Emile de Antonio
(1919 – December 16, 1989)
was a director and producer of documentary films, usually
detailing political or social events circa 1960s - 1980s.
He was born in 1919 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He attended
Harvard with John F. Kennedy and would later go on to make
a film about Kennedy's assassination called Rush to
Judgment. After serving in the military during World War
II, de Antonio frequented the art crowd, often associating
with such Pop artists as Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg,
and Andy Warhol, in whose film Drink de Antonio appears. De
Antonio chronicled this art scene in his documentary
Painters Painting (1972).
In 1959 de Antonio developed G-String Productions in order
to distribute the Beat Generation film Pull My Daisy. It
was at this time that de Antonio discovered filmmaking. His
first film, Point of Order, a compilation film made in
1964, regards Joseph McCarthy and the Army-McCarthy
hearings.
De Antonio went on to make many politically motivated films
that attracted a substantial amount of controversy and also
tended to align himself with Marxist thought. Most, if not
all, of his films criticize aspects of American culture or
politics or reflect a certain degree of political
dissension, because of which, along with his Marxist
affiliation, the FBI documented 10,000 pages of de
Antonio's activities.
- Wikipedia