Ken Adam

Sir Kenneth Adam OBE RDI (born Klaus Hugo George Fritz Adam; 5 February 1921 – 10 March 2016) was a German-British movie production designer, best known for his set designs for the James Bond films of the 1960s and 1970s, as well as for Dr. Strangelove and Salon Kitty.

Sir Ken Adam
Adam in 2012
Born
Klaus Hugo George Fritz Adam

(1921-02-05)5 February 1921
Berlin, Germany
Died10 March 2016(2016-03-10) (aged 95)
NationalityGerman-British
EducationSt Paul's School, London
Alma materUniversity College London
Years active1940–2003
Known forRoyal Air Force pilot, production designer
Spouse
Maria-Letizia Moauro
(m. 1952)
AwardsBAFTA for Dr. Strangelove (1964)
BAFTA for The IPCRESS File (1965)
Academy Award for Barry Lyndon (1975)
Academy Award for The Madness of King George (1994)
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Royal Air Force
Years of service1941–1947
RankFlight lieutenant
Service number187137
UnitNo. 609 Squadron
Battles/warsWorld War II

Adam won two Academy Awards for Best Art Direction. Born in Berlin, he relocated to England with his Jewish family at the age of 13 soon after the Nazis came to power. Together with his younger brother, Denis Adam, he was one of only three German-born pilots to serve in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.

Early life

Adam was born in 1921 in Berlin to an upper-middle-class secular Jewish family, the third child of Lilli (née Saalfeld) and Fritz Adam, a former Prussian cavalry officer who had served with the Zieten Hussars.[1] Fritz had been awarded the Iron Cross Second Class and the Iron Cross First Class for his service in the First World War.[2]

Fritz co-owned a well-known high-fashion clothing and sporting goods store called S. Adam (Berlin, Leipziger Straße/Friedrichstraße) together with his three brothers, George,[dubious ] Siegfried and Otto Adam.[3][4]The company had been established in 1863 by Saul Adam. Klaus (Ken) had two older siblings, Peter, Loni and a younger brother Dieter (1 February 1924 – 17 October 2018).[5][6]

The family lived an almost idyllic, privileged existence until the Nazi Party came to power.[3]

His older brother Peter was good friends with Gottfried Reinhardt the son of theatre and film director Max Reinhardt and they would often take the young Klaus out with them. As a result, he got to know Max Reinhardt and many other people in the German theatre. Gottfried Reinhardt later became a film director and producer.

England

The combination of his brother Dieter at the age of nine having a fight with a playground bully wearing a Hitler Youth uniform and the increasing discrimination against Jews convinced their parents to send Klaus and Dieter to Craigend Park boarding school in Edinburgh.[7] Upon arrival Klaus anglicised his name to Kenneth and eventually Ken while his brother Dieter changed his to Denis. Their oldest brother Peter was at the time studying law at the University of Clermont-Ferrand in France and decided to move to England and complete his studies there.

The rest of the Adam family stayed in Germany as Adam's father felt that the Nazis were only a temporary aberration and they would wait it out. Things however continued to deteriorate with Jewish stores being boycotted and targeted for attacks in April 1933.

During the summer of 1933, Max Reich, a senior employee of the family business, and then Fritz Adam were arrested. Reich was a member of the SS and leader of the business's Nazi cell. Reich was eventually released and Fritz Adam was released and put under house arrest for three days.[4] Inquiries determined that a former employee who had been dismissed for dishonesty had accused the two men of unfair dismissal and conspiring to maintain undeclared funds in Switzerland. It took two weeks to disprove both allegations and no charges were laid against either man.[8]Reluctantly coming to the conclusion that Jews had no future in Germany, Fritz, Lilli and Loni, as well as some of Ken's aunts and uncles, fled to England in the summer of 1934.[9] The family eventually settled in the Hampstead area of London the following year.

The family were declared refugees on their arrival to England and identified as "friendly aliens" with the exception of Denis who was too young to be classified. The family arrived in England with nothing other than some gold coins Lilli had smuggled out.[10] His mother who had never previously worked in her life used the little money they had to establish and run a boarding house. His father struggled with his change in status and starting over in a new country. His father started an import-export business selling gloves but his health deteriorated and he died in 1936 when he was 56 years old.[4]

Adam left the boarding school in Edinburgh to rejoin his parents in London and continued his education at St. Paul's School in London. At his mother's boarding house Adam became increasingly interested in cinema after coming into contact with a number of artists among the Jewish refugees who were boarding there. He was introduced to Vincent Korda, a Hungarian art director, when he was working on Knight Without Armour at Denham Film Studios. Korda not only nurtured Adam's passion for films, but encouraged him to train as an architect if he was interested in becoming a production designer.[1] Leaving school he became an apprentice at the firm of CW Glover & Partners (which specialized in making bomb shelters) and he signed up for evening classes at the Bartlett School of Architecture at University College London.[11][failed verification] Among his tutors was a part-time teacher who had been an assistant of famed German architect Erich Mendelsohn from whom Adam learned valuable architectural drawing techniques.[1]

World War II

When World War II began, Adam was working on designs for air-raid shelters and illustrated books on air-raid protection and gas masks. As German citizens, the Adam family could have been interned as enemy aliens, but in October 1940 Adam was able to join the Pioneer Corps, a support unit of the British Army open to citizens of Axis countries resident in the UK and other Commonwealth countries, provided they were not considered a risk to security. Adam was seconded to design bomb shelters.

After eight months service in the Pioneer Corps, Adam's application to join the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve as a pilot was accepted. After initial flight training on de Havilland Tiger Moth biplanes in Scotland, he was sent to Canada and the United States for additional training. Among his instructors was British actor Michael Rennie.

Flight Lieutenant Adam joined No. 609 Squadron at RAF Lympne on 1 October 1943.[12][13] He was nicknamed "Heinie the tank-buster" by his comrades for his daring exploits.[14] The squadron flew the Hawker Typhoon, initially in support of USAAF long-range bombing missions over Europe.[13] Later they were employed in support of ground troops, including at the battle of the Falaise Gap, in Normandy after D-Day. In 1944, his brother Denis joined No. 183 Squadron, joining Adam in No. 123 Wing. There were four squadrons in the wing: 164, 183, 198 and 609.[15]

Together with his brother Denis, Adam was one of three German-born pilots to serve in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War,[14] the third being Peter Stevens.[16] As such, if they had been captured by the Germans, they were liable to execution as traitors rather than being treated as prisoners of war.[17]

Following the end of the war Adam was the Allied officer in charge of German labour rebuilding Wunstorf Air Base.[1] Adam naturalised as a British subject on 27 December 1946 and left the RAF upon his demobilisation in 1947.[18][19]

Film career

Adam designed the War Room set for Dr. Strangelove (1964).

Adam entered the film industry as a draughtsman on This Was a Woman (1948) at Riverside Studios in Hammersmith.[1] His first major screen credit was as production designer on the British thriller Soho Incident (1956). Working in 1952 for art director Paul Sheriff on the Burt Lancaster film The Crimson Pirate, Adam designed an 18th-century hot-air balloon, a flame-throwing tank, and a rowing boat that transformed into a submarine.[1]

In the mid-1950s, he worked (uncredited) on the epics Around the World in 80 Days (also 1956) and Ben-Hur (1959), directed by William Wyler.

In 1956 he assisted art director Edward Carrere with the sets for Helen of Troy.[1]

His first major credit was for the horror film Night of the Demon (1957), directed by Jacques Tourneur, and he was also the production designer on several films directed by Robert Aldrich.The first public knowledge of his expertise came when he won an award for the sets of The Trials of Oscar Wilde at the Moscow Film Festival in 1960.[1]

He was hired for the first James Bond film, Dr. No (1962). Adam did not work in the second James Bond film, From Russia with Love (1963), because he was working on Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove (1964). His work on this film was described by the British Film Institute (BFI) as "gleaming and sinister".[5][20] Steven Spielberg even called it "the best set that's ever been designed".[21] He turned down the opportunity to work on Kubrick's next project, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), after he found out that Kubrick had been working with NASA for a year on space exploration, and that it would put him at a disadvantage in developing his art.[5]

This enabled Adam to make his name with his innovative, semi-futuristic sets for further James Bond films, such as Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967), and Diamonds Are Forever (1971). The supertanker set for The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) was constructed in the largest soundstage in the world at the time. Adam claims it was lit by Stanley Kubrick in secret.[22] His last Bond film was Moonraker (1979). Writing for The Guardian in 2005, journalist Johnny Dee claimed: "His sets for the seven Bond films he worked on [...] are as iconic as the movies themselves and set the benchmark for every blockbuster".[23]

Adam's other film credits include The Trials of Oscar Wilde (1960), the Michael Caine espionage thriller The Ipcress File (1965) and its sequel Funeral in Berlin (1966), the Peter O'Toole version of Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1969), Sleuth (1972), Salon Kitty (1976), Agnes of God (1985), Addams Family Values (1993), and The Madness of King George (1994).[20][24] He was also a visual consultant on the film version of Pennies from Heaven (1981), adapted from Dennis Potter's television serial.[24]

Adam returned to work with Kubrick on Barry Lyndon (1975), for which he won his first Oscar. The BFI noted the film's "contrastingly mellow Technicolor beauties" in its depiction of the 18th century.[20][25] He also designed the famous car for the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), which was produced by the same team as the James Bond film series.[25] During the late 1970s, he worked on storyboards and concept art for Star Trek: Planet of the Titans, then in pre-production. The film was eventually shelved by Paramount Pictures.[26]

Adam was a jury member at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival and the 49th Berlin International Film Festival.[27] In 1999, during the Victoria and Albert Museum exhibition "Ken Adam – Designing the Cold War", Adam spoke on his role in the design of film sets associated with the 1960s through the 1980s.[5]

Death

Adam died on 10 March 2016 at his home in London, following a short illness. He was 95 years old.[28]

Personal life

He met his wife Maria-Letizia Moauro while filming The Crimson Pirate on location on the Italian island of Ischia and they married on 16 August 1952.[1][5]

Legacy

In September 2012, Adam handed over his entire body of work to the Deutsche Kinemathek. The Ken Adam collection comprises approximately 4,000 sketches for films from all periods, photo albums to individual films, storyboards of his employees, memorabilia, military medals, and identity documents, as well as all cinematic awards, including Adam's two Academy Awards.[29][30]

The Ken Adam Building, a large lot at Pinewood Studios's Buckingham location, bears Adam's name and houses multiple theatres and businesses as well as the Kodak Film Lab and an office of the trade union Bectu.

Honours

Adam was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 1996 New Year Honours for services to the film industry and Knight Bachelor in the 2003 Birthday Honours for services to film production design and to UK–German relations.[31][32] Adam was appointed a Royal Designer for Industry in 2009.[33]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1948This Was a WomanDraughtsman
Brass MonkeyUncredited
1949Third Time LuckyUncredited
The Queen of SpadesUncredited
Dick Barton Strikes BackAssistant Art DirectorUncredited
ObsessionUncredited
Golden ArrowDraughtsmanUncredited
1950Your WitnessAssistant Art DirectorUncredited. Released in U.S. as Eye Witness
1951Captain Horatio HornblowerAssociate Art DirectorUncredited. Known in U.K. as Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N.
1952The Crimson Pirate
1953The Master of BallantraeAssistant Art DirectorUncredited
The IntruderUncredited
1954Star of IndiaCredited as Kenneth Adams
1956Helen of TroyAssistant Art Director to Edward Carrere
Around the World in 80 DaysArt DirectorUncredited, for the London sets
Soho Incident
Child in the House
Soho IncidentProduction Designer
1957The Devil's PassArt DirectorCredited as Kenneth Adam
Night of the DemonProduction Designer
1958Battle of the V-1Set Designs
Gideon's DayArt Director
1959Ben-HurAssistant Art DirectorUncredited
The Angry HillsProduction Designer
Ten Seconds to HellArt Director
Beyond This Place
The Rough and the SmoothProduction Designer/Art Director
1960In the NickArt Director
Let's Get MarriedProduction Designer
The Trials of Oscar Wilde
1962Sodom and Gomorrah
Dr. No
1963In the Cool of the DayCredited as Kenneth Adam
1964Goldfinger
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
Woman of Straw
1965Thunderball
The Ipcress File
1966Funeral in Berlin
1967You Only Live Twice
1968Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
1969Goodbye, Mr. Chips
1970The Owl and the PussycatDesign Supervisor
1971Diamonds are ForeverProduction Designer
1972Sleuth
1973The Last of Sheila
1975Barry Lyndon
1976The Seven-Per-Cent Solution
Salon Kitty
1977The Spy Who Loved Me
1979Moonraker
1981Pennies from HeavenVisual Consultant/Associate Producer
1985King DavidProduction Designer
Agnes of God
1986Crimes of the Heart
1988The Deceivers
1989Dead Bang
1990The Freshman
1991The Doctor
Company Business
1993Undercover Blues
Addams Family Values
1994The Madness of King George
1995Boys on the Side
1996Bogus
1997In & Out
1999The Out-of-Towners
2001Taking Sides
2004GoldenEye: Rogue AgentProduction Designer/Art DirectorVideo Game

Awards

YearAwardCategoryMovieResultNotes
1957Academy AwardsBest Art Direction-Set Decoration, ColorAround the World in 80 DaysNominatedShared with: James W. Sullivan, Ross Dowd
1965BAFTA AwardsBest British Art Direction (B/W)Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the BombWon
Best British Art Direction (Colour)GoldfingerNominated
1966The Ipcress FileWon
ThunderballNominated
1968You Only Live TwiceNominated
1974Best Art DirectionSleuthNominated
1976Academy AwardsBest Art Direction-Set DecorationBarry LyndonWonShared with: Roy Walker, Vernon Dixon
BAFTA AwardsBest Art DirectionNominated
1978Academy AwardsBest Art Direction-Set DecorationThe Spy Who Loved MeNominatedShared with: Peter Lamont, Hugh Scaife
BAFTA AwardsBest Production Design/Art DirectionNominated
1994Academy AwardsBest Art Direction-Set DecorationAddams Family ValuesNominatedShared with: Marvin March
1995The Madness of King GeorgeWonShared with: Carolyn Scott
1996BAFTA AwardsBest Production DesignNominated
2002Art Directors GuildLifetime Achievement AwardWon
2013Contribution to Cinematic Imagery AwardJames Bond FranchiseWonShared with: Peter Lamont, Allan Cameron, Dennis Gassner
2018Hall of FameWon

Notes

References

  • Adam, Denis (1996). Profile of a New Zealander: The Autobiography of Denis Adam. Wellington: Astra Publishing. ISBN 0-473-03742-4.

Further reading

External links