(1875–1948) film director; born in La Grange, Ky. The son of a Confederate cavalry hero, he grew up in poverty in Louisville, Ky., and in 1897 began a stage career. He wrote poetry and dramas, then found work with the Edison film company in New York, where he starred in a short film, Rescued from an Eagle's Nest (1907). He then became a writer and actor at Biograph; his first directorial effort was The Adventures of Dollie (1908). By 1909 he was the general director of Biograph. While there he developed undercutting, crosscutting, parallel action, mobile cameras, close-ups, and other techniques now common in filmmaking. He also assembled a "stock company" that was to include Mary Pickford, the Gish Sisters, and others. Feeling restricted, he left Biograph in 1913 to join Reliance-Majestic, where he began work on The Birth of a Nation (1915). Still regarded as one of the most influential movies ever made, it was also criticized for its bias in favor of the South in the Civil War. Griffith's next work was the epic Intolerance (1916), four separate stories about inhumanity throughout history. A founder of United Artists (1919), he continued directing until 1931 but nothing went right after 1924. Although he received a special Academy Award in 1935, he died alone and almost forgotten.
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