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WISEMAN, FREDERICK
 Frederick Wiseman Photo courtesy of Frederick Wiseman/ John Goodman FREDERICK
WISEMAN. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A., 1 January 1930.
Educated at Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts, B.A.
1951; LL.B., Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1954. Worked
as law professor; turned to television documentary filmmaking, 1967.
Recipient: Emmy Awards, 1969 and 1970; John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
Foundation Fellowship, 1980-81; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Fellowship, 1982-87; International Documentary Association, Career
Achievement Award, 1990; Peabody Award, Personal Award, 1991. Address:
Zipporah Films Inc., One Richdale Avenue, Unit #4, Cambridge, Massachusetts
02140, U.S.A.
TELEVISION DOCUMENTARIES (all as producer, director,
and editor)
1967
Titicut Follies
1968 High School
1969 Law and Order
1969 Hospital
1971 Basic Training
1972 Essene
1973 Juvenile Court
1974 Primate
1975 Welfare
1976 Meat
1977 Canal Zone
1978 Sinai Field Mission
1979 Manoeuvre
1980 Model
1982 Seraphita's Diary
1983 The Store
1985 Racetrack
1986 Blind
1986 Deaf
1986 Adjustment & Work
1986 Multi-Handicapped
1987 Missile
1989 Near Death
1989 Central Park
1991 Aspen
1993 Zoo
1994 High School II
1995 Ballet
1996 La Comedie Francaise
U.S. Documentary
Filmmaker
Frederick
Wiseman is arguably the most important American documentary filmmaker
of the past three decades. A law professor turned filmmaker in 1967,
Wiseman, in his most dramatically powerful documentaries, has poignantly
chronicled the exercise of power in American society by focusing
on the everyday travails of the least fortunate Americans caught
in the tangled webs of social institutions operating at the community
level. An underlying theme of many of these documentaries is the
individual's attempt to preserve his or her humanity and dignity
while struggling against laws and dehumanizing bureaucratic systems.
Wiseman functions as producer, director, and editor of the films,
which numbered 29 by 1996. The documentaries have all been broadcast
on public television in the United States, presented by New York
station WNET, and have regularly marked the opening of the new PBS
season. Wiseman's documentaries have won numerous awards, including
several Emmys, and a Dupont Award. Wiseman was awarded the prestigious
MacArthur Prize Fellows Award in 1982, and received a Peabody Award
for his contribution to documentary film.
Wiseman's
aesthetic falls squarely in the "direct cinema" tradition of documentary
filmmaking, which emphasizes continued filming, as unobtrusively
as possible, of human conversation and the routines of everyday
life, with no music, no interviews, no voice-over narration, and
no overt attempt to interpret or explain the events unfolding before
the camera.
Wiseman
calls his films "reality-fictions," reflecting his tight thematic
structuring of the raw footage in the editing process. Eschewing
"leading characters," Wiseman skillfully interweaves many small
stories to provide contrast and thematic complexity.
Wiseman's
debut as a documentarian was both auspicious and highly controversial.
His first film, Titicut Follies (1967), was shot in the Massachusetts
State Hospital for the Criminally Insane at Bridgewater. Here we
see the impact of a social institution--a publicly-funded mental
hospital--on society's rejects. Often described as an "expose,"
(a description Wiseman rejects), Titicut Follies chronicled
the indignities suffered by the inmates, many of whom were kept
naked and force-fed through nasal tubes. Titicut Follies caused
a public outcry and demands for institutional reform. The film was
officially barred from general public showings until 1993 by order
of a U.S. court on grounds that it violated an inmate's privacy.
A succession of critically-acclaimed documentaries quickly followed.
In High School (1968), Wiseman examined a large, largely
white and middle-class Philadelphia high school and the authoritarian,
conformist value system inculcated in students by teachers and administrators.
The official ideology reflected in the educational power structure
was largely seen as an expression of the value framework of the
surrounding community.
Law
and Order (1969) was filmed in Kansas City, Missouri. Here,
Wiseman cast his gaze on the daily routine of police work in the
Kansas City police department. Most of the sequences were filmed
in the black district of the city. Examples of police brutality
and insensitivity were juxtaposed with other examples of sympathetic
patrol officers attempting to assist citizens with a variety of
minor, and Wiseman sometimes humorous, problems. On the whole, however,
police behavior was depicted as symptomatic of deeper social crisis,
including racism, poverty, and the resultant pervasive violence
in the inner city.
His
next film, Hospital (1970), for which Wiseman won two Emmys
for Best News Documentary, was set in the operating room, emergency
ward and out-patient clinics of New York City's Metropolitan Hospital.
As in Law and Order, Wiseman used an institutional setting
to examine urban ills. Stabbing and drug overdose victims, abused
children, the mentally disturbed, and the abandoned elderly pass
through the public hospital. But unlike the authority figures in
Titicut Follies, the doctors, nurses, and orderlies at Metropolitan
come off as much more humane, responding to patients with sympathy
and understanding.
In
Juvenile Court (1973), as in Hospital, Wiseman reveals
the compassionate side of authority. The court officials in the
Memphis, Tennessee juvenile court discuss, with evident concern,
the futures of young offenders accused of crimes such as child abuse
and armed robbery.
Welfare
(1975) is one of the most provocative and understated of Wiseman's
institutional examinations. Shot in a New York City welfare office,
the documentary, in seemingly interminable shots, chronicles the
frustration and pain of abject welfare recipients who spend their
time sitting and waiting, or being shunted from office to office,
as the degrading milieu of the welfare system grinds on. Welfare
bureaucrats are largely seen as agents of dehumanization.
The
Store (1983), Wiseman's first color film, at first glance appears
to depart from the typical "weighty" subject matter of most of his
previous films. That, however, is deceptive. For while the institution
under scrutiny, the world-famous Neiman-Marcus department store
in Dallas, Texas, may seem to be light-weight material, Wiseman's
treatment of the activities of store employees and the mostly wealthy
customers ultimately reveals the shallow lives of America's economic
elite and those who service them. Conspicuous consumption is everywhere
in evidence. The clientele while away days in the store's dressing
rooms, trying on expensive gowns and furs. A compliant group of
saleswomen are led in smile exercises as they prepare to meet their
condescending customers. The bourgeoisie and proletariat are complicit
in this sordid dance of money and unproductive leisure. The Store
stands in stark and powerful contrast to the despair depicted in
Welfare.
The
ethics of Wiseman's filmmaking has been criticized by some as invading
the privacy of its subjects (Titicut Follies is the clearest case-in-point).
Wiseman's response is unequivocal. He argues that if an institution
receives public tax support, citizens are entitled to observe its
operation. Reportorial access, Wiseman adds, is a constitutional
right with regard to public institutions. In his early documentaries,
if any subject objected, at the time of shooting, to being filmed,
Wiseman eliminated the footage in question from the final cut. Later,
however, he denied subjects veto rights. Some subjects, while initially
pleased with their portrayals, later became upset with others' negative
reactions to those portrayals. This may be one of Wiseman's major
Wiseman contributions to the documentary form, to permit subjects
to examine their own behavior--to confront the consequences of their
own social actions--as seen through the eyes of others.
-Hal
Himmelstein
FURTHER READING
Arlen,
Michael J. The Camera Age: Essays on Television. New York:
Penguin, 1982.
Atkins,
Thomas R. "Frederick Wiseman's America: Titicut Follies to Primate."
In, Jacobs, Lewis, editor. The Documentary Tradition. New
York: Hopkinson and Blake, 1971; 2nd edition, New York: Norton,
1979.
Barnouw,
Erik. Documentary: A History of the Non-fiction Film. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1974; revised edition 1983.
Denby,
David. "Documentary in America." Atlantic Monthly (New York),
March 1970.
Rifkin,
Glenn. 1983. "Wiseman Looks at Affluent Texans." New York Times,
11 December 1983.
Rosenthal,
Alan, editor. New Challenges in Documentary. Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1988.
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