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Showing posts with label Paul Newman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Newman. Show all posts

Monday, 4 February 2013

Dennis Hopper: 1936-2010

Posted on 13:20 by Ratan
Dennis Hopper: actor, artist, filmmaker, Hollywood survivor.

Just days after remembering the loss of Sydney Pollack two years ago, we awaken to mourn the loss of another Hollywood icon, Dennis Hopper, less than two weeks after his 74th birthday. Hopper had been on my short list of "dream interviews" during my tenure at Venice Magazine. When I was lucky enough to finally sit down with him in November of 2008, I was thrilled, and didn't know quite what to expect.

What I found while smoking cigars with Hopper in his Venice home-studio, was a thoughtful man with a gentle demeanor, who spoke in measured tones and loved telling stories. Gone was the wild-eyed "enfant terrible" that Hopper had made his name playing, and sometimes living. What I saw instead was a man who seemed to be at peace with himself and his life, who loved his children, art, film and new ideas. Sometimes when you have seen life at its ugliest, as Hopper surely had, you're able to come out the other side and drink in its beauty. I hope this was true.

Rest in peace, and thanks for it all.


DENNIS HOPPER IS RIDING EASY
By
Alex Simon


The Hollywood landscape is littered with tragedies, broken promise and self-destruction. Many promising artists stumble once and never recover from that initial fall. In the history of American film, there has never been a phoenix-like story of survival and rebirth quite like that of Dennis Hopper, who has gone from Warner Bros. contract player in his late teens, to Hollywood outcast, to renowned artist, photographer and art collector, to the man who brought independent cinema into the mainstream with Easy Rider, to being outcast again and nearly destroyed during a period of heavy drug and alcohol abuse. There are single incidents of self-destruction in Dennis Hopper’s life that most human beings could never walk away from in one piece, and by his own admission, Hopper repeated these incidents dozens of times over decades, until getting sober for good in 1985.

Hopper has also had a Zelig-like ability to have been surrounded by some of the film, art and political world’s most significant players: James Dean, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Martin Luther King, Marlon Brando, John Wayne, Miles Davis, and dozens of other legendary names that could fill every page of this blog and turn it into a history book. Few Hollywood players have led as rich, and varied a life as that of Dennis Lee Hopper, who was born May 17, 1936 in Dodge City, Kansas. Hopper has appeared in 200 films and television productions since 1955, with 2008 showcasing “Dennis the Menace,” as he was nicknamed in his enfant terrible days, in no less than eight feature films, the best being Isabel Coixet’s superb Elegy, with Hopper in a masterful turn as Sir Ben Kingsley’s best friend and confidant, and the lead in the Starz network’s first original series, Crash, based on Paul Haggis’ Oscar-winning film, telling a tableaux of tales about the disparate denizens of Los Angeles. Hopper scores big again with his manic portrait of a legendary record producer who seems to be constantly teetering on the precipice of madness or epiphany.

A long-time Venice resident, Dennis Hopper has been named one of the top 100 collectors of modern art in the world, and was recently honored by the Cinematheque Francais in Paris with a retrospective of his work. Mr. Hopper sat down with Venice Senior Editor Alex Simon recently over a cigar, and discussed his life as Hollywood’s greatest survivor. Read on…

You’ve had a busy year. Let’s start by talking about Crash.
Dennis Hopper: I had just gotten back from the Cannes Film Festival, and my agent called and asked if I’d like to do a TV series. They said it was an incredible part and based on the film Crash, which won all the Academy Awards. The kicker was I had two days to decide! (laughs) But I’m glad I did it. It’s been a lot of fun and we’re working very hard: sometimes working sixteen hour days, but nobody’s complaining because the scripts are so good. We have no restrictions in terms of what we can say or do, and in many ways we have more freedom than we would on film, because we had a commitment for thirteen episodes. Then two days after I shot the first episode, I was in France where the cinematheque in Paris had spent three and a half years working on a retrospective of my work and some of my art collection and took the fifth floor of the Frank Gehry building, where the cinematheque is located and built this virtual reality installation with twenty different screens that showed all the films I’d made, commercials I’d done, experimental films I’d made with Andy Warhol and Bruce Conner. It covered my entire career up till now, and it was really amazing.

Every time I’ve been in Paris, Easy Rider seems to be playing somewhere.
Yeah, it played in one theater on the Left Bank for twenty years. It was a very narrow, long little theater. I kept seeing this woman who grew older and older over the years at all these film festivals. She’d walk up to me and say “It’s still playing!” (laughs) I felt like a jazz musician in France, when jazz went sour in the States, the Europeans all sort of took over the jazz movement. I guess if you’re a big enough failure, they really take you to heart! (laughs)


Hopper as Billy in Easy Rider.

You really do have the greatest Hollywood survival story, ever.
Yeah, and this is not a place where you want to try and survive. (laughs)

Well, one could argue that Hollywood is a living metaphor for social Darwinism at its most twisted.
True, very true.

Watching your character in the first episode of Crash, I thought to myself ‘So Frank Booth survived the gunshot to the head in Blue Velvet and became a record producer.’
(laughs) Yeah, right!

Who else would call someone an “eyeless fuck” but Frank Booth?
(laughs) Yeah, yeah. My first conversation with my penis in the limo with the young woman driver, it’s pretty hairy. When I hire the new driver, who’s black, and say “Gorillas in the mist, that’s what the LAPD call you,” he has no stop switch, my character. He says everything and insults everybody. He just goes for it.

Which at one time could have described you.
Yeah, probably. I guess so. It was so long ago now, I can’t remember. (laughs) Phil Spector and I had an office together for ten years, and people have asked me if I’m doing Phil Spector in this and I said ‘No. I’m doing me!’ (laughs) The office was right up on Sunset before you go into Beverly Hills. David Geffen was in there for a while, too.

I know you’ve done TV work before, going back to its infancy in the 1950s. How is working in TV a different process from doing a film, or is it?
Well, you have more time to develop a character, first of all. Instead of an hour and a half, you have thirteen hours, in this instance. Doing regular television you have lots of restrictions, but doing cable you have no restrictions and can push the envelope a lot farther. That said, you have more time to do a feature than you do a television series itself, because we’re constantly under the gun, working twice a week with sixteen hour days. I have so much dialogue, though. I have all these speeches to memorize which really, if you look at them, mean nothing at all! (laughs) They’re just these stream-of-consciousness rants. I’m like a little kid sitting in the corner memorizing this stuff all day and all night. We’re shooting it all in Albuquerque because (Governor) Bill Richardson is giving us such a good deal to film there. There’s probably more movies being shot in New Mexico than anywhere else in the States. It’s a drag because I have to leave my family, but the work is good.

Hopper and Sir Ben Kingsley in Isabel Coixet's Elegy.

You also have a terrific part in one of the year’s best films, Isabel Coixet’s Elegy.
That’s a brilliant film. I hope they get some awards so they’ll mass distribute it. Penelope Cruz gives one of the best female performances I’ve ever seen. I’m very proud to have been part of that.

How was working with Sir Ben Kingsley?
Sir Ben is great, man. All my scenes were with him, really. He’s so comfortable to be with. He’s such a good actor, you could just play moment-to-moment reality with him all day long. It’s a pleasure to work with an actor who’s that good. I had a ball with him, and he’s very funny. He just gives and never pushes and is really there for you, has a great rhythm.

Let’s start at the beginning: you were born in Kansas.
Dodge City, Kansas, 1936, which makes me seventy-two years-old. A guy who never thought he’d live to be thirty, who had a real shock when he made it to thirty-one.

Is there a secret to being a survivor? Does it come down to genetics, to luck, to having a specific outlook?
I think it’s probably a combination of all three. I had such a bad drinking problem, and it took a lot to get me sober.

And you knew from a young age that you liked mind-altering experiences. I remember hearing you tell a story about snorting gasoline from your grandfather’s truck…
Yeah, and I looked up at the clouds and saw clowns, until I ODed on the fumes and smashed up his truck with a baseball bat, thinking it was a monster, smashing out the lights. (laughs) I was about seven. (laughs) Not good, but that was the end of my gas-sniffing.

What did your parents do?
My father served in the OSS during World War II and came back and went to work for the railway mail. So we moved from Dodge City when I was nine, and moved to Kansas City, where I lived until I was thirteen, then we moved to San Diego. My father ended up managing the San Diego post office, and my mother, who had managed one of the largest outdoor swimming pools in the country—she was the backstroke champion of Kansas, and was on her way to the Olympics when she became pregnant with me—and then she managed a swimming pool in a suburb of San Diego called El Cajon. I started acting at The Old Globe Theater in San Diego when I was thirteen.

When did you know you were an actor?
I wanted to be an actor from the time I saw my first films, which I think were singing cowboy pictures like Roy Rogers.

What else do you remember about that time?
It was the dustbowl, so I had to wear a gas mask to school five days a week, and my grandmother would open the door and five inches of dust would blow inside. There were bread lines and soup lines, and it was really bad. The whole middle of the country had blown away. My grandmother used to fill her apron full of eggs and we’d go into town. She’d sell the eggs and we’d go to the movies, while my grandfather would be out working on his wheat farm. I got my first Sheep Dog from the Clutters, the family that was murdered years later that Capote wrote about in “In Cold Blood.” When I was eighteen years-old I came to Los Angeles, went under contract to Warner Bros. and did Rebel Without a Cause, my second movie.

Hopper, second from left, in Rebel Without a Cause.

I know both Nicholas Ray and James Dean were profound influences on you.
Yeah, Dean made a real impression on me. I thought I was the best young actor around, and then I saw him. I’d never seen anybody improvise before. I’d always been doing Shakespeare and other plays where everything was a preconceived idea, preconceived gestures, how I said a line…and here he was differently every scene, adding things to the script. It was really confusing to me, initially. I grabbed him one night, and said ‘What are you doing?’ And we talked for a while, and I asked ‘Should I go back and study with (Lee) Strasberg?’ He said “No, no, no. Just start doing things, but don’t show them. Don’t indicate, or presuppose what you’re going to do. Live in moment-to-moment reality. Instead of playing drinking your coffee, just drink your coffee. Just smoke your cigar, don’t play smoking the cigar. You’ll find the simplest things become very difficult the first time you get onstage or in front of the camera, but eventually you’ll get through all that. Just live in the moment.” So that was the beginning of it. We did Giant together next, and he used to watch me on that picture and critique me afterward. When his character got older, he started asking me to watch him in those scenes and to tell him if I thought he seemed old. That was basically our relationship. We weren’t great buddies who went out drinking or anything like that. He was five years older than me. That was quite an age difference at that point. Also, we thought of him as a kid because he’d done Rebel, but in point of fact, he was older than Elizabeth Taylor, who was considered an “adult.”

Didn’t he also encourage you to pursue photography?
No, but he saw me taking pictures and said “If you’re going to take pictures, don’t crop them.” I said ‘Why not?’ He said “Because you’re probably going to want to direct films someday, and you can’t crop film, so learn how to frame full-frame, full negative.” So from that day on, I didn’t crop my photographs.

Had Dean lived, would he have survived the ‘60s?
Oh yeah, I mean he was…first of all, Paul Newman, who was a good friend of mine and a great man, had made a film called The Silver Chalice which Paul took out an ad apologizing for, because it was so terrible, the two parts that made Paul a star: Somebody Up There Likes Me and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, had both been cast with James Dean before he died.

Do you know the book “Suspects” by the film critic and historian David Thomson?
No.

He takes famous movie characters and tells you what happened to them after the credits rolled. He did a similar piece on what happened after James Dean “survived” his car crash, with one of the punch lines being that Paul Newman kept losing parts to him and eventually moved back to Cleveland, where he became a successful car dealer.
(laughs) That’s so cool! Wow…

What are some of your memories of Mr. Newman?
Well, I’d been friends with Paul since I was eighteen years old. When they lived out here in California, he and Joanne (Woodward), I’d be at their house a couple times a week, then when they moved back East, we lost touch for a little while, but there was a five year period where I was with them every week. He was a terrific guy, very generous with all his charity work, and just had a huge heart, from day one. He was one of the most unselfish people I’ve ever known.

Hopper, bottom left, with Paul Newman, George Kennedy, Harry Dean Stanton, and many other actors who would go onto fame in the egg-eating sequence of Cool Hand Luke.

The two of you were in Cool Hand Luke which, like Rebel, had a who’s-who of young talent that went onto bigger things.
Stuart Rosenberg directed that, his first feature, and he’d had us all in various television shows he’d directed for years. I’d starred in about five different shows he’d directed. I don’t think I had one line of dialogue in that whole picture. I had some interesting physical business I did. Babalugats was the character’s name. I just sort of mumbled a lot. (laughs)

What was the atmosphere like on the set? I’ve heard that you all became pretty tight.
We did. We shot it all up in Stockton, California. We wore our chains and prison clothes all night. We’d go to sleep in this motel with our chains on, go into the restaurant and this little nightclub there, and we’d all be in our chains. (laughs) If a lady wanted to dance with a “prisoner” she could. (laughs) It was a fun shoot. Rosenberg was always fun to work with.

Director Nicholas Ray confers with James Dean on the set of Rebel Without a Cause.

And back to Rebel. What about Nicholas Ray?
Well Nick and I had a long, long relationship. He came and lived with me for a while. He showed up at the Cannes Film Festival when I was showing Easy Rider and asked to borrow $500, which I didn’t have at the time. He said “C’mon, you can get $500.” I said “I’ve been sleeping on the floor of a borrowed pool house for the last year editing this movie, being paid $140 dollars a month. I don’t have any money.” He said “Well go to (Bert) Schneider and ask for the money.” So I went to Schneider and borrowed the money and gave it to Nick, who came back an hour later and said “I need another 500.” I said ‘What you talking about?’ He said “I lost it in the casino across the street.” So he ended up living at my house in Taos, New Mexico for about six months, until I got him a job teaching. He ran up a phone bill that was unbelievable, looking for Howard Hughes to convince him to back his next movie. But during Rebel, Nick was very open to what were then, in the ‘50s, very new techniques of acting.

You became one of the first collectors of pop art. When did you first discover Warhol, Lichtenstein, Ruscha and the pop art movement?
I met a lot of the key figures at a place called Stone Brothers Printers, which was a place where they made mailers and did a magazine called Semina, which Wallace Berman put out. There was an old Chinese man named Mr. Chang who would dress in a Confederate General’s uniform and perform Shakespeare, very badly, in a heavy Chinese accent out on Hollywood Boulevard, and would put his hat out. James Dean was a big fan of this guy, and would throw quarters at him. (laughs) He was having a poetry reading at Stone Brothers, so we went there, and that night I met Walter Hopps and later he and Ed Kienholz started The Ferus Gallery on La Cienega, which is where Andy Warhol had his first show, and he then went to the Pasadena Museum where he gave Marcel Duchamp his first retrospective in 1963. So, in 1962 everybody was talking about “the return to reality.” I was a third generation abstract expressionist, which we all were, really. We were looking at a lot of the Bay Area painters, but really felt that they were just rehashing a lot of the old stuff, it wasn’t a return to reality. It was nothing new. I walked into the Ferus Gallery one day, and Irving Blum, who was running the gallery said “Dennis, I want to show you something.” He showed me two slides, one of which was of a soup can, and the other was a cartoon. It was Andy and Roy Lichtenstein. I went crazy, started jumping up and down and said ‘That’s it! That’s it!’ Irving said “That’s what?” I said ‘That’s the return to reality!’ Irving said “What are you doing tomorrow?” So we went to New York the next day, went to Andy Warhol’s studio, and met Roy Lichtenstein, Jasper Johns, Rauschenberg, Rosenquist, I saw the whole thing. That was it. I bought a Roy Lichtenstein called “Sinking Sun” for $1100, which I later lost in a divorce. A year and a half ago it sold for $17,870,000. I bought one of Andy’s soup cans out here and I’ve been collecting since. That was a very exciting time in Los Angeles, in the early ‘60s, and that’s when I had my first shows.

Andy Warhol's 1971 portrait of Hopper.

It’s interesting, because I think most people view pop art as an East Coast movement, not that it was born here.
Yeah, and all the East Coast guys came out here for the Duchamp retrospective. We were all so backward; we had a great thing to fight against: around 1965, the Los Angeles County Museum, one of the curators bought a Jackson Pollock. The board of directors got together and were furious, and refused to show it in the main museum, calling it “Communist propaganda.”

Where the hell did they get that?
Who knows? That’s how backward we were! Then Kienholtz did “Backseat Dodge” which was this sculpture made out of wire, of two people that looked like they might be making it in the back seat, and they closed down the whole L.A. County Museum because of this. Around the same time, the LAPD came in and busted Wallace Berman’s show at The Ferus Gallery and destroyed all his pieces out in the alley because he had a nude picture of his wife on display. But it was a great thing if you were an artist to be sort of underground.

Hopper's 1961 photograph "Double Standard."

When you paint a picture, or shoot a photograph, is it a different process from when you act, or are you tapping into the same vein?
I think they’re all different disciplines, but working with Strasberg, we worked with our senses, and brought back emotional recall and so forth. So I think you work with the same instrument, and just apply it to different disciplines. I was born in Dodge City, Kansas and am really just a middle class farm boy at heart. I really thought acting, painting, music, writing were all part of being an artist. I never thought of them as being separate. I could never play music, but I’d always loved music, and I tried to apply that. Easy Rider was the first film to use “found” music that was popular at the time. Prior to that, most movies were scored with an orchestra. Colors was the first million-selling rap album, and I produced Miles Davis’ last album for The Hot Spot. When I went under contract to Warner Bros., it allowed me to have a cultural life, instead of having to get a “normal” job bussing tables, or putting on a suit and tie and going into the office. I just never stopped painting, taking photographs, writing. There was no pressure to “put that childish stuff away.” It allowed me to continue to be a child.

Hopper with then-wife, actress Daria Halprin, in Taos, circa 1971.

You had a seminal experience with the director Henry Hathaway on a picture called From Hell to Texas.
(laughs) Yeah, that was in 1958, with Don Murray, Diane Varsi and Chill Wills. I got into a lot of trouble on that. I was loaned out from Warner Bros. to Fox, and I didn’t want to do the part, but Hathaway kept insisting. We had the most wonderful dinners, just a delightful, wonderful guy at dinner, and a screaming, yelling maniac on the set. (laughs) But I ended up working for him more than any other director, did three films for him by the end.

Director Henry Hathaway, Hopper's nemesis and reluctant mentor.

But he was the antithesis of what you responded to: an old-school director who carried a riding crop.
Yeah, yeah, and he’d tell you exactly where to move, how to walk, how to talk. He’d give you line readings. I was now trying to “live in the moment” and doing things without preconceived ideas, and I walked off the picture three times on location. He’d beg me to come back, and we’d have a wonderful dinner where he’d be utterly charming and I’d say ‘Mr. Hathaway, tomorrow I’d like to try the scene this way.” And he’d say “Sure, sure kid. Whatever you say.” And the next day on the set, he’d be screaming and yelling again, and I’d say ‘Mr. Hathaway, last night at dinner, you said I could try this.’ He’d scream “That was just dinner talk, kid, dinner talk! We’re makin’ a movie here, now get the fuck over there and hit your mark and say your lines like I tell ya!” (laughs) If you really wanted to drive him crazy, you’d put a paper cup in the scene: “Paper cup in a fuckin’ western! They didn’t have fuckin’ paper cups in the old west, goddammit!” So the last day on the picture, I came on the set at 20th Century Fox, and he said “Hey, good morning. See that over there? Know what those are?” I said ‘Well, those are stacks of film cans, Henry.’ He said “That’s right. I’ve got enough film there to shoot for four and a half months. Did you know that I owned 40% of 20th Century Fox?” ‘No, I didn’t know that, Henry.’ “Well, I do. See that over there?” ‘Yeah, those are sleeping bags.’ “That’s right. We’re gonna do this scene till you do it my way,” and it was a ten line scene, “and we’ll send out for lunch, for dinner, we’ll sleep here for four and a half months, then we’ll send out for more!” So we started about eight o’clock in the morning. Around eleven at night, after 85 takes, I finally cracked, and said ‘Okay, tell me what you want to do.’ I did it, then I walked out. It wasn’t like somebody sent a black ball around after that, but word got around that I wasn’t somebody you wanted to work with. Soon after that, I was dropped from my contract at Warner Bros.. I went back to New York and I studied with Strasberg for five years. I didn’t have another major role in a studio picture for nearly ten years, until Hathaway hired me again for The Sons of Katie Elder in ’65.

Around the same time, you cut your teeth directing for Roger Corman, directing second unit on The Trip. What was it like stepping behind the camera for the first time?
Well, Roger was the kind of guy who wouldn’t give us any money, but would let us take cameras and equipment out on the weekends and shoot. Jack Nicholson had written the screenplay for that picture, and it was a wonderful screenplay. The stuff on Sunset Boulevard, and the acid trip and the stuff in the desert was all stuff that I shot, because we didn’t feel that Roger would have the inclination to shoot that stuff, so we did it all on weekends.

You got to work with some of the great directors throughout your career, from day one. Who are some of your greatest influences behind the camera?
I’d say George Stevens, and Henry Hathaway, strangely enough. (laughs) Even though I fought with him a lot, he had a great leanness to his work. Nick Ray, on Rebel, was a big influence, just watching him allow Dean to do what he did on that film. I’ve worked with so many top directors, John Sturges was another great one. You learn something from everyone, even if they’re terrible directors. A lot of directing is really like being a floor manager of a department store, where you’re just managing all these different divisions, and time is your worst enemy.

I heard that during the filming of True Grit that John Wayne chased you around Paramount with a loaded gun?
(laughs) No, that’s not quite how it happened. He used to arrive on the lot via helicopter from his mine sweeper that he had moored in Newport Beach. He’d have a .45 strapped on his side, wearing army fatigues, and that’s the way he’d arrive to work every day. This one day he arrived, and he wanted to know where “that Pinko Hopper was hiding.” I was actually in Glen Campbell’s trailer, hiding from him. He was screaming “My daughter was out at UCLA last night and heard (Black Panther) Eldridge Cleaver cussing, and I know he must be a friend of that Pinko Hopper! Where is he? I want to talk to him!” So he wasn’t literally running around with a gun looking for me. He was walking around with a gun at his hip, but I think he wanted to have a political discussion, as opposed to committing actual manslaughter! (laughs) Anyway, nothing ever came of it. That was just Duke.

The legendary opening sequence of Easy Rider. Let’s talk about how Easy Rider was born. Peter Fonda and I were doing motorcycle movies: I did one called The Glory Stompers and Peter did one called The Wild Angels. Jack Nicholson did one called Hell’s Angels on Wheels, all at American International Pictures. Peter had read I thing I wrote with Stewart Stern called The Last Movie, and I’d wanted to make it as my first film. Peter loved it and went around trying to raise money to make it, but wasn’t successful. We’d promised each other that if we were going to do a movie, that it wasn’t going to be a motorcycle movie. So we wrote a screenplay together with a standup comic named Don Sherman called The Yin and the Yang, a comedy, and we couldn’t find financing for that, either. Around three o’clock in the morning, Peter called me. He was up in Toronto promoting The Trip at the film festival up there. So Peter says that he’s just talked with James Nicholson, no relation to Jack, and Sam Arkoff, who ran AIP, and I told them this idea for a movie: these two guys sell a bunch of marijuana in Mexico, then buy these two beautiful, gleaming bikes and ride cross-country to New Orleans for Mardi Gras, where they have a great time, then they go into Florida to retire, and are shot by a couple of duck hunters. Peter says “They said we could both act in it, and you could direct. What do you think?” (laughs) I said ‘They actually said they’d give you money for that?’ “Yeah.” So I said ‘Terrific, man. If they really said they’d give you the money, it sounds great to me.’ So that’s how it started. Then when it came time to really do it, they pulled back and said I could act or direct, but not both. So we went to see Bert Schneider and Bob Rafelson, because they’d just finished doing The Monkees and our friend Michael McClure, a poet from San Francisco, he had a project called The Queens he wanted to do which was a satire about LBJ and Dean Rusk, and all these powerful Washington insiders dressed in drag, eating live lobsters, talking about how they assassinated President Kennedy. It was going to be a 20 minute short. We decided to pitch it to Rafelson and Schneider, Peter couldn’t help but talk about what was then called The Loners, and by then we had a full outline. Schneider left the room, the Rafelson left, who came back and said “Can I see you in my office?” So we went in and he said “Call Schneider at home tonight. I think he’s going to give you the money and let you act in it and direct it.” And Schneider said “Yeah, it’s a go.” And it was groundbreaking on so many levels: the first movie to really address the counterculture seriously, not in an exploitative way. The first to show people openly using drugs. The first to show some of the serious social problems that were happening in the country, particularly in the Deep South, where you actually shot some of it. Yeah, and like I said before, it was the first time found music was ever used. At that time it was so much cheaper. All I had to do was go the artist and ask their permission to use the music. So was the decision one that was based more on economics than on creativity? No. I went out and shot the movie in five and a half weeks. Laszlo Kovacs said it was the best-organized picture he’d ever shot. When we spoke at AFI a few years before he died, he said “People talk about how crazy the shoot was, but there was nothing crazy about that shoot.” The thing was, after shooting the film I came back to eighty hours of footage that I hadn’t seen, because in those days there was no way for me to see my dailies out on the road. I had an editing job that was just horrendous, took me over a year. And driving on the way to the studio to cut the picture, I’d hear all this great music on the radio: Steppenwolf, Jimi Hendrix, The Byrds. I heard all these songs and cut the picture to picture, and not to sound. Then when I put in a song like “Born to be Wild” it just fit perfectly. But when you see the movie, the story is told through the music, not the dialogue. It was just one of those things that worked. Has MTV ever acknowledged you of being an early inventor of music video?(laughs) No, I don’t think so. Easy Rider changed Hollywood. Yeah, it certainly showed them that they could make independent films. You had to get an I.A. union stamp on your film to get released in those days, and we didn’t have that stamp. Bert Schneider’s father Abe was Chairman of Columbia Pictures and paid off the unions, gave them $25,000 so we could release the movie, which broke the code, and other studios saw that they could do the same thing: make a non-union film and then make a deal with the union to distribute it. Cassavetes was really the only person in the U.S. who’d been making independent films up to that point, because he was a from a well-to-do Greek shipping family that allowed him to finance his own low budget films. But he could never really get them distributed, because the majors wouldn’t distribute them. I read a quote attributed to you, and maybe you can tell me if it’s accurate: “There are moments that I've had some real brilliance, you know. But I think they are moments. And sometimes, in a career, moments are enough. I never felt I played the great part. I never felt that I directed the great movie. And I can't say that it's anybody's fault but my own.”Well, I could agree with everything but the last part. It wasn’t all my fault. Hopper on the cover of Rolling Stone issue 56, April 16, 1970. You don’t feel that Easy Rider is a great film?I do. I do, but after that I should have made another great movie and Colors is an alright film, but I don’t know, I just never felt I directed the film I really wanted to direct after Easy Rider. I know I never did. But I don’t think it was my fault that I wasn’t allowed to. I had a lot of help on this end. It may have been my behavior that caused the rift to happen, but once it happened, it wasn’t my fault. I could’ve brought them a ship full of gold, and they wouldn’t have let me direct a picture after my fallout with Lew Wasserman over The Last Movie. He wanted me to re-edit it after The Venice Film Festival. I had final cut and said ‘no.’ He said “Then it will never be distributed.” Let’s talk about Apocalypse Now. What are some of your memories of being in the Philippines doing that? I was there for four or five months. When I arrived I was signed to play a CIA agent. There was no script. So I started out in a clean uniform being told by Francis (Coppola) that I was going to be second-in-charge to Marlon Brando’s army he had in the jungle. I was with these guys about three weeks and we were training with these Green Beret guys who’d just gotten out of Vietnam, playing war games. We had mortars that we’d play with that were full of powder, and if you got any of the powder on you, that meant you were dead. We had all these war toys we’d play with at night. We’d be assigned to hold a bridge. Would they be coming by the sea? Would they be coming through the jungle? We’d play these incredible war games and just had a ball. Finally Marlon arrived and everything was shut down for a week because he realized Marlon hadn’t read “Heart of Darkness,” so Francis went out to read Marlon “Heart of Darkness” and 900 people, the cast and crew, just sat and waited! (laughs) We called it “the million dollar week” because Marlon was getting paid a million dollars a week. When he came back he said “Marlon and I agreed that your part should be as large as his, or maybe larger.” When you read “Heart of Darkness” you never actually see the Kurtz character, you only hear about him being talked about by this Russian-Jewish trader, who comes out with shrunken heads and thinks he’s such a great man. So Francis wanted me to play that part, and made him a photojournalist who carried a lot of cameras instead of shrunken heads. So we started there, and wrote a little bit in the morning and then would just improvise off of that. So those scenes between you and Martin Sheen, when he was locked in the bamboo cage, were largely improvised? Yeah. I mean, it was improv that came out of writing. Hopper, Martin Sheen and Marlon Brando in Apocalypse Now. And you and Brando were never actually on the set together, right? Yeah, he’d shoot one night, then I’d do another. I came in one night and Francis said “Marlon called you a ‘sniveling dog’ and threw bananas at you.’ So I had this prop man throwing bananas at me all night long. (laughs) And that’s how we worked for a couple weeks. It was Marlon’s decision for us to work separately and at the time, I was sort of offended by it, but looking back, I think Marlon did me a big favor. If you’re improvising something, and he suddenly started reading “Hollow Man” by D.H. Lawrence, you really can’t get something going if you have two people vying for (the director’s) time. In the end, it worked out really well. In 1986 you had a renaissance in your career with three amazing movies: River’s Edge, Blue Velvet and Hoosiers, the last of which earned you an Oscar nomination. It marked a real comeback in your career, and you haven’t stopped working since. That was my first year of sobriety, too. I’d been out of rehab like two months when I went into do Blue Velvet, then I went straight to Indiana and did Hoosiers. I didn’t do anything but get a haircut and put on some different wardrobe, then came back to Los Angeles and did River’s Edge. It’s funny because I play a drug addict in one, an alcoholic in the other, and a drug dealer in the third! (laughs) So my first year of sobriety was a test. (laughs) Hopper as the evil Frank Booth, with Isabella Rossellini in David Lynch's Blue Velvet. We have to talk about the character of Frank Booth in Blue Velvet. I read an interview with David Lynch where he said you called him after reading the script and said “David, you have to let me play this part because I am Frank Booth.” Well actually, he’d already cast me, but I did call him after he’d cast me, and we’d never met at that point, and said ‘You haven’t made a mistake, because I am Frank Booth.” So supposedly he went back to the table with Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini and Laura Dern, they were all having lunch together, and said “I just got off the phone with Dennis Hopper, and he said that he was Frank Booth, which I guess is really good for the picture, but I don’t know how we’ll ever have lunch with him.” (laughs) How were you Frank Booth? I’d come out of a heavy drug life, and had known a lot of people like Frank. I didn’t mean that I was literally Frank Booth, but I’d certainly run into characters like Frank, and understood him. A big discrepancy came the first day we were shooting the big scene where Kyle is hiding in the closet and I come in demanding my bourbon and tell Isabella to spread her legs, and then this sort of horrendous rape scene occurs against her. None of us had met at this point and that was our first scene. (laughs) David had helium on the set, because in the script, the tank that Frank was constantly taking hits from was written as helium, which makes your voice really high, like Donald Duck. But it doesn’t disorient you in any way, it just makes you talk funny. So I said to David, ‘You know I always thought of this as being nitrous oxide or amyl nitrate or something.’ He said “What is that?” I said “Something that disorients your mind for a few minutes. I’m also having trouble acting with my voice sounding like this. So could I just show you what it would look like with the other stuff?” And I did, and David said “Oh, that’s great!” So we went with that, and I said ‘If you want to put the (helium) voice in later, in post, we can,’ and of course, we didn’t. So that was the only real contribution I made to that film, I guess. (laughs) David had written a great screenplay, and there wasn’t any reason to change anything else. Years later I was sitting, thinking about it, and I thought how really weird it would be if Frank Booth had only used the gas to change the sound of his voice, that it didn’t affect his mind at all, and what a cold, calculating kind of guy that would be. The Observer, in England, and Film Quarterly gave me an award in Paris as the outstanding villain of all-time for that film, which is pretty heavy, because that means I beat out Sir Ben Kingsley in Sexy Beast and Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs. (laughs) Hopper and Christopher Walken in the legendary "eggplant" scene from True Romance. Which brings us to True Romance and the scene between you and Christopher Walken, which has gone down as one of the great scenes in movie history. At the time, Quentin Tarantino was unknown. Did you know upon reading the script that a completely original voice had arrived?Oh yeah, that was apparent immediately. I thought it was a terrific script and terrific movie, and it just died at the box office. All the buzz came out of tape and DVD. It was strange because I never saw it with an audience where it didn’t get a standing ovation at the end, at Toronto and other places. It just didn’t connect with mainstream audiences. Maybe it was the title, who knows? It’s such a great, popcorn eating movie, you know? (laughs) Tony Scott is a terrific director. The day we did that scene, we did the whole interior of my trailer here at the studio in Los Angeles. First of all, you don’t see speeches like this as an actor in film anymore. It was just pages and pages of this great dialogue. Tony started lighting, was going to shoot with two cameras, and was going to shoot Chris Walken first. Chris came in and saw it, and Tony approached me and said “Chris just said he didn’t want to go first. Would you mind going first?” I said ‘I don’t mind going first, but you’ve been lighting for two and a half hours, man!’ (laughs) Tony said he didn’t mind, and reversed all the lighting and went on me first, and that’s how we did it and it was just wonderful. The only improvisation in the whole thing, because Tarantino’s script was so good, was the bit about the eggplant and the cantaloupe. Walken and I went out later, selling the piece as a team. And someone said to us “Oh, you guys are great actors!” And Walken says “I don’t know if we’re great actors or not, but I started out as a dancer, and Hopper and I partner real well together.” (laughs) And I thought that was a great line. We touched earlier on your being a survivor. I think it was genetics. I think it was luck. I think it was attitude that got me through a lot of it. I believe in miracles. It’s a miracle that I’m still here. And I plan on being here a while longer.
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Posted in Andy Warhol, Apocalypse Now, Christopher Walken, Easy Rider, Henry Hathaway, Jack Nicholson, James Dean, Marlon Brando, Nicholas Ray, Paul Newman, Peter Fonda, Quentin Tarantino, Roger Corman | No comments

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Sam Mendes--The Hollywood Interview

Posted on 14:03 by Ratan
Director Sam Mendes.


SAM MENDES HITS THE ROAD WITH AWAY WE GO
By
Alex Simon



Sam Mendes is one of the rare hyphenates who remains active directing on the stage and in film, in a time when the two worlds have become largely segregated from one another. Having been lauded with virtually every prestigious award for stage and screen by time he was in his mid-30s, Sam Medes was a wunderkind almost from the start.

Born August 1, 1965 in Reading, Berkshire, England to a university lecturer father and a mother who authored children’s books, Mendes’ parents divorced when he was five. Upon reaching Cambridge University, he quickly fell in love with theater and film, joining the Chichester Festival Theater after graduation in 1987. Soon, he was directing Dame Judi Dench in Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard, winning the Critics Circle Award for Best Newcomer. Following work with the Royal Shakespeare Company, Mendes became artistic director of the reopened Donmar Warehouse in London, and later directed the Broadway revival of Cabaret, which won four Tony Awards, including Best Actress for the late Natasha Richardson.

Sam Mendes hit pay dirt with his first feature film, American Beauty, which swept the 1999 Academy Awards, taking home five statuettes, including Best Director for Mendes who, at the tender age of 34, was now a major player in Hollywood. Mendes followed Beauty with a stellar body of work: the Depression-era drama Road to Perdition, the Gulf War epic Jarhead, and last year’s adaptation of Richard Yates’ iconic novel Revolutionary Road, which starred Mendes’ wife, 2008’s Oscar-winner for The Reader, Kate Winslet.

Sam Mendes’ latest feature film is a departure for the director, whose previous cinematic efforts have been painted on broad canvases. Away We Go tells the story of a happily married couple (Maya Rudolph and John Krasinski) who, upon discovering their first child is on the way, travel cross-country to find the perfect place to settle down, encountering friends, family and some new perspective on the way. Reminiscent of some of the ‘70s’ greatest road pictures, Away We Go was written by Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida, and features stellar support from a dream cast, including Allison Janney, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jeff Daniels, Catherine O’Hara, Chris Messina and Melanie Lynskey, to name but a few. The Focus Features release hits theaters June 5.

Sam Mendes sat down with us recently during an LA stopover to discuss his latest film and remarkable career. Here’s what followed:

This film reminded me of some of my favorite road pictures from the ‘70s, like Harry & Tonto and The Last Detail. Is that what struck you when you initially read the script?
No, what struck me was the script itself, and it actually felt very contemporary to me, as opposed to something that was a throwback. It’s a very “generation Y” story. It reminded me of the period, in our thirties, when my friends and I really made the decisions that informed the rest of our lives: we got married, had kids. Very few of us got married in our twenties and started families. That doesn’t happen as much anymore. So I thought it captured that very well, and I love the road movie genre and the road movie format. I like the simplicity of it: Start at A. Got to get to B. And the audience knows where you’re heading because they’ve got the itinerary. It’s like chapters in a book. The other thing I loved about this movie is that people keep trying to label it a “romantic comedy,” which it isn’t. A romantic comedy is “boy meets girl, boy loses girl,” and so on. This is not that at all. This establishes very quickly that this couple is in love and they’re going to remain in love. There’s no crisis in their relationship like there would be in a classic romantic comedy. Throughout the movie they’re like a unit, almost like one character. The movie is about what they see, and what they learn. So I saw it much more as a road movie, first and foremost.

John Krasinski and Maya Rudolph in Away We Go.

What movies did you study before you shot it?
I immediately thought of all the great Hal Ashby movies, The Last Detail being the primary one. There was a simplicity in his work stylistically, and also the way he used music, was years ahead of its time. His films are almost more inspiring now than they were when they came out, or even 10-15 years ago. Now you’ve got all these great directors like Spike Jonze, Judd Apatow, Cameron Crowe, all saying that one of their biggest influences was “the master, Hal Ashby.” So I watched The Last Detail several times, and thought ‘It’s so simple in its presentation, yet so complex in the way the characters are presented, and the people that they meet,’ and how unafraid he is to meet someone and move on. There’s no tying up “loose ends” and having the characters come back in the end for some kind of payoff. The whole idea of an “arc” that every character has to have is just absurd. The Last Detail presented human encounters as they usually happen in life: you meet someone, you have the encounter, and you move on.

Like The Last Detail, Away We Go also has the characters encountering very specific cultural archetypes, that could only exist in the time and place that the film takes place. There are very contemporary characters in this film, as you said, just as there are characters in The Last Detail that you would only meet in 1973.
Right, right, and yet they stay with you, don’t they? And the sign of a great writer is to make all the characters familiar to you, archetypes as you said, but unique and sometimes strange in their own way. When I was reading the script, every character there reminded me of someone that I knew, yet they weren’t exactly like them because we’re all unique. That really was my way into the movie, and it didn’t change from that moment to now. I love the characters of that couple, and I feel that I really cast them right, and when that happens, two plus two equals five. When we did the first preview of the movie, there were about 25 people in the focus group, and literally everyone in the room loved the leading couple. If they hadn’t, I knew that we’d be in big trouble.

Mendes on the set of Away We Go.

The focus group experience must be like going for a dental checkup to the Laurence Olivier character in Marathon Man for any director. Is that true? Do you just dread it?
(laughs) That’s very good—like your teeth being pulled. You know, since I’ve done so much theater, I really like sitting with an audience watching my work. I like the feeling of being able to watch where they switch on, where they switch off, where they laugh, where they cry. The focus group, though, once you’ve gone through the first two or three questions and you’ve established that they like it, that’s when you want to leave, because then they’ll start trying to fish for all the reasons they don’t like it.

Kevin Spacey and Mena Suvari in American Beauty, 1999's Best Picture.

Wasn’t something like twenty minutes of American Beauty cut after a focus group screening—the sequence involving the back-story of Chris Cooper’s character?
No, that was me that cut that. It had nothing to do with a focus group. The movie never changed really after the first preview, aside from about a minute that I cut from the cheerleader sequence. The changes I made to that movie were long before an audience ever saw it. The only other person that ever saw it in a longer form was (screenwriter) Alan Ball, and the two producers.

And we’ll never see a “Director’s Cut” DVD release that restores that sequence?
No, the director’s cut is what’s out on DVD. I’d like to do a director’s cut of Jarhead, though.

Jake Gyllenhaal and Peter Sarsgaard in Jarhead.

How was that film compromised?
I took the politics out of it.

Why?
I don’t know. Because it felt wrong at the time, I think. I was too close to it, and I couldn’t give it a context. We were in the middle of the height of the Gulf War, and people were determined to make the film into something that was political, and I felt that I wanted it to stand on its own, and be timeless. The thing I regret, which I didn’t have to do on Away We Go, was that I didn’t have a chance to be away from it for a while. I shot Away We Go, then did a play, then came back to the film and did post. So that gave me some objectivity with it, whereas with Jarhead, I was working on it right up until its release date. I had a strange experience during the premiere of Jarhead, I was watching it and thinking ‘Wait a minute, they’ve skipped a scene! Where did that scene go?’ Then I realized, I’d cut the fucking thing! (laughs) And that shouldn’t happen to you as a filmmaker. You should know the landscape of your movie intimately. That just shows you that sometimes when you don’t have the time, you can really compromise your own material without meaning to.

You were in post on Revolutionary Road when you started Away We Go, right?
Yes, I was. Revolutionary Road was long. We were supposed to release it the previous year, but we couldn’t get it together in time. In this case it was good for me to go from one to the other because I was able to work much more instinctively on this. Usually I’ve gone from movie-play-movie-play. And sometimes a year or two will go by between the play and the movie, which causes you to sort of lose your “movie muscles,” and you have to take a couple weeks to build them back up, so to speak. So I was really in the groove when I started this, and was making decisions very instinctively, from my gut. I think the movie really benefited from the fact that I didn’t over think, and over plan it.Revolutionary Road was threading a needle, whereas this was painting a canvas with warm colors.

This is a completely different kind of film for you. You usually paint on a huge canvas, whereas this was a small canvas, painted with what felt like watercolors. Was that your intention?
Yeah, absolutely. I’m glad you got that, and it was a great feeling to be working on a smaller canvas, so to speak.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Revolutionary Road.

Speaking of Revolutionary Road, I was very happy to see one of Richard Yates’ stories finally adapted for the screen. Are you familiar with his short story anthology, Eleven Kinds of Loneliness?
Yeah, wonderful stories. John Frankenheimer actually had wanted to film Revolutionary Road in the early ‘60s, but wasn't able to, because the subject matter was a bit too frank to be filmable in that time. There’s a story in Eleven Kinds of Loneliness called “Saying Goodbye to Sally,” I think, which was about Yates going to Hollywood. It was nakedly autobiographical, and the character of the young director was based on Frankenheimer.

You mentioned the theater earlier. You’re one of the few directors today, Mike Nichols being the other, who goes back and forth between film and theater, whereas years ago, it was more commonplace. Talk to us about the different processes between working with actors in theater versus working with them in film.
Well, I used to think it was completely different, and when you’re shooting it is very different from doing a play. But I’m finding increasingly that the two are much closer together. I find that as I get more comfortable with film, I find myself working very much the same way and in the same atmosphere as when I’m in rehearsals for a play. The difference is that rehearsals for a play are everything, and rehearsals for a movie are not. You rehearse a play to the very end, and then when you put it up, it’s either going to work, or it’s not. With film, every day is a challenge which can make or break the film. Then you have to remake it again in the editing room. I’d say rehearsals for a play and the editing room for a movie are my favorite places to be.

Do you like to rehearse before you shoot?
Oh yeah. I like to rehearse every movie, sometimes for quite a long time. We rehearsed this for a total of about three weeks over a couple of months: five days here, three days there, just to keep the energy going and also because I knew the center of the film was John and Maya, and if they didn’t have an easy relationship with each other, and their chemistry wasn’t perfect by the time we shot, the film wouldn’t work.

Allison Janney and Maya Rudolph in Away We Go.

The other thing I noticed was you used different color palates for the different locations they traveled to.
Yeah, that was all intentional, and the other thing we did was allow a lot of improvisation in the movie. The scene with Allison Janney in Phoenix, where she’s calling her child over and over again, and he ignores her, that was all improvised. Allison did it during one take and I said ‘That’s great, just keep doing that.’ She thought I was being funny, and I said ‘No, I’m serious, just keep doing that.’ And then I told the kid to just ignore her. To be able to be that loose was great. I like to be able to get to the point with the actors where I can just throw stuff back and forth like that.

L to R: Maya Rudolph, John Krasinski and Maggie Gyllenhaal in Away We Go.

Maggie Gyllenhaal, I think, should be nominated for Best Supporting Actress. Living in Southern California you encounter so many pretentious, overbearing New Agers like her character.
(laughs) I know, wasn’t she great? She’s channeling something there, to be sure. That character is a great creation by David and Vendella, but taken to another level by a great actor.

Paul Newman and Tom Hanks in Road to Perdition.

My favorite film of yours is Road to Perdition. I was a fan of the graphic novel, but I loved the way you reinvented what was basically a John Woo Hong Kong film set during the Great Depression, and turned it into something completely different, basically an original work. We also need to talk about two people you worked with in the film: Paul Newman and Conrad Hall, two of my heroes.
They’re both very easy people to talk about. I suppose they were two of the biggest pleasures of my professional life, the more important relationship of the two being Conrad. We were really close friends, and he influenced everything about how I make movies. There isn’t a day that goes by on a set when I don’t think to myself ‘What would Connie do here?’ or just about the fact that I miss him. He was just a wonderful human being. They both were just great people who transcended their skills as artists and went into that very rare realm of just being great human beings. They were both able to keep their lives separate from their work. Conrad was the greatest lighting cameraman of the last 30-40 years, along with a handful of people like Gordon Willis, Haskell Wexler, Sven Nykvist, and just set the agenda for all the cinematographers that followed him.

They’re like a school of painters almost, aren’t they?
Yeah, they are. That’s exactly what you become a part of when you have that level of skill, and when you see the work, you realize what goes into it and that it’s very special. Newman was that way, too. I wrote an article about him after he died, and I knew him for such a small period of his life, but I think he influenced future generations of actors just as Connie did cinematographers. Plus, you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who lived a better life than Paul did. He committed so much of himself to things outside of acting and set the standard in them all: charity, auto racing, entrepreneurship. Then, when he’d lost his leading man/movie star status, he was perfectly comfortable just being a great actor, doing character roles, and never lost his dignity. He wasn’t one of these people who clung onto fame with his fingertips, because I don’t think he cared.

Mendes and cinematographer Conrad L. Hall on the set of Road to Perdition.

Having Conrad Hall as your D.P. on your first feature must have been akin to being schooled by Yoda.
(laughs) Yes, it was. That’s exactly right. I was so in the dark as a filmmaker, I had to ask him ‘When do I say “action”?’ (laughs)

Was it less-daunting to have someone like that in your corner when you were starting out?
Yes, but on the other hand, it was also more daunting, because you’ve got someone who’s worked with John Huston, and shot Cool Hand Luke and In Cold Blood. It was like ‘Jesus Christ! What the fuck am I doing with this guy in the room with me?’ (laughs) And he also always wanted to direct, so I always had this voice in the back of my head with him saying ‘This kid’s got this job that I’d really like to be doing. Can he do it?’ And for the first couple weeks, he was probably wondering if I could, as I was finding my feet. But then we found a way of talking and being together that really worked. I miss him, still.

Let’s talk about your background. You were born and raised in and around London?
Yeah, London and Oxford.

Then you went to Cambridge.
Right, went from one university town to another.

Was your father a professor?
No, he was a lecturer at a university in London.

Did you discover the arts through him?
Both my parents, actually. I was always surrounded by books, so I’d say it was a combination of books and TV that fueled my interest, movies not so much then.

British TV was great then, with the Play of the Week series, and the like.
Yeah, exactly, plus the comedy was great: Monty Python, Fawlty Towers. So those were my major influences. Movies and theater didn’t really enter my life until university.

Was there one epiphanous moment where you knew that this was your calling?
Yeah, seeing Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas. It was a real epiphany. The further I get away from it, the bigger I think it was, actually. The main epiphany was the realization that you could make a movie in contemporary America that had a mythic scale, that dealt with big themes, and did so almost wordlessly. Everything about it was just perfect. I watched it three nights in succession. So that was a big moment for me, and might explain why I ended up making American films, as a Brit. And I still don’t quite know why I continue to do that. It’s just worked out that way.

Fate stepping in, perhaps.
Yeah, and now we live in New York because both Kate and myself are working so much in the States, we didn’t want to leave the kids behind in England. But we both love America, so it’s great.

Natasha Richardson as Sally Bowles in Mendes' Tony-winning production of Cabaret.

I interviewed Natasha Richardson five years ago and, like everyone who knew or got to meet her, was saddened by her passing. You directed her in her Tony-winning performance of the Cabaret revival. What are some of your memories of Natasha?
Yeah…you know it’s a terrible irony that so many of the things she wanted in her life were things that were given to her after she died, speaking professionally. Her fame rocketed after she died, and I remember thinking to myself ‘Why the fuck didn’t you all write these things about her while she was still alive?’ It was very frustrating in that respect, because she was such a wonderful person with a large, large heart and an amazing presence. She had a “force of nature” quality about her, and was just massively intelligent, as well. She had her dad’s theater instinct, with very precise taste and was very observant, which she also inherited from her mum. It’s just tragic that she won’t be here to contribute all that she was blessed with any longer, and worse, that she won’t be able to see her kids grow up.

Did you ever read her father, Tony Richardson’s, autobiography, The Long Distance Runner?
Yeah, great book, brilliant book. He was such an amazing, acerbic, intellectual man.

I saw your production of Cabaret in New York, and I imagine it must’ve been rather intimidating to step into the giant shoes that had interpreted it previously. But, as you did with Road to Perdition, you really reimagined and reinvented it to a large extent.
Yeah, someone said to me at the time “We’ve invented a new word for what you’ve done with Cabaret. We’re calling it ‘a revisal.’” (laughs) That is what it was, because it wasn’t really a revival of the original script. We included two songs from the movie, and one from the ’85 stage revival. It was a real patchwork of the different versions of the show. It was a very happy experience, that, and ran for a long time, for five years.

What are you working on now?
I’m doing two more plays with my company, The Bridge Project, and we’ll start rehearsing in the Fall, so I’ve got Summer off, which is great. And I’ll try to do a movie next year. I’m developing various things, so we’ll see what emerges. I’m always asked that, at this stage of the game after I’ve just finished a film. I always very foolishly say ‘Next I’m going to make this kind of movie,’ sounding very determined, and I always do the opposite. (laughs) I literally have no idea, and that’s part of the fun: flying blind for a while.



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Posted in American Beauty, Away We Go, Conrad Hall, Jarhead, John Frankenheimer, Kate Winslet, Natasha Richardson, Paul Newman, Revolutionary Road, Road to Perdition, Sam Mendes | No comments

Sunday, 9 December 2012

RIP ARTHUR PENN

Posted on 08:10 by Ratan
Director Arthur Penn.

The great Arthur Penn has passed away at the age of 88. Below is an interview Jon Zelazny did with Penn some two years back.

THE LEFT HANDED GUN: ARTHUR PENN’S TICKET TO HOLLYWOOD… AND HIS TICKET BACK HOME AS WELL
by Jon Zelazny


Editor's Note: This article originally appeared on EightMillionStories.com September 29, 2008.

In the 1960’s, Arthur Penn was one of the most acclaimed directors in the world, best known for his smash hits The Mircale Worker (1962) and Bonnie & Clyde (1967), each of which earned him an Oscar nomination.

He spent his early career directing theater and live television in New York, until he and three of his TV colleagues—producer Fred Coe, writer Leslie Stevens, and fledgling star Paul Newman—went to Hollywood to make a western about Billy the Kid.

Paul Newman takes aim as Billy the Kid, in Arthur Penn's The Left Handed Gun.

2008 marked the 50th anniversary of The Left Handed Gun, Penn’s now-celebrated feature film debut. We spoke by phone, ironically the day before Paul Newman passed away at age 83. The day after that was Penn’s birthday. He’s now 86.

Happy Birthday!
Arthur Penn: Thank you.

How are you feeling?

Well, considering what birthday it is, not bad.

Have you spent most of your life in New York?All of it. We’ve always lived here, aside from a few brief periods in Hollywood. And when I was on location.

Before we get to The Left Handed Gun, I mentioned in my email that I finally saw your film Mickey One (1965) for the first time last Friday. There were about seventy people at the screening; the programmer asked how many of us had ever seen it before, and about five hands went up. Why has it remained so obscure? Is it true it’s never had a home video release?
Columbia never liked it. I made it for very little—a million dollars—so they could afford to just scrap it. Which is what they wanted to do as soon as they saw it.

Author's Note: "Mickey One" is an experimental feature film about a New York nightclub comic (Warren Beatty) who goes on the lam when he can’t repay his mob debts. He lays low in Chicago, starts working in clubs under the name Mickey One, and falls in love with a nice girl… but his paranoia regarding his past threatens to destroy his new life.

Even Warren Beatty in the lead isn’t enough to justify a home release today?No. Maybe they would now, but I doubt it.

What I’d always read in books was that it was your ode to the French New Wave. There is a feeling of Godard about it, but my first reaction was that it was more in the spirit of Richard Lester, very whimsical and sassy… but as it got darker and darker towards the end, it really reminded me of David Lynch, especially the films I think of as his “dream stories.”
Everybody evaluates Mickey One for their own time. There was no David Lynch at the time I did it.

Paul Newman (L) as Billy the Kid in Penn's debut film, The Left Handed Gun.

Have you seen those works of his? Lost Highway, or Inland Empire? Did it strike you he was working along some of the same lines?
Those are his pictures. They’re his equivalents of Mickey One.

Were you trying to evoke the French New Wave?No. They only called it French New Wave at the time because there was nothing else to compare it to.

The print we saw was gorgeous, by the way, and I think people really enjoyed it. I also like pictures where the director feels free to really experiment, to play with interesting visual ideas. Did you know Scorsese’s Boxcar Bertha?No, I never saw it.

It’s a Roger Corman picture, a rip-off of Bonnie & Clyde really, but you can see the young Scorsese just using the opportunity to try every visual trick, and angle, and idea that he can possibly get in. Another one I like is Steven Soderbergh’s The Limey.
Yeah, I saw that one.

When I think of your first three films now—The Left Handed Gun, The Miracle Worker and Mickey One—it’s an amazing progression. Your confidence and dexterity with the medium really leapfrogged with each picture.
Yeah. It was all new to me. I was very captivated by it.

Paul Newman and Lita Milan in a rare romantic moment of The Left Handed Gun. Note the rather Freudian implications of Newman's pistol...

In researching The Left Handed Gun, I saw that you, Fred Coe, Leslie Stevens, and Paul Newman all knew each other from these television dramas in New York. Were all these shows you did free-standing stories?
Yes, they were. The first one I ever did was about a Korean war soldier coming back. That was all live TV. You know… well, you probably don’t know.

The only one of those I ever saw was Requiem For a Heavyweight with Jack Palance. I never saw any of yours. What was a schedule like for one of these shows? Were they all done in studio?Sure. They were live. There was no tape. What we shot went right out on the air. That was television in the early days. I did one every third week for NBC. We’d rehearse them in a hotel ballroom with just the actors, no cameras. We’d plan how we were going to shoot it, and after about seven days of these rehearsals, we’d go into the TV studio. We’d rehearse one day with the cameras, the next day was a final dress rehearsal, and we went on the air that evening. And the pictures that were going out, we cut them ourselves, in the control room. And not only were we choosing the shots, we were choosing how long those shots would last—based on how the actors were performing! That was live TV.

I had to direct like that once in college. It was incredibly difficult.
We did it. Show after show.

It must have been the greatest training ground imaginable.It was wonderful.

I saw you first worked with Paul Newman on a TV drama called The Battler in 1956. When did he first come to your attention?
I saw him on the stage, very early on. In Bus Stop. I knew him from The Actor’s Studio.

And you directed a Leslie Stevens TV script called Invitation to a Gunfighter in 1957. Was that your first western?
Yeah, I guess so. I mean, it wasn’t much of a western. It was all done in the studio.

But it had cowboys in it?
(chuckling) Yeah, it had cowboys. Not so many horses!

So who had the idea that you, Fred Coe, Leslie Stevens, and Paul Newman would make this western for Warner Bros.?
Fred had the rights to the play. And he’d talked to Newman about it. And they approached another director, Delbert Mann, but he wasn’t available. Then they went to Bob Mulligan, but there was some falling out there, so then Fred came to me. I said I wanted to rewrite it with Leslie, so that was the deal.

And who was it at Warner Bros. that decided to take a chance on four TV guys from New York?
Jack Warner. Our first day at the studio, he took Fred and me around on a tour of their facilities. And introduced us to his son-in-law, who was starting to produce some TV there. See, they were finally coming around to the idea that the future was in working with TV, not against it. Up until then, they just kept hoping it go away. But it had gotten so popular that it had cut deep into their audience. So they thought, “Well, let’s get some of those television guys to work for us.” That’s how we really got there.

Most Hollywood westerns, before and since, have been made by these very rugged, Western, California kinds of guys. Did anyone think it was funny, you New York theater types coming out to make a western?
Well, the cameraman sure didn’t like me! (laughs) Because I came in with this idea that I was going to make sort of a ditzy Western, y’know? With a different twist to it. And he wanted to drag me into a kind of conventionality. Then I started using camera angles he didn’t want to do. So he put up this clapboard at the head of all these shots. It said, “Photographed Under Protest.”


You’re kidding.
No. That was for the executives, so when they saw the dailies… y’know, he didn’t want them to think he’d lost his touch! But he worked for them. He was under contract to Warner Bros. Everybody was in those days. You worked at one place.

I looked at it again last week. It seems to me the basic idea was to take a '50s juvenile delinquent story and put it in the Old West. Was that about how you saw it?
Yeah. It was also based on the idea that as the West was expanding, there was this yellow journalism back east, where they more or less invented these stories about people just to sell cheap dime novels. So there was this kid named Bill Bonney, who had this bad reputation out west, and they named him Billy the Kid, and wrote up this whole legend about him. Nobody knows what’s really true. They’re pretty sure that one photo of him is authentic, but now it’s come out that it was actually a reversed image. That picture was the sole reason people believed Billy the Kid was left handed, but it turns out that wasn’t really the case.

The iconic photo of the real William Bonney, aka Billy the Kid, circa 1880.

I think your staging of that photograph is one of the best scenes in the movie. Now that idea of modern technology intruding on the West became a major element for Sam Peckinpah. He loved putting cars, or other modern inventions, in his westerns to show time was moving on. Did he ever acknowledge you as an inspiration for that?
He did.

Another '50s director I really admire is Anthony Mann, who I think started taking Westerns into riskier psychological terrain: you could make the case that it was the emotionally unstable heroes Jimmy Stewart played for Mann that set the stage for Paul Newman’s really unstable Billy. Was Mann someone you paid attention to at the time?Oh, yeah. I think we were in the same camp. I never met him, but I wish I had. I really admired his work.

I noticed Billy and his buddies are supposed to be around twenty years old, but Newman and the other actors look about thirty. Did anyone say that at the time?
No. Because most of the movie stars back then were fifty or sixty!

So he really did seem like “a kid” to a 1950s audience. I’m going to guess they gave you twenty-five days to shoot the picture?I think it was twenty.

That’s pretty tight. Or did it feel luxurious compared to those TV shows?
Oh, yeah. TV was so frantic, it made this seem like a vacation.

Did Paul Newman enjoy all the rugged playacting you have in westerns that you don’t have in theater? Riding horses, gunplay, all that?
Sure. He was very committed. He’s a real actor.

A cinematic moment that really stands out his murder of Bob the deputy, when the man collapses to the street in slow motion.
It’s actually half slow motion and half fast motion.

L to R: Gene Hackman, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway in Bonnie & Clyde.

You’d expand on that technique in Bonnie & Clyde, and then it became pretty standard in Hollywood action sequences. Was that an effect you invented yourself?
No, I picked it up from Kurosawa.

That’s right. I forgot he’d done it as well. Did The Left Handed Gun do well?

It didn’t do well at all. The studio didn’t like it. They put it out on the bottom half of a double bill with some stinker, and it didn’t do anything… until it opened in France. A man named Andre Bazin—he was sort of the intellectual father of Cahiers du Cinema—he saw it, and he wrote a very good piece about it. And then other filmmakers looked at it, and picked up on it, and it became a big hit in Europe. It won the Belgian Film Critic’s Prize for the Best First Picture.


The Left Handed Gun trailer.

Warner Bros. had certainly read the script. They knew who was in it. What was it they disliked so much about the finished film?
The unorthodoxy of it. It was simply not what they expected a western to be.

That’s hard to understand fifty years later. Was it the way Newman played the character?
There was that. It was the way it was shot, the way it was written. The Hurd Hatfield character—this journalist who holds Billy up to this god-like position, and then when he’s sort of rejected, ends up betraying Billy—that was a whole new kind of character. That was like Gene Hackman’s character in Unforgiven. I think that character was a steal from Left Handed Gun.

Did you get other film offers after that?
I went back to New York. I got pissed off when Warner Bros. wouldn’t let me edit it. The day we finished, a guy walked up and said, “I’m going to edit your movie.” And there was no court I could appeal to that might change that decision. He was the studio cutter. It was just a disgraceful process because it was so industrialized. Later, the studios lost a lot of that power, in the good period of the late 1960s and early '70s. Now they’ve regained it, and they’re right back where they started.

Are there changes you can still remember wanting to make?The ending. It was supposed to end with Billy dying, when he collapses and rolls off those carts. It looks like slow motion, but it’s not. Instead, they stuck on this ending with Pat Garrett’s wife saying, “We can go home now.” They wanted a happy ending.

Patty Duke and Anne Bancroft in The Miracle Worker.

They did love a sunny tack-on back then, didn’t they? So you went back to Broadway, and did The Miracle Worker? And because that play was such a hit, you were able to do it as your next movie?
I did Two For the Seesaw on Broadway first, and that was a big hit too, but Ray Stark bought the movie rights, and he didn’t want any of us involved. And boy, he really fucked up that movie. Hired what’s-his-name to direct… “The hills are alive/With the sound of music… ?”

Robert Wise.
Yeah, Bob Wise. And they got Shirley MacLaine, but it was just a terrible film. So the next hit we had, when they came around for the movie rights, we said, “Hell, no. We’re going to do it, or you can’t have it!” And United Artists agreed. So Bill Gibson, who wrote the play, wrote the screenplay. I directed it, Fred Coe produced it…

…and the rest was history!It’s a pretty damn good movie.

Yeah, I was knocked out when I saw it. I think it’s still one of the best adaptations of a stage play I’ve ever seen. And it holds up so well.
It really does.

One last question: you said at the top that you’ve almost always lived in New York. Was there ever a time—say, following your Oscar nominations—when you felt like you’d really become a Hollywood director? That you were a part of this community?
No. I wasn’t that impressed by those nominations. I didn’t even go to the ceremonies—no, I did go the first time, but not the second or third. Because I was more interested in theater at that time. I thought Hollywood movies were always going to be like the experience I’d had on The Left Handed Gun, which was unpleasant. But The Miracle Worker was fun. And we did it right here in New York. So I never gave any more thought to going back out to Hollywood.

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Posted in Arthur Penn, Bonnie and Clyde, David Lynch, Fred Coe, French New Wave, Jean-Luc Godard, Leslie Stevens, Mickey One, Paul Newman, Richard Lester, The Left Handed Gun, The Miracle Worker, Warren Beatty | No comments
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