box-office dud. He ended his career directing the exploitation film Les yeux de la terreur (1981), a slasher pic starring a then-unknown Rachel Ward.After a period of declining health, Ken Hughes died on April 28, 2001, in Los Angeles. He was 79 years old.

  • Birthday

    Jan 19, 1922
  • Place of Birth

    Liverpool, England, UK

Known For

Awards

2 wins & 8 nominations

Avoriaz Fantastic Film Festival
1981
Night School (1981)
Winner - Terror Award
1981
Night School (1981)
Winner - Terror Award
Primetime Emmy Awards
1959
Best Writing of a Single Program of a Dramatic Series - Less Than One Hour
Winner - Primetime Emmy
Alcoa Theatre (1957)