NEW YORK, NY.- Denis OBrien, who with former Beatle George Harrison founded a production company that made several audacious hit movies, beginning with Monty Pythons Life of Brian in 1979, before the partnership and the companys fortunes soured, died Friday in Swindon, west of London. He was 80.
His daughter Kristen said the death, in a hospital, was caused by intra-abdominal sepsis.
OBrien became Harrisons business manager in 1973, hired to bring some stability to Harrisons financial affairs, which had been muddled since the Beatles broke up four years earlier. And when Harrisons friend Eric Idle, of the Monty Python comedy troupe, went to Harrison with a problem in 1979, it was OBrien who nudged Harrison into producing movies.
Monty Python had begun work on a follow-up to its 1975 hit, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The new movie was a satire about a man who is mistaken for the Messiah. Idles problem was that EMI, an entertainment conglomerate that had been financing the new movie, had gotten cold feet and pulled out just as production was gearing up. He asked if Harrison could help financially, and Harrison in turn consulted OBrien.
Denis called me back a few days later and said, OK, I think I know how to do it: Well be the producers, Harrison told The Advertiser of Australia in 1986. He was laughing because he knew that my favorite movie was The Producers the Mel Brooks comedy which Id watched over and over.
Harrison, putting up as collateral his estate in Henley-on-Thames, England, provided some $4 million to make Monty Pythons Life of Brian. It was the first release of Handmade Films, the production company that he and OBrien created. As Idle told the story, Harrison had a simple reason for financing the film: He wanted to see the movie.
At $4 million, this is still the most anyone has ever paid for a movie ticket, Idle wrote in an essay in the Los Angeles Times in 2004.
In his telling, OBrien had actually structured the project assuming that the film would lose money and that it could be a tax write-off; instead, it became a hit and a beloved entry in the annals of comedy films. Time Out recently ranked it No. 3 on its list of the 100 greatest comedy movies of all time, trailing only Airplane! and This Is Spinal Tap.
With Brian, Handmade Films was off on a run of quirky critical and often financial successes, including The Long Good Friday (1980), a crime drama with Bob Hoskins and Helen Mirren; Time Bandits (1981), directed by Terry Gilliam of the Python troupe and featuring other Pythons; the noir drama Mona Lisa (1986), another vehicle for Hoskins; and the comedy Withnail & I, which became a sort of cult classic and was ranked No. 7 on that Time Out list.
OBrien and Harrison were executive producers on these and numerous other Handmade films, and their early successes were credited with helping to revive the moribund British film industry. They shared a taste for offbeat scripts.
We tend to do movies that come to us because no one else wants to make them, Harrison told Newsweek in 1987.
That was certainly the case with Time Bandits, a hard-to-categorize movie about time-traveling dwarfs that they had trouble getting distributed, securing a deal with independent Avco Embassy Pictures only after the major studio distributors had declined.
There were any number of majors who walked out of the screenings, OBrien told the Los Angeles Times in November 1981, just after the film had enjoyed a robust opening weekend.
But Handmades Midas touch didnt last. Some of its movies were costly bombs, most famously Shanghai Surprise (1986), a widely panned adventure yarn that starred Madonna and Sean Penn.
By the 1990s, the company was in financial trouble, and Harrison soon turned on his longtime partner, accusing him in a 1995 lawsuit of mishandling his money. A court later awarded Harrison more than $11 million. When OBrien sought to declare bankruptcy, Harrison tried to block that declaration.
In 2001, when Harrison, by then ill with cancer, did not show up to give a deposition in that court challenge, a bankruptcy judge dismissed the case. Harrison died later that year at 58.
In the years since, OBrien took most of the criticism for the collapse of Handmade, which was sold in 1994 to a Canadian concern. In a rare interview, with the Belleville News-Democrat of Illinois in 1996, OBrien, who lived in the St. Louis area at the time, gave his own interpretation.
As long as we were successful, we had a wonderful relationship, he said of Harrison. The money is not the important aspect here. It wouldnt make any difference if it were a dollar or a million dollars. Its George not knowing how to accept failure or take responsibility for it.
O'Brien's daughter Kristen used to visit Harrisons estate with her father as a child, playing in the elaborate gardens that were Harrisons pride and joy. The falling-out, she said by email, was painful for her father.
I know he felt just as hurt and betrayed as I am sure Harrison felt, she said.
Denis James OBrien was born Sept. 12, 1941, in St. Louis. His father, Albert, worked for Ralston Purina, where he rose to president; his mother, Ruth (Foster) OBrien, was office manager for an interior-decorator shop as well as a homemaker.
OBrien played basketball at Webster Groves High School, near St. Louis, before earning a bachelors degree at Northwestern University and a law degree at Washington University in St. Louis.
He worked with the Paris law firm Coudert Frères from 1967 to 1969, then held finance positions at N.M. Rothschild & Sons and the EuroAtlantic Group, working out of London.
In 1971, he began advising comic actor Peter Sellers, who recommended OBrien to Harrison, a friend.
Harrison was known to enjoy Pythonesque humor, but OBrien also had a sense of impishness. Michael Palin, one of the Pythons, recalled by email that OBrien used to call him up and pretend to be Sellers. Funny accents were a favorite gag Kristen OBrien said that when she or her sister, Laura, would call their father, they would sometimes find themselves speaking to Fritz the German.
On Life of Brian, OBrien and Harrison let the Pythons do the filmmaking, but OBrien later became more involved in the creative side of movies he was financing. His detractors said this had contributed to the companys downfall; however, screenwriter Stephen Rivele (Ali, Nixon), who with his writing partner, Chris Wilkinson, wrote seven scripts for Handmade in its later years (although none were produced), said his experience with OBrien had been positive.
On every draft, he gave careful, handwritten notes, which were always as perceptive as they were polite, Rivele said by email. He had very keen insights and original ideas which invariably made the scripts better.
OBrien moved back to England in 2008 after living near St. Louis for a time. At his death, he lived in Little Somerford. He was married four times, most recently to Phyllida Riddell OBrien, who died in 2019. In addition to his daughters who are from his first marriage, to Karen Lazarus he is survived by a brother, Douglas.
Kristen OBrien said that in the past year, her father had been showing signs of dementia, which seemed to alter his memory of his relationship with Harrison.
He seemed to have forgotten there was ever a falling-out, she said, and in this last year, he loved to hear Georges music, and it would transport him back to some really good times in his life. He had nothing but good memories left.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.