Buy JAMES MASON | General Books
Sarah Thomas's study moves beyond the
image of the brooding, destructive man at odds with employers and his own star
status to explore the complexity of Mason's career and star persona. Her
analysis is structured around three strands central to understanding stardom:
the star persona, industry and power, and screen performance. Thomas addresses
the incredible range of Mason's star career – 1930s 'quota quickies'; 1940s
Gainsborough melodramas; the desperate IRA man in Carol Reed's 'Odd Man Out'
(1947); from the 1950s onwards, Hollywood classics including starring in
Hitchcock's 'North by Northwest' (1959) and playing Humbert Humbert in
Kubrick's 'Lolita' (1962). She also considers in depth his undervalued
post-1962 career, off-screen celebrity status, non-film work, comic and vocal
performances, and the star's own self-commentary. In doing so, she offers a new
perspective on such subjects as power and powerlessness; public image and
national identity, contextualizing Mason's career in wider histories of
British, American and European transnational filmmaking.