Christian Nyby, the television and movie director who achieved acclaim
as a film editor before moving into the director's chair, was born on
September 1, 1913, in Los Angeles, California. He made his reputation
as a cutter during the 1940s, when he worked with the great helmer
Howard Hawks, winning his sole Academy Award nomination for the editing of
Hawks' classic Western
Red River (1948) (1948). Nyby first collaborated with
Hawks as an editor at Warner Bros., on the director's adaptation of his
friend
Ernest Hemingway's novel
To Have and Have Not (1944) (1944). He edited
The Big Sleep (1946), both the
original 1944 version and the recut version that put more emphasis on
stars
Humphrey Bogart and
Lauren Bacall that was released in 1946.
In a real-life scenario similar to
Robert Wise's cutting of
Orson Welles's
second masterpiece,
The Magnificent Ambersons (1942), Nyby had to cut
Red River (1948) on his own when
director/producer Hawks had to go to Europe to complete another
assignment. Nyby had to shorten Hawks' original cut, and also eliminate
scenes that producer
Howard Hughes thought plagiarized his own Western
The Outlaw (1943), which Hawks had worked on. Though the film became regarded as
a genre classic in the original Nyby cut, the original cut that Nyby
had made under Hawks' supervision survived and was released during the
1960s, further burnishing the reputation of the film.
Nyby moved to the directors' chair for producer Hawks for the sci-fi
movie
The Thing from Another World (1951). Although The Thing is rightly regarded as a classic,
credit for the direction of the film generally is attributed to Hawks
as he reportedly was on the set everyday as the producer, and the film
bears his "auteurist" stamp. Furthermore, Nyby's subsequent directorial
output in film and on TV was mediocre, unlike this, his debut. Some
believe the Hawks was ashamed to put his name on such a lowly genre
piece (sci-fi was despised, critically, until
Stanley Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) a
generation later, and that film, one of the great classics of cinema,
initially engendered hostile reviews from critics). Another theory is
that Hawks helmed the film himself but let Nyby, who was on the set
learning the ropes of direction, take the director's credit on the
picture to receive membership in the Directors Guild. Whatever the
truth, "The Thing" -- Nyby's greatest accomplishment as a director --
generally is credited to Hawks in fact or in spirit, so much is his
style evident in the picture.
Nyby went on to direct B-movies such as the uninspired ode to the
Marine Corps and battlefield sacrifice
First to Fight (1967) (1967) and episodic
television, never again showing the promise he had as director of "The
Thing." He died on September 17, 1993, two weeks after turning 80 years
old.