Jo Mielziner(1901-1976)
- Production Designer
- Art Department
What Cedric Gibbons was to MGM, Jo
Mielziner was to Broadway. Simply put, American theatrical design can
be divided distinctly into pre and post Mielziner periods. Born in
Paris, France in 1901, he wasn't French--- his parents were American
ex-patriate artists. Mielziner was schooled in England, the U.S. and
eventually, across the European continent. His older brother, Kenneth
MacKenna, was an actor who recruited him as a stage manager in a summer
stock production in Michigan and he found his calling. By the late
1920's he was recognized as a prodigious artistic genius, soon becoming
the most influential theatrical designer of his era, designing the
scenery and the lighting for some 200 Broadway productions (his output
was astounding, his actual credits may extend to 300 in total if
off-Broadway credits are counted), many of which became American
classics (see "Other Works"). His set designs for 1947's A Streetcar
Named Desire and Death of a Salesman (1949; featuring a
then-revolutionary transparent skeletal setting) were utterly
revolutionary, rendering later designers' work in revivals imitative by
comparison. He had no qualms about working in any style; he moved
freely from dramas to elaborate musicals, but proved most effective in
productions allowing for abstract designs over abject realism. As a
result of his scope, he would add costumes and lighting designer to his
list of credits. Mielziner put his talents to work in WWII as a
camouflage specialist with the Army Air Corps before being transferred
to the Office of Strategic Services (or OSS, precursor to the CIA),
under General "Wild Bill" Donovan. His circle of friends included
artist, Edward Hopper, who was widely thought to have constructed his
painting 'Early Sunday Morning' after Mielziner's set designs for
Elmer Rice's Street Scene. His work extended
into the field interior design in collaboration with architect Eero
Saarinen for their work on the Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont
Theater. He also accepted design consultancies with the Denver Center
Theater and North Carolina's Wake Forest University. He was chosen to
design the special events at the San Francisco convention of the United
Nations in 1945. While he certainly could have easily moved into film
work, his credits in the medium are confined to a small number of
1950's theatrical adaptations. Interestingly, Mielziner can be spied
working in his studio in an exterior shot at his residence in The
Dakota in Rosemary's Baby (1968).
While his film resume is limited, Mielziner's influence was undoubtedly
responsible for many of his phenomenal successes being sold for film
adaptations. He won five Tony Awards and enjoyed a 50+ year career on
Broadway. He was unhappily married three times, two of which ended in
divorce. He had converted to Catholicism under the guidance of none
other than Bishop Fulton J. Sheen (later designing his personal chapel)
in the 1930's and later found happiness in a long term relationship
with his private secretary--- in a sad irony, his conversion prevented
another divorce. Mielziner never retired; he died of a heart attack in
a taxi en route to a meeting with
David Merrick about designs
concepts for The Baker's Wife, just shy of his 75th birthday.
Fittingly, the designs were completed by Ming Cho Lee, a colleague.