Le Chiffre wrote:... Was it Mankiewicz who proposed Hearst? I don't recall that ever being determined for sure in any Welles interviews I've read. If it wasn't ever asked of Welles, it should have been.
Well, my proposed opening scene is taking liberties with the actual genesis of
Kane in a way that
Mank does throughout. It was an attempt to show that the film would not have to follow the Kael interpretation to be dramatically successful; in fact, I believe the film would be better dramatically by acknowledging a collaboration between Mankiewicz and Welles.
I'm sure the reality of the genesis of
Kane involved a lot of back-and-forth between Welles and Mankiewicz. We know that Welles was interested in telling a story about a powerful man told from multiple perspectives, and Welles has commented on searching for a suitable model (someone with political influence, but who was not a politician). Given that Mankiewicz had been part of Hearst's circle, and had been interested in the publisher as a possible subject for a film, probably convinced Welles that a newspaper publisher would be a good fit for the approach he wanted to take and Mankiewicz (a former journalist as well) could write what he already knew. Of course, our association of Mankiewicz with Hearst exists almost exclusively because of Welles' first feature. Had
Kane never happened, would Mankiewicz's proximity to Hearst or Davies be historically noteworthy? As it is, Robert Carringer documents in "The Making of Citizen Kane" that Mankiewicz "borrowed" enough material from the Hearst biography "Imperial Hearst" that the book's author, Ferdinand Lundberg, instigated a lawsuit. Not everything Hearst-related in
Kane came from Mankiewicz's personal knowledge.
MartynH wrote:I recall Welles saying on the BBC Arena interview of 1982 that one of the first big figures suggested was Howard Hughes - presumably when the film was called American. However, Welles then said 'I would have been no good as Hughes, Cotten would have played Hughes, let's get a part (figure) I can play'
Carringer claims that Welles told him that a character in
Smiler With The Knife (the spy thriller Welles tried to develop after the collapse of
Heart of Darkness) was based on Howard Hughes, although that idea may have migrated to
American early on. Cotten claims the same thing in
F for Fake if one cares to trust that "documentary"

.