Saturday, July 2, 2016

Euan Lloyd obit

Obituary: Euan Lloyd, film producer

 

He was not on the list.


The British film industry was in a state of depression when Euan Lloyd became an independent producer and much of his time was spent battling to find finance for his productions.

Although he failed to get backing for some projects, he made a handful of action pictures that have enjoyed longevity with the viewing public.

First came The Wild Geese (1978), pitching three giants of British cinema – Richard Burton, Roger Moore and Richard Harris – into a story of mercenaries trying to rescue a democratically elected president sentenced to execution by a central African country’s dictator.

Lloyd’s ambition was to emulate adventure films such as The Guns of Navarone and Where Eagles Dare, but the sagas surrounding The Wild Geese were typical of the constant challenges he faced as a producer.

Burt Lancaster was originally cast as Captain Rafer Janders but dropped when he insisted on being given a bigger role. So Harris was drafted in to replace him but, with a reputation for hard drinking that had led to at least one film going over budget, the film’s insurers insisted that he put down half of his fee as a guarantee. In the event, there were no problems.

Moore starred again, along with Gregory Peck, David Niven and Trevor Howard, when Lloyd made The Sea Wolves (1980), based on real-life events and depicting how former British military officers in Calcutta set out to destroy Nazi U-boats during the Second World War.

Shortly afterwards, he was inspired to make Who Dares Wins (1982) on seeing the 1980 storming of the Iranian embassy in London, just a short distance from his home.

“I watched in awe at what these SAS men did and truly I felt very proud,” said Lloyd, who saw the film as an antidote to anti-Establishment pictures of the time. “Terrorism worries me greatly, so here was an opportunity for me to say what I’ve felt for a long time.”

The film features American and British politicians and military leaders being held hostage at a meeting to discuss the siting of nuclear missiles in Europe, Lewis Collins – well known to British audiences for his action role on TV in The Professionals – starred as an SAS soldier infiltrating the terrorists and, despite some critical maulings, Who Dares Wins became one of the ten most successful films at the domestic box office in 1982.

Lloyd was not so lucky with his final film, The Wild Geese II (1985), the fictional story of an attempt to break Nazi war criminal Rudolf Hess out of Spandau Prison. Its poor performance in cinemas was the last in a chain of events that began with Roger Moore declining to reprise his role from the original and the death of Richard Burton – who had agreed to return – just days before shooting was due to begin. Edward Fox replaced Burton, with Laurence Olivier playing Hess.

Euan Wallace Lloyd was born to John and Doris (née Rose) on their Warwickshire dairy farm outside Rugby. He loved going to Saturday cinema matinees to watch Buster Crabbe serials, Laurel and Hardy comedies and, in particular, Westerns.

On leaving school at 14, he worked on the family farm before landing a job at Walsall’s ABC cinema and was soon its assistant manager. He became a publicist for movie mogul J Arthur Rank’s Eagle-Lion Films during the Second World War, then in 1951 for the newly established Variety Club.

Hollywood actor Alan Ladd, whom Lloyd publicised in The Red Beret (1953), recommended him for a job as a production assistant at Warwick Films, where he worked on pictures such as the 1955 war drama The Cockleshell Heroes, as well as writing, directing and producing travelogues. From there, Lloyd became associate producer on several films.

As a fully fledged producer, he travelled to Spain to make the Westerns Shalako (1968), teaming Sean Connery with Brigitte Bardot, Catlow (1971), with Richard Crenna and Yul Brynner, and The Man Called Noon (1973), starring Crenna.

Back in Britain, Lloyd’s first film as an independent producer, Paper Tiger (1975) – starring David Niven as tutor to a Japanese ambassadors’s son in south-east Asia – was not a success, but he persisted and attracted cinemagoers with his action-adventure films.

Lloyd’s first three marriages – to opera singer Julia Behar (1947) and actresses Jane Hylton (née Audrey Gwendolyn Clark, 1951) and Patricia Donahue (née Mahar, 1961) – ended in divorce. He is survived by former actress Rosalind, the daughter of his second marriage, guitarist Jerry Donahue, the stepson of his third marriage, Ando, an orphan from Vietnam whom he and Patricia Donahue adopted in 1975, and his fourth wife, Ingeborg (née Muller), a film publicist whom he married in 1982. His other stepson, Marc Donahue, predeceased him.

 

Director

Love in Monaco (1959)

Love in Monaco

7.3

Director

1959

 

Land of Laughter (1957)

Land of Laughter

Short

Director

1957

 

Jocelyn Lane in April in Portugal (1956)

April in Portugal

7.3

Short

Director

1956

 

Writer

Glück und Liebe in Monaco (1959)

Glück und Liebe in Monaco

5.8

writer

1959

 

Love in Monaco (1959)

Love in Monaco

7.3

writer

1959

 

Land of Laughter (1957)

Land of Laughter

Short

narrative

1957

 

Producer

The Skiers of Norway

producer

Short

 

Barbara Carrera, Scott Glenn, and Edward Fox in Wild Geese II (1985)

Wild Geese II

4.9

producer

1985

 

The Final Option (1982)

The Final Option

6.4

producer

1982

 

David Niven, Gregory Peck, Roger Moore, Trevor Howard, and Barbara Kellerman in The Sea Wolves (1980)

The Sea Wolves

6.3

producer

1980

 

Richard Burton, Roger Moore, Richard Harris, and Hardy Krüger in The Wild Geese (1978)

The Wild Geese

6.8

producer

1978

 

David Niven, Toshirô Mifune, Irene Tsu, and Kazuhito Andô in Paper Tiger (1975)

Paper Tiger

5.8

producer

1975

 

The Man Called Noon (1973)

The Man Called Noon

5.8

producer

1973

 

Catlow (1971)

Catlow

5.6

producer

1971

 

Brigitte Bardot and Sean Connery in Shalako (1968)

Shalako

5.6

producer

1968

 

Ann-Margret and Dean Martin in Murderers' Row (1966)

Murderers' Row

5.8

associate producer

1966

 

Rita Hayworth, Marcello Mastroianni, Senta Berger, Stephen Boyd, Yul Brynner, Angie Dickinson, Omar Sharif, Trevor Howard, Hugh Griffith, Jack Hawkins, E.G. Marshall, Anthony Quayle, Gilbert Roland, Harold Sakata, Barry Sullivan, and Eli Wallach in The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966)

The Poppy Is Also a Flower

5.2

TV Movie

producer

1966

 

Genghis Khan (1965)

Genghis Khan

5.8

associate producer

1965

 

The Secret Ways (1961)

The Secret Ways

6.2

associate producer

1961

 

Love in Monaco (1959)

Love in Monaco

7.3

producer

1959

 

Additional Crew

Steven Seagal and Marg Helgenberger in Fire Down Below (1997)

Fire Down Below

5.1

production assistant (uncredited)

1997

 

Anita Ekberg and Victor Mature in Zarak (1956)

Zarak

5.5

production assistant (uncredited)

1956

 

Safari (1956)

Safari

5.6

production assistant (uncredited)

1956

 

The Cockleshell Heroes (1955)

The Cockleshell Heroes

6.5

production assistant (uncredited)

1955

 

The Black Knight (1954)

The Black Knight

5.2

production assistant (uncredited)

1954

 

Paratrooper (1953)

Paratrooper

5.9

publicist (uncredited)

1953

 

Thanks

The Wild Geese Director

Video

special thanks

2012

 

The Mercenary

Video

special thanks

2012

 

Directing the Beast (2003)

Directing the Beast

6.8

Video

special thanks

2003

 

Self

Interview mit Produzent Euan Lloyd und Ingrid Pitt

Video

Self

2010

 

The Last of the Gentleman Producers

6.5

Video

Self

2004

 

The Tenby Poisoner

TV Movie

Self

1993

 

Anthony Daniels and Chris Kelly in Clapper Board (1972)

Clapper Board

7.8

TV Series

Self

1980

1 episode

 

Nai Zindagi: Naya Jeevan (1968)

Nai Zindagi: Naya Jeevan

TV Series

Self

1980

1 episode

 

Stars' War - The Flight of the Wild Geese

Short

Self

1978

 

On Location

TV Series

Self

1971

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Profile: Hardy Krüger

TV Movie

Self - Producer of 'The Wild Geese' (archive footage)

1978


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