Grand Prix Director Frankenheimer Dies

Famed Hollywood director John Frankenheimer passed away on July 6 from complications arising from a stroke. He was 72-years old.

Frankenheimer was best known to the movie-going public for his award-winning films, โ€œThe Manchurian Candidateโ€ and โ€œThe Birdman of Alcatraz.โ€ However, in the racing world, Frankenheimer has always been remembered and revered for creating what many believe to be one of the best racing motion pictures ever produced, โ€œGrand Prix,โ€ staring James Garner, Yves Montand, Toshiro Mifune and Eva Marie Saint, as well as a host of โ€™60s Formula One racing legends. Filmed on location during the 1965 Formula One season, โ€œGrand Prixโ€ captured motor racing like no other movie before it, using spectacular in-car footage which helped earn the movie Oscars for Best Film Editing, Sound and Sound Effects.

In addition to film, Frankenheimer also studied cooking at Franceโ€™s famed Cordon Bleu and volunteered his time as Director of Campaign Spots for John F. Kennedyโ€™s presidential campaign. In recent yearโ€™s Frankenheimer won a long-standing battle with alcohol addiction and returned to directing. Not only did he direct a number of films for cable, but in his 1998 action-thriller โ€œRonin,โ€ Frankenheimer drew on his experiences with โ€œGrand Prixโ€ to create one of the greatest car chase sequences ever recorded on film. Frankenheimerโ€™s death is both a loss to the film and motorsports communities.

Submitted by Casey Annis