Tim Burton's Big Eyes

 

Big Eyes is director Tim Burton's newest on the life of artist Margaret Keane.

The maker of Beetlejuice, The Nightmare before Christmas, Batman, Edward Scissorhands, Ed Wood, Alice in Wonderland and Corpse Bride is a fervent collector of Margaret Keane's artworks of big eyed children, women and animals. The sad children are a result of Margaret's miserable childhood days, when she started painting.

In 1955 Margaret met Walter Keane at an exhibition in San Francisco. At that time Walter painted Parisian street scenes. They soon got married. When the duo held a show at a local jazz club, Walter claimed he had painted Margaret's popular Big Eyes and made up a story that they referred to the orphans he had seen after World War II.

Her deranged, controlling, violent husband earned a fortune with the oeuvre whilst Margaret was cooped up in the house, keeping her mouth shut and taking care of the children.

After their divorce in 1965 the fraudulence was finally revealed. In 1970 Margaret told her story to a journalist. In 1986 Margaret took the case to court, where they both had to paint.

Walter died in 2000. Margaret Keane, aged eighty seven, now depicts happy, bright coloured subjects.

In the making are Tim Burton's Peregrine's Home for Peculiars and the follow up of Beetlejuice.
 

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