William Cameron Menzies was educated at Yale University, the University
of Edinburgh and at the Art Students League in New York. He entered the
film industry in 1919, after serving with the U.S. Expeditionary Forces
in World War I. His initial assignments were in film design and special
effects, as assistant to
Anton Grot at Famous
Players-Lasky. Menzies drew inspiration from German Expressionism and
from the work of
D.W. Griffith.
His sense of visual style was quickly recognized and he was promoted to
full art director after only three years. At United Artists (1923-30,
1935-40) and Fox (1931-33), he eventually designed for stars like
Rudolph Valentino,
Douglas Fairbanks and
Mary Pickford. He worked for all three of
the major independent producers:
Samuel Goldwyn,
David O. Selznick and
Walter Wanger. Menzies also had the
singular distinction of receiving the first-ever Oscar for art
direction (for
The Dove (1927)).
His flamboyant and exotic fairy-tale sets for
The Thief of Bagdad (1924)
are regarded to this day as a work of pure genius. From the beginning
of the sound era, Menzies also got involved in directing and producing.
During the
1940's, he worked frequently with the director
Sam Wood,
whose films he improved dramatically through his designs. Over time,
Menzies acquired a well-earned reputation for his larger-then-life
personality, his visual flair and love of adventure and fantasy in
films. He defined and solidified the role of the art director as having
overall control over the look of the finished motion picture. He was a
tireless innovator, who meticulously pre-planned the color and design
of each film through a series of continuity sketches that outlined
camera angles, lighting and the position of actors in each scene. For
Gone with the Wind (1939), he
and
J. McMillan Johnson drew some
2000 detailed watercolor sketches, that got him the Honorary Academy Award 1940 "For outstanding achievement in the use of color for the enhancement of dramatic mood" of the film.
An historian,
Wilbur G. Kurtz, was employed on the
project to provide additional accuracy of period detail. Menzies
himself directed the famous burning of Atlanta sequence and hospital
sequence, including the famous long shot of wounded and dying
Confederate soldiers, taken from a 90-foot crane.
A consummate designer of film architecture on a grand scale, Menzies
was rather less effective as a director, consistently displaying an
inability to draw strong performances from his cast. As a result,
others were often brought in as co-directors, forcing Menzies to share
the credit. In the 1950's, he helmed several low-budget films, which
stand out purely for their characteristically good visuals, as, for
example,
Invaders from Mars (1953).
Menzies was inducted into the Art Directors Guild Hall of Fame in 2005.