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Jack Maxsted
Jack Maxsted
from Wikipedia

Albert John Maxsted (30 April 1916 – September 2001) was an English art director. He won an Academy Award in the category Best Art Direction for the film Nicholas and Alexandra.[1][2]

Key Information

Selected filmography

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Personal life

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Maxsted married Edna M Barton in 1939.[3]

References

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from Grokipedia
Jack Maxsted was a British art director known for his contributions to film production design in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly on large-scale and high-profile productions, and for sharing the Academy Award for Best Art Direction for the 1971 film Nicholas and Alexandra. His career spanned several decades, beginning in the art department on films in the 1950s before he transitioned to full art director credits starting in the early 1960s. Maxsted worked on notable titles including the James Bond adventure Diamonds Are Forever (1971), the Ray Harryhausen fantasy Jason and the Argonauts (1963), the aerial combat epic Battle of Britain (1969), and the prison escape drama Papillon (1973), among others. Born on 30 April 1916 in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, England, he continued his work through the late 1970s and died in September 2001 in Bath, Somerset, England.

Early life

Birth and background

Jack Maxsted was born on 30 April 1916 in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, England. No verified details about his family background, childhood, or early influences are available from primary sources.

Career

Early art department roles

Jack Maxsted began his career in the British film industry in the art department during the early 1950s, starting with uncredited supporting roles that focused on draughting and set preparation. He contributed as a draughtsman (uncredited) on films such as Penny Princess (1952), Made in Heaven (1952), and Desperate Moment (1953). In these positions, he assisted in creating detailed technical drawings and plans for film sets, gaining essential hands-on experience in the pre-production phase of production design. By the mid-1950s, Maxsted progressed to chief draughtsman (uncredited) on Simon and Laura (1955) and Doctor at Sea (1955). In these roles, he oversaw draughting teams and coordinated more complex set documentation, building expertise in translating art direction concepts into practical construction blueprints. During the 1950s, Maxsted also began receiving credited art director roles on several films, including The Million Pound Note (1954, also known as Man with a Million), The Purple Plain (1954), Tiger in the Smoke (1956), Dangerous Exile (1957), Rooney (1958), and others through 1959. These early credited positions marked his entry into leading art direction responsibilities on feature films. In the early 1960s, Maxsted took on assistant art director positions on larger-scale productions, including Sword of Lancelot (1963), Becket (1964), Guns at Batasi (1964, uncredited), Kaleidoscope (1966), The Quiller Memorandum (1966, as associate art director), and Fathom (1967). These roles supported lead art directors and honed his skills in set supervision and collaboration on high-profile projects.

Transition to art director

Jack Maxsted continued in credited art director roles throughout the 1960s and beyond, building on his earlier experience. His credits in this period include Man in the Moon (1960), The Impersonator (1961), and one episode of the television series Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1961. In 1963, he served as art director on the fantasy adventure Jason and the Argonauts. Some credits appear under the alternate spelling "Jack Maxted".

1960s projects

During the 1960s, Jack Maxsted worked as art director on several notable feature films. He served as one of the art directors on the 1963 fantasy adventure Jason and the Argonauts, distinguished by its elaborate sets and integration with Ray Harryhausen's stop-motion effects. Later in the decade, Maxsted was credited as art director on the 1969 war epic Battle of Britain, which recreated large-scale aerial sequences and period environments for the historical drama. These high-profile projects built toward further prominent assignments in the following decade.

1970s projects

In the 1970s, Jack Maxsted continued his career as an art director, taking on credits across a diverse range of international and Hollywood productions. He began the decade with The Adventurers (1970), where he was credited as Jack Maxted. In 1971, Maxsted worked as art director on the adventure thriller When Eight Bells Toll, the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever, and Nicholas and Alexandra. Maxsted's work in the early 1970s also included Papillon (1973), an adaptation of Henri Charrière's memoir directed by Franklin J. Schaffner. He followed this with credits on the comedy That Lucky Touch (1975) and Robert Altman's satirical Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson (1976). Later in the decade, Maxsted served as art director on the underwater adventure The Deep (1977), the fantasy film Warlords of the Deep (1978), and Arabian Adventure (1979). These projects reflected his ongoing involvement in large-scale productions spanning thrillers, historical dramas, satires, and fantasy adventures.

Academy Award win

Jack Maxsted won the Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration for his work on Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) at the 44th Academy Awards held on April 10, 1972, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. He shared the award with art directors John Box, Ernest Archer, and Gil Parrondo, along with set decorator Vernon Dixon. The art direction team was not present at the ceremony to accept the award, which was instead received by the film's director, Franklin J. Schaffner. In his brief acceptance remarks, Schaffner noted, "Those five gentlemen are so enormously talented it's a shame that they cannot be here to pick up this award. For my colleagues, for my friends, this is terrific. Thank you." Nicholas and Alexandra received six nominations overall at the 44th Academy Awards and won two Oscars, including this one for art direction.

Personal life

Marriage

Jack Maxsted married Edna M. Barton in 1939. No further details about the marriage or any children are documented in available sources.

Death

Death

Jack Maxsted died in September 2001 in Bath, Somerset, England, at the age of 85. His marriage lasted until his death.
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