John Steppling at Galicia
Museum
Throughout November American playwright and
film-maker John Steppling will continue his Saturday lecture and film series at
Galicia Museum.
Featuring post-World War II noir films, the series
examines German Jewish emigre directors and the influence they had on the
"golden age" of Hollywood.
Steppling is particularly interested in the way
these directors brought Europe's harsh political realities to bear on American
film in the 1940. By infusing low-budget genre projects with a certain cynicism,
subversiveness, and earnest social realism, emigre directors transformed would
be B movies into calssics of American film noir, thereby leaving an indelible
stamp on the art and the industry.
It was a lack of this subversiveness, in
concert with an overbearing consumerism, that ultimately drove Steppling away
from Hollywood and to Poland, where his lives with his wife in Krakówand teaches
at the National Film School in £ód¼. Steppling began his career as a playwright
in New York and moved to LA when his play "52 Cars" was picked up by a Hollywood
agent. For the next twelve years he earned a "surreal" salary working on what he
says were depressingly conformist movies.
While Steppling says he has found a healthier
sensibility surrounding art and film in Poland, he still maintains
relationshipswith theaters in California, and he is currently working on
forthcoming plays for those venues. As a playwright he has been a Rockefeller
Fellow, an NEA recipient, and a Pen-West winner. His most recent screenplay was
"Animal Factory", directed by Steve Buscemi.
KRAKOUT, November' 04