Research in Progress (Nov 18, 2022)
Howard Hawks Career Summation
Occupational Inheritance: No
Nationality: US
Social Class: upper-middle; father wealthy manufacturer
Race/Ethnicity:
Family: eldest of five; In 1911, youngest sibling Helen died suddenly of food poisoning; he was 15
Formal Education: Pasadena High School (for a while); Cornell, mechanical engineering
Training: prop man
First Film: aged 30
Breakthrough:
First Oscar Nomination: Sergeant York, 1942; aged 46
Gap between First Film and First Nom: 16
Other Oscars:
Other Oscar Nominations:
Oscar Awards: Honorary Oscar
Nominations Span:
Genre (specialties): various
Collaborators: John Wayne, Cary Grant; writer Leigh Brackett
Last Film: Rio Lobo, 1970; aged 74
Contract:
Career Length: long
Career Output: over 40
Career Shape: 11 hits in a row
Career Signature: auteur
Marriage: actress
Politics:
Death: 81
Howard Winchester Hawks (May 30, 1896) was a versatile film director, Hawks explored many genres such as comedies, dramas, gangster films, science fiction, film noir, war films and westerns.
He was admired by French critics because of the subject matter and lack of style (style without style).
He made engaging, unpretentious action films, Westerns, sci-fi, and adventures, and was known for his skillful treatment of ostensibly low-brow material (one notch above trash).
His most popular films include Scarface (1932), Bringing Up Baby (1938), Only Angels Have Wings (1939), His Girl Friday (1940), To Have and Have Not (1944), The Big Sleep (1946), Red River (1948), The Thing from Another World (1951), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), and Rio Bravo (1959).
His frequent portrayals of strong, tough-talking female characters came to define the “Hawksian woman.”
In 1942, Hawks was nominated for the Best Director Oscar for Sergeant York; aged 46
In 1974, he was awarded an Honorary Oscar as “a master American filmmaker whose creative efforts hold a distinguished place in world cinema.”
His work has influenced respected directors such as Scorsese, Robert Altman, Jean-Luc Godard, John Carpenter, and Tarantino.
Howard Winchester Hawks was born in Goshen, Indiana. He was the first-born child of Frank Winchester Hawks, a wealthy paper manufacturer, and his wife, Helen Brown, the daughter of a wealthy industrialist.
Hawks’s family on his father’s side were American pioneers and his ancestor John Hawks had emigrated from England to Massachusetts in 1630. The family settled in Goshen and by the 1890s was one of the wealthiest families in the Midwest, due to the highly profitable Goshen Milling Company.
Hawks’s maternal grandfather, C. W. Howard, had homesteaded in Neenah, Wisconsin in 1862 at age 17. Within 15 years he had made his fortune in the town’s paper mill and other industrial endeavors. Frank Hawks and Helen Howard met in the early 1890s and married in 1895. Howard Hawks was the eldest of five children.
Between 1906 and 1909, the Hawks family began to spend more time in Pasadena, California during the cold Wisconsin winters in order to improve Helen Hawks’s ill health. They began to spend only their summers in Wisconsin before permanently moving to Pasadena in 1910. The family settled in a house down the street from Throop Polytechnic Institute and the Hawks children began attending the school’s Polytechnic Elementary School in 1907. Hawks was an average student and did not excel in sports, but by 1910 had discovered coaster racing, an early form of soapbox racing.
In 1911, Hawks’s youngest sibling Helen died suddenly of food poisoning.
From 1910 to 1912, Hawks attended Pasadena High School. But in 1912, the Hawks family moved to Glendora, California, where Frank Hawks owned orange groves. Hawks finished his junior year of high school at Citrus Union High School in Glendora. During this time he worked as a barnstorming pilot.
He was sent to Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire from 1913 to 1914; his family’s wealth may have influenced his acceptance to the elite private school. Even though he was 17, he was admitted as a lower middle classman, the equivalent of a sophomore.
While in New England, Hawks attended the theaters in nearby Boston. In 1914, Hawks returned to Glendora and graduated from Pasadena High School that year.
Skilled in tennis, by 18, Hawks won the US Junior Tennis Championship. That same year, Hawks was accepted to Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he majored in mechanical engineering and was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. His college friend Ray S. Ashbury remembered Hawks spending more time playing craps and drinking alcohol than studying, although Hawks was also known to be a voracious reader of popular American and English novels in college.
While working in the film industry during his 1916 summer vacation, Hawks made an unsuccessful attempt to transfer to Stanford University. He returned to Cornell that September, leaving in April 1917 to join the Army when the US entered World War I.
During WWI, he taught aviators to fly and he used these experiences as influence for future aviation films such as The Dawn Patrol (1930). Like many college students who joined the armed services during the war, he received a degree in absentia in 1918. Before Hawks was called for active duty, he returned to Hollywood and by the end of April 1917 was working on a Cecil B. DeMille film.
Hawks’s passion for aviation led him to important experiences and acquaintances. In 1916, Hawks met Victor Fleming, a Hollywood cinematographer who had been an auto mechanic and early aviator. Hawks had begun racing and working on a Mercer race car—bought for him by his grandfather, C.W. Howard—during his 1916 summer vacation in California. He allegedly met Fleming when the two men raced on a dirt track and caused an accident.
This meeting led to Hawks’s first job in the film industry, as a prop boy on the Douglas Fairbanks film In Again, Out Again (on which Fleming was employed as the cinematographer) for Famous Players-Lasky. According to Hawks, a new set needed to be built quickly when the studio’s set designer was unavailable, so Hawks volunteered to do the job himself, much to Fairbanks’s satisfaction. He was next employed as a prop boy and general assistant on an unspecified film directed by Cecil B. DeMille. (Hawks never named the film in later interviews and DeMille made roughly five films in that time period). By the end of April 1917, Hawks was working on Cecil B. DeMille’s The Little American. Hawks then worked on the Mary Pickford film The Little Princess, directed by Marshall Neilan. According to Hawks, Neilan did not show up to work one day, so Hawks offered to direct a scene himself, to which Pickford consented.
Hawks began directing at age 21 after he and cinematographer Charles Rosher filmed a double exposure dream sequence with Mary Pickford.
Hawks worked with Pickford and Neilan again on Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley before joining the US Army Air Service. Hawks’s military records were destroyed in the 1973 Military Archive Fire, so the only account of his military service is his own.
According to Hawks, he spent 15 weeks in basic training at the University of California in Berkeley where he was trained to be a squadron commander in the air force. When Pickford visited Hawks at basic training, his superior officers were so impressed by the appearance of the celebrity that they promoted him to flight instructor and sent him to Texas to teach new recruits. Bored by this work, Hawks attempted to secure a transfer during the first half of 1918 and was eventually sent to Fort Monroe, Virginia. The Armistice was signed in November of that year, and Hawks was discharged as a Second Lieutenant without having seen active duty.
After the war, Hawks was eager to return to Hollywood. His brother, Kenneth Hawks, who had also served in the Air Force, graduated from Yale University in 1919, and the two of them moved to Hollywood together. They quickly made friends with Hollywood insider (and fellow Ivy Leaguer) Allan Dwan.
Hawks landed his first important job when he used his family’s wealth to loan money to studio head Jack L. Warner. Warner paid back the loan and hired Hawks as a producer to “oversee” the making of a new series of one-reel comedies starring the Italian comedian Monty Banks. Hawks later stated that he personally directed “three or four” of the shorts, though no data exist to confirm the claim.
Using Family’s Wealth and Connections
The films were profitable, but Hawks left to form his own production company using his family’s wealth and connections to secure financing.
The production company, Associated Producers, was a joint venture between Hawks, Allan Dwan, Marshall Neilan, and director Allen Holubar, with a distribution deal with First National. The company made 14 films between 1920 and 1923, with 8 directed by Neilan, 3 by Dwan and 3 by Holubar. More of a “boy’s club” than a production company, the four men gradually drifted apart and went their separate ways in 1923, by which time Hawks had decided that he wanted to direct rather than produce.
In 1920, Hawks lived in rented houses in Hollywood with the group of friends he was accumulating. This rowdy group of mostly macho, risk-taking men included his brother Kenneth Hawks, Victor Fleming, Jack Conway, Harold Rosson, Richard Rosson, Arthur Rosson and Eddie Sutherland. During this time, Hawks first met Irving Thalberg, the vice-President in charge of production at MGM. Hawks admired his intelligence and sense of story. Hawks also became friends with barn stormers and pioneer aviators at Rogers Airport in LA, getting to know men like Moye Stephens.
In 1923, Famous Players-Lasky president Jesse Lasky was looking for new Production Editor in the story department of his studio and Thalberg suggested Hawks. Hawks was immediately put in charge of over 40 productions, including several literary acquisitions of stories by Joseph Conrad, Jack London and Zane Grey.
Hawks worked on the scripts for all of the films produced, but he had his first official screenplay credit in 1924 on Tiger Love. Hawks was the Story Editor at Famous Players (later Paramount Pictures) for almost two years, occasionally editing such films as Heritage of the Desert.
Hawks signed a new one-year contract with Famous-Players in fall of 1924. He broke his contract to become a story editor for Thalberg at MGM, having secured promise from Thalberg to make him a director within a year. In 1925, when Thalberg hesitated to keep his promise, Hawks broke his contract and left.
In October 1925, Sol Wurtzel, William Fox’s studio exec at Fox Film Corporation, invited Hawks to join his company with the promise of letting Hawks direct. Over the next 3 years, Hawks directed his first 8 films (six silent, two “talkies”).
Hawks reworked the scripts of most of the films he directed without always taking credit. He also worked on the scripts for Honesty – The Best Policy in 1926 and Joseph von Sternberg’s Underworld in 1927, one of the first gangster films.
The Road to Glory (1926)
Hawks’s first film was The Road to Glory which premiered in April 1926. The screenplay was based on a 35-page composition written by Hawks. This represented one of the only films on which Hawks had extensive writing credit. It is one of Hawks’s only two lost films.
After completing The Road to Glory, Hawks began writing Fig Leaves, his first (and, until 1935, only) comedy.
It received positive reviews, particularly for the art direction and costume designs. It was released in July 1926 and was Hawks’ first hit as director. Although he later dismissed his early work, Hawks praised this film.
Paid to Love was a highly stylized, experimental film. He attempted to imitate the style of German film director F. W. Murnau. Hawks’s film includes atypical tracking shots, expressionistic lighting and stylistic film editing that inspired by German Expressionist cinema. In a later interview, Hawks commented “It isn’t my type of stuff, at least I got it over in a hurry. You know the idea of wanting the camera to do those things: Now the camera’s somebody’s eyes.”
Collaborator: Scribe Seton I. Miller
Hawks worked on the script with Seton I. Miller, with whom he would collaborate on seven more films.
Hawksian Woman
The film stars George O’Brien as the introverted Crown Prince Michael, William Powell as his happy-go-lucky brother and Virginia Valli as Michael’s flapper love interest Dolores. The characters played by Valli and O’Brien anticipate those found in later films by Hawks: a sexually aggressive showgirl, who is early prototype of the “Hawksian woman,” and shy man disinterested in sex, found in later roles played by Cary Grant and Gary Cooper.
Paid to Love was completed by September 1926, but remained unreleased until July 1927. It was financially unsuccessful. Cradle Snatchers was based on a 1925 hit stage play by Russell G. Medcraft and Norma Mitchell. The film was shot in early 1927. The film was released in May 1927 and was a minor hit.
In March 1927, Hawks signed one-year, three-picture contract with Fox and was assigned to direct Fazil, based on the play L’Insoumise by Pierre Frondaie. Hawks again worked with Seton Miller on the script. Hawks was over schedule and over budget, which began rift between him and Sol Wurtzel that would eventually lead to Hawks leaving Fox. The film was finished in August 1927, and released in June 1928.
A Girl in Every Port, the most important film of Hawks’s silent career, is the first of his films to utilize many of the Hawksian themes and characters that would define his subsequent work.
It was his first “love story between two men,” with two men bonding over their duty, skills and careers, who consider their friendship more important than their relationships with women.
In France, Henri Langlois called Hawks “the Gropius of the cinema” and Swiss novelist and poet Blaise Cendrars said the film “definitely marked the first appearance of contemporary cinema.” Hawks went over budget once again, though, and his relationship with Sol Wurtzel deteriorated. After advance screening that received positive reviews, Wurtzel told Hawks, “This is the worst picture Fox has made in years.”
The Air Circus was Hawks’s first film centered around aviation, one of his early passions. In 1928, Charles Lindbergh was the world’s most famous person and Wings was one of the most popular films of the year. Wanting to capitalize on the country’s aviation craze, Fox immediately bought Hawks’ original story for The Air Circus, a variation of the male friendship plot of A Girl in Every Port about two young pilots. The film was shot from April to June 1928, but Fox ordered an additional 15 minutes of dialogue footage in order that the film could compete with the new “talkies” being released.
Hawks hated the new dialogue by Hugh Herbert and he refused to participate in the reshoots. The film was released in September 1928 and was moderate hit.
It is one of two films directed by Hawks that are lost films.
Trent’s Last Case is adaptation of British author E. C. Bentley’s 1913 novel of the same name. Hawks considered the novel “one of the greatest detective stories of all time” and was eager to make it his first sound film. He cast Raymond Griffith in the lead role of Phillip Trent. Griffith’s throat had been damaged by poison gas during WWI and his voice was a hoarse whisper, prompting Hawks to later state, “I thought he ought to be great in talking pictures because of that voice.” However, after shooting a few scenes, Fox shut Hawks down and ordered him to make a silent film, both because of Griffith’s voice and because they only owned the legal rights to make a silent. The film had musical score and synchronized sound effects, but no dialogue. Due to failing business of silent films, it was never released in the US and only briefly screened in England where film critics hated it. The film was believed lost until the mid-1970s and was screened for the first time in the US at a Hawks retrospective in 1974. Hawks was in attendance and attempted to have the only print of the film destroyed.
Independent Producer-Director
Hawks’s contract with Fox ended in May 1929, and he never again signed long-term contract with a major studio. He managed to remain an independent producer-director for the rest of his long career.
By 1930, Hollywood was in upheaval over the coming of “talkies” and the careers of many actors and directors were ruined. Hollywood studios were recruiting stage actors and directors that they believed were better suited for sound films.
After having worked in the industry for 14 years and directed many financially successful films, Hawks found himself having to prove himself an asset to the studios once again. Leaving Fox on sour terms didn’t help his reputation, but Hawks never backed down from fights with studio heads. After several months of unemployment, Hawks renewed his career with his first sound film in 1930.
Hawks’ first all-sound film was The Dawn Patrol, based on original story by John Monk Saunders and (unofficially) Hawks. Hawks paid Saunders to put his name on the film, so that Hawks could direct the film without arousing concern due to his lack of writing experience. Hawks and Saunders developed the story together and tried to sell it to several studios before First National agreed to produce it. Shooting began in late February 1930, about the same time that Howard Hughes was finally finishing his epic World War I aviation epic Hell’s Angels, which had been in production since September 1927. Shrewdly, Hawks began to hire many of the aviation experts and cameramen that had been employed by Hughes, including Elmer Dyer, Harry Reynolds and Ira Reed. When Hughes found out about the rival film, he did everything he could to sabotage The Dawn Patrol. He harassed Hawks and other studio personnel, hired a spy that was quickly caught and finally sued First National for copyright infringement. Hughes eventually dropped the lawsuit in late 1930—he and Hawks had become good friends during the legal battle. Filming was finished in late May 1930 and it premiered in July, setting first-week box office record at the Winter Garden Theatre in NY.
The film became one of the biggest hits of 1930. The success of this film allowed Hawks to gain respect in the field of filmmaking and allowed him to spend the rest of his career as an independent director without the necessity to sign any long-term contracts with specific studios.
Hawks did not get along with Warner executive Hal B. Wallis and his contract allowed him to be loaned out to other studios. Hawks took the opportunity to accept a directing offer from Harry Cohn at Columbia Pictures. The film opened in January 1931 and was a hit. The film was banned in Chicago, though, and the experience of censorship which would continue in his next film project.
In 1930, Howard Hughes hired Hawks to direct Scarface, a gangster film loosely based on the life of Chicago mobster Al Capone. The film was completed in September 1931, but the censorship of the Hays Code prevented it from being released as Hawks and Hughes had originally intended. The two men fought, negotiated and made compromises with the Hays Office for over a year, until the film was eventually released in 1932, after such other pivotal early gangster films as The Public Enemy and Little Caesar. Scarface was the first film in which Hawks worked with screenwriter Ben Hecht, who became a close friend and collaborator for 20 years.
After filming was complete on Scarface, Hawks left Hughes to fight the legal battles and returned to First National to fulfill his contract, this time with producer Darryl F. Zanuck.
Collaborations with Seton Miller
Hawks wanted to make a film about his childhood passion: car racing. Hawks developed the script for The Crowd Roars with Seton Miller for their eighth and final collaboration. Hawks used real race car drivers in the film, including the 1930 Indianapolis 500 winner Billy Arnold. The film was released in March and became a hit.
Later in 1932, he directed Tiger Shark starring Edward G. Robinson as a tuna fisherman. In tearly films, Hawks established the prototypical “Hawksian Man,” which film critic Andrew Sarris described as “upheld by an instinctive professionalism.” Tiger Shark demonstrated Hawks’ ability to incorporate touches of humor into dramatic, tense, and even tragic story lines.
In 1933, Hawks signed a three-picture deal at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, the first of which was Today We Live in 1933. This World War I film was based on a short story by author William Faulkner. Hawks’ next two films at MGM were the boxing drama The Prizefighter and the Lady and the bio-pic Viva Villa!. Studio interference on both films led Hawks to walk out on his MGM contract without completing either film himself.
In 1934, Hawks went to Columbia Pictures to make his first screwball comedy, Twentieth Century, starring John Barrymore and Hawks’s distant cousin Carole Lombard. It was based on a stage play by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur and, along with Frank Capra’s It Happened One Night (released the same year), is considered to be the defining film of the screwball comedy genre. In 1935, Hawks made Barbary Coast with Edward G. Robinson and Miriam Hopkins. Hawks collaborated with Hecht and MacArthur on Barbary Coast and reportedly convinced them to work on the film by promising to teach them a marble game. They would switch off between working on the script and playing with marbles during work days.[46]:94 In 1936, he made the aviation adventure Ceiling Zero with James Cagney and Pat O’Brien. Also in 1936, Hawks began filming Come and Get It, starring Edward Arnold, Joel McCrea, Frances Farmer and Walter Brennan. But he was fired by Samuel Goldwyn in the middle of shooting and the film was completed by William Wyler.
In 1938, Hawks made the screwball comedy Bringing Up Baby for RKO Pictures. It starred Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn and was adapted by Dudley Nichols and Hagar Wilde.
Grant plays a near-sighted paleontologist who suffers one humiliation after another due to the lovestruck socialite played by Hepburn. Hawks’s artistic direction for Bringing Up Baby revolved around the raw natural chemistry between Grant and Hepburn. With Grant portraying the paleontologist and Hepburn as an heiress, the roles only add to the movie’s purpose of disintegrating the line between the real and the imaginary. Bringing Up Baby was a box office flop when initially released and RKO fired Hawks due to extreme losses; however, the film is now regarded as one of Hawks’s masterpieces.
Hawks followed this with 11 consecutive hits up to 1951, starting with the aviation drama Only Angels Have Wings, starring Cary Grant and made in 1939 for Columbia Pictures. It also starred Jean Arthur, Thomas Mitchell, Rita Hayworth, and Richard Barthelmess.
In 1940, Hawks returned to the screwball comedy genre with His Girl Friday, starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell. The film was an adaptation of the hit Broadway play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, which had already been made into a film in 1931.
Not forgetting the influence Jesse Lasky had on his early career, in 1941, Hawks made Sergeant York, starring Gary Cooper as a pacifist farmer who becomes a decorated World War I soldier. Hawks directed the film and cast Cooper as a favor to Lasky. This was the highest-grossing film of 1941 and won two Academy Awards (Best Actor and Best Editing), as well as earning Hawks his only nomination for Best Director.
Later that year, Hawks worked with Cooper again for Ball of Fire, which also starred Barbara Stanwyck. The film was written by Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett and is a playful take on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Cooper plays a sheltered, intellectual linguist who is writing an encyclopedia with six other scientists, and hires streetwise Stanwyck to help them with modern slang terms.
In 1941, Hawks began work on the Howard Hughes-produced (and later directed) film The Outlaw, based on the life of Billy the Kid and starring Jane Russell. Hawks completed initial shooting of the film in early 1941, but due to perfectionism and battles with the Hollywood Production Code, Hughes continued to re-shoot and re-edit the film until 1943, when it was finally released with Hawks uncredited as director.
After making the World War II film Air Force in 1943 starring John Garfield and written by Nichols, Hawks did two films with real-life lovers Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. To Have and Have Not, made in 1944, stars Bogart, Bacall and Walter Brennan and is based on a novel by Ernest Hemingway. Hawks was a close friend of Hemingway and made a bet with the author that he could make a good film out of Hemingway’s “worst book.” Hawks, William Faulkner and Jules Furthman collaborated on the script about an American fishing boat captain working out of French Martinique in the Caribbean and various situations of espionage after the Fall of France in 1940. Bogart and Bacall fell in love on the set of the film and married soon afterwards.
To Have and Have Not has been critiqued as having a “rambling, slapped-together feel” that contribute to an overall clumsy and dull movie. The film, however, has also been enjoyed for its romantic plot and has been compared to Casablanca in its feel.[52] The greatest strength of the movie has been said to come from its atmosphere and use of wit that really plays on the strengths of Bacall and helps the movie solidify the theme of beauty in perpetual opposition. Hawks reteamed with Bogart and Bacall in 1946 with The Big Sleep, based on the Philip Marlowe detective novel by Raymond Chandler The screenplay for the film also reteamed Faulkner and Furthman, in addition to Leigh Brackett.
In 1948, Hawks made Red River, an epic western reminiscent of Mutiny on the Bounty starring John Wayne and Montgomery Clift in his first film.
Later that year, Hawks remade his earlier film Ball of Fire as A Song Is Born, this time starring Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo. This version follows the same plot but pays more attention to popular jazz music and includes such jazz legends as Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Lionel Hampton, and Benny Carter playing themselves.
In 1949, Hawks reteamed with Cary Grant in the screwball comedy I Was a Male War Bride, also starring Ann Sheridan.
In 1951, Hawks produced, and directed, a science-fiction film, The Thing from Another World. He let his editor, Christian Nyby, take credit. But the kind of feeling between the male characters—the camaraderie, the group of men that has to fight off the evil—it’s all pure Hawksian.”
He followed this with the 1952 western film The Big Sky, starring Kirk Douglas.
Later in 1952, Hawks worked with Cary Grant for the fifth and final time in the screwball comedy Monkey Business, which also starred Marilyn Monroe and Ginger Rogers. Grant plays a scientist who creates a formula that increases his vitality. Film critic John Belton called the film Hawks’ “most organic comedy.”
Hawks’ third film of 1952 was a contribution to the omnibus film O. Henry’s Full House, which includes short stories by the writer O. Henry made by various directors. Hawks’ short film The Ransom of Red Chief starred Fred Allen, Oscar Levant and Jeanne Crain.
In 1953, Hawks made Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, which featured Marilyn Monroe famously singing “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend.” The film starred Monroe and Jane Russell as two gold-digging, cabaret-performer best friends that many critics argue is the only female version of his celebrated “buddy film” genre.
In 1955, Hawks shot a film atypical within the context of his other work, Land of the Pharaohs, which is a sword-and-sandal epic about ancient Egypt that stars Jack Hawkins and Joan Collins. The film was Hawks’ final collaboration with longtime friend William Faulkner before the author’s death.
In 1959, Hawks worked with John Wayne in Rio Bravo, also starring Dean Martin, Ricky Nelson, and Walter Brennan as four lawmen “defending the fort” of their local jail in which a local criminal is awaiting a trial while his family attempt to break him out. The screenplay was written by Furthman and Leigh Brackett, who had collaborated with Hawks previously on The Big Sleep.
In 1962, Hawks made Hatari!, again with John Wayne, who plays a wild animals catcher in Africa. It was also written by Leigh Brackett. Hawks’s knowledge of mechanics allowed him to built the camera-car hybrid that allowed him to film the hunting scenes in the film.
In 1964, Hawks made his final comedy, Man’s Favorite Sport?, starring Rock Hudson (Cary Grant felt he was too old for the role) and Paula Prentiss.
Hawks then returned to his childhood passion for car races with Red Line 7000 in 1965, featuring a young James Caan in his first leading role.
Hawks’ final two films were both Western remakes of Rio Bravo starring John Wayne and written by Leigh Brackett. In 1966, Hawks directed El Dorado, starring Wayne, Robert Mitchum, and Caan, which was released the following year. He then made Rio Lobo, with Wayne in 1970.
After Rio Lobo, Hawks planned a project relating to Ernest Hemingway and “Now, Mr. Gus,” a comedy about two male friends seeking oil and money. He died before these projects were completed.
Hawks died on December 26, 1977, at the age of 81, from complications arising from a fall when he tripped over his dog at his home in Palm Springs, California.