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The Honourable Anthony Asquith (November 9, 1902 – February 20, 1968) was a respected English film director.
Born in London, he was the son of Herbert Henry Asquith, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom during World War I, and Margot Asquith. Within his family he was known as 'Puffin'.
His first successful film was Pygmalion (1938) based on the George Bernard Shaw play. It featured Leslie Howard and Wendy Hiller. His later films included The Winslow Boy (1948), The Browning Version (1951), and The Importance of Being Earnest (1952). The last two starred Michael Redgrave. All three were remade in subsequent years.
Asquith, a charming, gentle man and a closeted homosexual who never married, died from lymphoma at the age of 65.
At the height of the Profumo scandal, Asquith is widely believed to have been the 'man in the mask' at an orgy attended by Stephen Ward, Christine Keeler, Mandy Rice-Davies and a host of top establishment figures. This person's theatrical display of masochism was regarded as symptomatic of the British establishment in decline and decay.
The British film director Anthony Asquith was born on November 9,1902 to H.H. Asquith, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and his second wife. (A former Home Secreatary and the future leader of the Liberal Party, H.H. Asquith served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1908-1916 and was subsequently elevated to the hereditary peerage). The youngest child, Anthony, was called 'Puffin by his family, a nickname given him by his mother, who thought he resembled one. Puffin was also the name his friends called him throughout his life. Asquith was active in the British film industry from the late silent period until the mid-1960s. As a director, Asquith was highly respected by his contemporaries and had a long and successful career; by the 1960s, he was only one of only three British directors (the others being David Lean (I) and Carol Reed (I)) who were directing major international motion picture productions. However, Asquith's proclivity for adapting plays for the screen caused an erosion in his critical reputation as a filmmaker after his death. He was faulted for what was perceived as his failure to focus, like his contemporary Alfred Hitchcock, on the cinematic. Asquith was known as an actor's director, and solicited some of the finest film performances from Britain's greatest actors, including Edith Evans (I) and Michael Redgrave. Asquith's first love was music, but he lacked musical talent. Subsequently, his artistic ambitions were channeled toward the nascent motion picture, and he was instrumental in forming the London Film Society to promote artistic appreciation of film. Asquith traveled to Hollywood in the 1920s to observe American film production techniques, and after returning to England, he became a director. Among his best-known films is ""Pygmalion" (1938), an adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's stage play, which he co-directed with the film's star, Leslie Howard (I). The film was a major critical success, even in the United States, winning multiple Academy Award nominations. (Nobel Prize-winner Shaw, who had been a co-founder of the London Film Society along with Asquith, won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for the film). Puffin had a long association with the playwright Terence Rattigan, and two of Asquith's most famous and successful pictures were based on Rattigan plays, "The Winslow Boy (1948) and "The Browning Version" (1951). (Asquith directed the screen version of Rattigan's first successful play, " French Without Tears," in 1940,) Asquith's most successful post-war film, arguably, was his 1952 adaptation of Oscar Wilde's play "The Importance of Being Earnest." Over a half-century since it was made, Asquith's film remains the best adaptation of Wilde's work. (Ironically, Puffin's father H.H. Asquith, while serving as Home Secretary, ordered Wilde's arrest for his homosexual behavior. Wilde's arrest for indecent behavior, which led to his incarceration in the Reading Gaol, destroyed the great playwright, personally. The Wilde incident stifled gay culture in Britain for the first two-thirds of the 20th Century. Another irony of the situation is that H.H. Asquith's youngest son, Puffin, himself was gay.) By the 1960s, Asquith was directing Hollywood-style all-star productions, including the Richard Burton (I)-'Elizabeth Taylor' potboiler "The V.I.P.s" (1963) (with a screenplay by Rattigan based in an incident in the life of Laurence Olivier, a frequent Puffin collaborator) and the episodic "The Yellow Rolls Royce" (1964), once again, from a screenplay by Rattigan. In 1967, Asquith was tipped to direct the big-screen adaptation of the best-selling novel "The Shoes of the Fisherman" (1968) set to co-star Olivier and Anthony Quinn (I), but he had to drop out of the production due to ill heath. He died on February 20, 1968, at the age of 65. The British Academy Award for Best Music is named the Anthony Asquith Award in his honor.





