Showing posts with label Django Unchained. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Django Unchained. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2022

TOM WOPAT ON HIS INSP ‘COUNTY LINE’ MOVIES, VITAGRAPH -- THE PERFECT GIFT BOOK FOR THE MOVIE-HISTORY LOVER, I’VE GOT A BOOK DEAL, AND MORE!

TOM WOPAT – NOT JUST A GOOD OL’ BOY


TOM WOPAT ON HIS INSP ‘COUNTY LINE’ MOVIES, BEING LUKE DUKE, HIS WESTERNS, AND MUSICALS

By Henry C. Parke

On Monday, November 28th, at 10 p.m. Eastern time, the second of INSP’s County Line movies starring Tom Wopat, County Line: All In, will play on INSP.  It’s also streaming on Vudu, and is available to purchase on Amazon.

No disrespect to Waylon Jennings, there’s nothing wrong with being a good ol’ boy, but fans who know Tom Wopat by his portrayal of rural characters in movies like County Line and series like The Dukes of Hazzard may be surprised to learn that he’s also a major Broadway musical star. Tom certainly has his country credentials, growing up in Lodi, Wisconsin, “On a farm.  Every other farmer had a little dairy farm.”  But his goals would soon draw him beyond his state’s border, and he credits Wisconsin’s education system for preparing him.

TOM WOPAT:  Back in the sixties. you remember when Kennedy said we we're going to the moon in nine years?  We did, you know. I think that our schools in Wisconsin were exceptional, in that decade especially. And I was fortunate enough to have really fine music teachers, even when I was a little kid.  The local music teacher kind of took me under her wing and encouraged me to learn songs and do solos. And then a guy from North Carolina came to the University of Wisconsin, and he, again, took me under his wing and taught me. I sang opera, I sang German Lieder art songs. I had a really wonderful musical education in our little high school.

HENRY PARKE: So you were first attracted to music, rather than acting?

TOM WOPAT: Definitely. I did my first musical when I was 12.  I kinda learned acting just in self-defense (laugh). I started getting better and better parts and, when I went to the University, (I did) West Side Story, and Godspell and Jesus Christ Superstar -- I played Judas in that. It was amazing. And also there were guys that, again, took me under their wing. I was directed towards the summer stock theater in Michigan, where I could get my [theatre actors’ union] Equity card. After I got my Equity card, I took my ‘68 Chevy and 500 bucks and two guitars and drove to New York.

When I got to New York, it was pretty quick. I got there in the fall of ‘77, and by the spring of 78 I was in an off-Broadway musical. I left that one to go to D.C., where I played the lead character in The Robber Bride Room, the Bob Waldman musical. I left that to go back to Broadway and replace Jim Naughton in I Love My Wife. So within six or seven months of being in New York, I was on Broadway in the leading role.

HENRY PARKE: When you were doing so well on Broadway, why did you go to Hollywood?

TOM WOPAT: To quote Larry Gatlin, they made me an offer I couldn't understand (laugh). It was shortly after I finished an off-Broadway run in Oklahoma. I read for Dukes, and that afternoon they called and said, you want to fly to LA and do a screen test? I said, I guess so. I don't know (laugh), I'm just a farm boy from Wisconsin. So I packed up a few things in a paper bag and got on a plane. And 10 days later, we were shooting in Georgia.  I mean, I went from Wisconsin in the fall of '77 to New York, and was on Broadway in the summer of 78. And in the fall of 78 we were making the Dukes of Hazzard.

Tom Wopat and John Schneider

HENRY PARKE: That's amazingly fast.

TOM WOPAT: Yeah, it was a bit of a whirlwind. When I found out I got the part, I was more frightened than relieved. I had just put my toes into the water in New York City, doing Broadway, and then all of a sudden I gotta go and do a role in an action series. I had no idea how to approach television. It's a different ballgame than being on stage.  But I figured I'd make a little money and go back to Broadway, but not so: Dukes was a big hit immediately. So then I moved to LA for a few years.

HENRY PARKE:  You mentioned going to Georgia to shoot. I thought the series was shot at Warner Brothers in Burbank.

TOM WOPAT:  We shot five shows in Georgia, and it was a little grittier, a little more adult show than what it ended up being. They started preaching to the choir a little bit. And some of the scripts got fairly cartoonish for a while. We even had a visitor from outer space in one episode (laugh), which is really bizarre.

HENRY PARKE:  How did you get along with John Schneider? 

TOM WOPAT:  I’ve got six brothers, but I count John as number seven.  I really, really enjoyed my time. I enjoyed our cast. Our cast was very close and still is, really a nice bunch of people.

HENRY PARKE: You worked with two of my favorite actors in that regularly, Denver Pyle as Uncle Jesse, and James Best as Sheriff Rosco Coltrane.

TOM WOPAT: Terrific actors, terrific. And Sorrell Booke [Boss Hogg] might have been the best of the bunch.  Denver and Jimmy probably had more visibility, but Sorrel was kind of ubiquitous for a while. He's in What's Up, Doc? He was on M.A.S.H. And he was a really, really talented guy. All three of them were very talented and very helpful to the younger crew.

HENRY PARKE:  Why did you and John Schneider famously walk out?   

TOM WOPAT: Well, they [the Dukes producers] sell all the dolls and the cars and all that merchandise stuff, and we were supposed to get a pretty good taste of that.  But the way they did it is they had a series of shell companies.  So they would buy the company that made the toys, they would buy the company that licensed everything. They were making half a billion dollars a year, and we were getting a check for a couple of grand. So we thought we were being cheated. And unfortunately, that's the word we used in our lawsuit, and they took umbrage to that and then sued us. In retrospect, it might not have been the best bunch of decisions that we made. However, it was the first time that two stars of a show had walked out together, and that meant something to other actors in the business.  We didn't really get a raise (laugh). They just dropped all the lawsuits. And we did get a couple of new writers, and I was able to direct a half a dozen episodes. I very much enjoyed that.  We had a little more control of the artistic input into the show. I mean, that could be an oxymoron for Dukes of Hazzard, but John and me, we had a lot of skin in the game. We were out there every week doing this stuff, and they kept shortening the shooting schedule.  And they wanted to use miniature cars and barns and stuff. They were doing stunts that weren't stunts, filming stuff with toys and presenting it like it was real. And that was kind of an insult. So, for one of my last episodes, I took out all the miniature stunts that they were gonna do, and I put in footage from earlier shows, different angles of jumps and crashes that we did that weren't used.  We had this huge backlog of stuff like that, and I put it to good use. And John got to direct; John directed the final one. In retrospect, we may have shortened the life of the show a little bit with our walkout, but you know, hindsight's 20-20. We moved on and had a lot of success. I started making records, and from 1991 until 2013, I was probably in a dozen different shows on Broadway.

HENRY PARKE:  Including your first historical Western role, as Frank Butler in Annie Get Your Gun. 

Bernadette Peters and Tom Wopat

TOM WOPAT:  We had so much fun!  Bernadette Peters is the perfect leading lady, and I worked with her for almost two years.  That's really the high point of my Broadway career.   Then Glengarry Glenn Ross opened up a whole different territory of parts to me. People were not aware that I had any range. They're used to seeing me as the big dog in a musical. And in Glengarry, I was the patsy, I was the one who got taken advantage of. That was interesting; that was hard. Because I'm so used to playing the hero.   Playing somebody that gets skunked, it's not a feeling I wanna walk around with all day (laugh), but I've had other interesting parts. I did a thing with Cicely Tyson, The Trip to Bountiful. That's the last time I was on Broadway.

HENRY PARKE:  And you played Sky Masterson in Guys and Dolls.

TOM WOPAT: Oh man, what a dream cast. Nathan Lane was Nathan Detroit, Faith Prince was Miss Adelaide, Josie de Guzman was Sister Sarah.  One of my favorite parts is playing Billy Flynn in Chicago, because he shows up late and leaves early, and he wears one outfit.

HENRY PARKE:  In 2010 you did the film Jonah Hex, which is certainly an edgy Western --somewhere between historical and steampunk.

Tom Wopat in Django Unchained

TOM WOPAT:  It's like, metaphysical.  I read for it and they decided I could wear a dental prosthesis and (laugh) pull it off. That was kind of a complicated situation. I think they went through three directors getting that thing filmed.  We worked in Louisiana.  I enjoyed it. It wasn't the most fun I've had; I'll tell you the most fun I’ve had doing a Western was Django Unchained. Oh my gosh. That was great. Basically, my part [as a U.S. Marshall] is kind of a one- trick-pony, but what I did in the movie is exactly what I did in the audition.  Tarantino was very, very gracious. People don't know, but Tarantino used to study acting with James Best. [Tarantino] would take a bus up from Torrance, and he would have a class on Thursday night, and then Jim would let him sleep in the classroom.  Then he would come over to Warner Brothers the next day, I think he's 18, 19 years old, and hang out on the set being one of Jim's guests. So now he has a habit of using TV stars in his films; like Don Johnson was so super in Django. I enjoyed Longmire, another Western.  I'm playing kind of a villain in a sense. It's always implied that I'm taking money from the oil companies to let them do what they want in my county. That was a quality organization. And one of the producers was the daughter of one of the people that worked on Dukes at Warner Brothers.



Tom Wopat in Longmire 

HENRY PARKE: You shot Django at Melody Ranch.

TOM WOPAT:  Right, the Gene Autry place.

HENRY PARKE:  As a singer, did you feel any Gene Autry vibes there?

TOM WOPAT:  No. But you feel the vibes of his horse that's buried there standing up -- you know that?  He buried Champion standing up. We had a good time. One notable thing that Tarantino does is, when you go to the set, you check your phone. There's no cell phones on the set.  Which I thought was genius, and it's not brain surgery to do that.  You want everybody focused on what they're supposed to be doing, not checking their email.

HENRY PARKE: Right. And there's way too much of that on sets these days.

TOM WOPAT:  When I was doing A Catered Affair one time, there was a kid down in the front row and he was looking at a cell phone and I was like six feet away.  I'm sitting at a table right at the edge of the stage and I just looked down there and I just shook my head back and forth and he put the phone away.

HENRY PARKE:  I was surprised to realize that the first County Line movie you made for INSP was four years ago.

TOM WOPAT: Yeah, it was a while back, and it was actually their first action movie. Their previous movies had largely been romcoms, maybe with a little bit of drama to them.  Ours was the first action one. I had so much fun. I had such a great time. And then, they asked if I wanted to do two more, two sequels back-to-back. I said, yeah, you bet. So we filmed them down in Charlotte and around there. And again, a lot of fun, the most fun, really, I've had since Django or Dukes. Because in these shows I'm kind of the big dog, the leader of the pack and I enjoy being able to set the tone on the set, and making sure everybody has a good time. So I take the cast and crew out bowling, or I'll bring in a big pot of chili that everybody has to have a taste of, or make ribs for everybody. I enjoy that kind of hosting situation, and being the alpha male.  It's not probably the most attractive thing to be the alpha male, but (laugh) I enjoy it.

HENRY PARKE: And you need one.

TOM WOPAT: Usually there's a leader on the set. When we were doing Dukes, the leader on our set was a director of photography, Jack Whitman, may he rest in peace. He set the tone. He had come from shooting Hawaii 5-0, so him and his crew had all come from Hawaii. And there was a certain vibe on the set that was focused but gentle. And erudite. He was a real leader in a very soft-spoken way. He was a good guy to learn from.

HENRY PARKE: For folks who haven’t seen the first County Line movie, and don’t know your character, Sheriff Alden Rockwell, what does the title refer to?

TOM WOPAT:  There’s a café, basically a diner, that sits on the county line, on the road.  There's a line that runs down the middle of the café, a line drawn across the table exactly where the county line is, so if I have a beer, I have to put it in the other county, because we don't drink in my county.  There was cooperation between me and the sheriff in the next county [Clint Thorne, played by Jeff Fahey], and we had actually served together in Vietnam as Marines, so we’re heavily bonded. 

HENRY PARKE:  I don’t want to give away too much, because it’s a good mystery as well as a rural crime story.

TOM WOPAT:  It's a little bit like Walking Tall. 

HENRY PARKE:  Yes. Alden Rockwell became a widower in the first film.  And the diner’s proprietress, Maddie Hall, is played by Patricia Richardson. 

Patricia Richardson

TOM WOPAT:  And Pat Richardson has a really nice quality. It gives you a sense of comfort to see somebody that you know and recognize. I mean, being kind of my girlfriend and also running a diner and looking after my health, there's a comforting part of that. I think one of the real attractions of Dukes to families is that it's about family, and it's about taking care of your family, and making sure that nobody comes to harm. And when we're talking family, we talk extended family. So if Boss or Rosco got their tail in a crack somewhere, Jesse would make sure that we helped them out of it. I liken it to The Andy Griffith Show.

HENRY PARKE:  Oh, I can see that immediately. In the County Line films Abby Butler plays your daughter, and it’s a very interesting and very unusual relationship between you two, with her as a recently returned Iraq War vet. 

TOM WOPAT: Well, she's a pistol, man! She didn't take any guff off me. I'm proud of her for joining the service, but I'm frightened for her at the same time.

HENRY PARKE: Right.

TOM WOPAT:  There's that one scene in the original County Line where we're out on the porch and breaking down pistols that we've just taken from a bunch of nefarious dudes. And I asked the director, I said keep this in a two-shot. Because it really works, and any cuts back and forth would be more of a distraction than a help. If you look at old movies, a lot of the really good scenes are shot in a two shot.  They let you decide who you want to watch for the reactions and who you want to listen to. It's not like [single close-up] ‘talking heads’, which television in the eighties got into a lot. We had a lot of fun making County Line and we had just as much fun making these two new movies.

Tom Wopat and Kelsey Crane

HENRY PARKE:  Someone who’s new to the mix is Kelsey Crane, who plays Jo Porter, who is now the sheriff across the county line.

TOM WOPAT:  She's terrific. She's got a lot of talent and she also has the moxie to know how to work a set and how to let people do their jobs without getting in their stuff. Cause a lot of actors will kind of try to be the center of attention all the time. And that gets pretty old.

Tom Wopat and Denim Richards

HENRY PARKE:  If there are going to be more County Line movies, or possibly a series, the determining factor will probably be how audiences relate to your character.  Why do you think viewers will keep coming back?

TOM WOPAT:  Because Alden is the kind of a guy who, if he sees an injustice, he's gonna try and do something to make it right. Whether he really has the power to do that, the agency to do that, that doesn't matter. He's going to do what he can, legally, mostly.


THE PERFECT GIFT FOR THE MOVIE-HISTORY LOVER:

VITAGRAPH – AMERICA’S FIRST GREAT MOTION PICTURE STUDIO


BY ANDREW A. ERISH 

ARTICLE BY HENRY C. PARKE

 

NOTE: The videos you’ll see embedded throughout the article are not merely clips, they are complete films, some running just three minutes, others nearly half an hour.

While most film biographers and historians set out to teach you more about the films and personalities you’ve already grown to love, educator, historian and author Andrew Erish has set himself a more ambitious task: he seeks out the film pioneers who have been undeservedly written out of the histories.  The depth and detail of his research is astonishing, and his prose is accessible and entertaining.  With his previous tome, the fascinating Col. William N. Selig, the Man Who Invented Hollywood, he told of the life and work of a film pioneer whose name belongs alongside D.W. Griffith, Jesse Lasky, and Cecil B. DeMille.  He wants to save Vitagraph from the same sort of obscurity. 

The output of this initially Brooklyn-based movie studio was remarkable.  “They were leading the way,” Erish explains.  “From 1905 on, they were producing more movies than anyone else in America. They were the first to consistently release a film a week; then it became two films a week until, by 1911 or 1912, they were releasing six shorts and one feature every week. It's just an astounding output, and covering every kind of movie imaginable.”

The men who formed Vitagraph were unlike any of the other movie moguls.  Sam Goldwyn was a glove salesman. Louis Mayer was a nickelodeon theatre operator. They all came to movies from business.  But not Vitagraph’s J. Stuart Blackton and Albert E. Smith.  “They started out as vaudeville entertainers.”  Both English immigrants, who arrived in America at the age of ten, Smith was a magician, ventriloquist, and impressionist.  Blackton was a cartoonist and quick-sketch artist.  “They understood the aesthetic that ruled vaudeville, which was a variety of entertainment that would appeal to the widest possible audience, with something for every segment of the audience. And understanding firsthand what audiences reacted to, as stage performers, they had insight that really no mogul coming after them had; they had experience.”

Erish makes a convincing case that Blackton created the first animated films.  “There's absolutely no doubt about it,” he asserts. “A lot of history books mistakenly credit, a Frenchman named Emile Cohl, but Cohl's first animated film was made after Blackton had already made four or five. And Cohl's very first film is actually aping a film which Blackton had made a year earlier.”

Below is Blackton’s wonderful 1907 film, The Haunted Hotel. 

The Haunted Hotel – 1907 dir. Blackton

While Blackton was pioneering animation, “Smith, on the other hand, was very interested in making action-oriented films, and great with moving camera ideas and staging dramatic moments and action to their greatest effect, in real locations, so that these stories would appear more real. And if he was staging something at a steel mill, he would photograph at real steel plants, and put real steel workers mixed in with his lead actors, and it all looked real.” 

They excelled in Westerns, eventually. “The very first Westerns Vitagraph made were in Prospect Park in Brooklyn. And they're really bad, there’s just no getting around it. But they had a great story guy named Rollin Sturgeon, who they promoted to director. The guy had such a strong story sense and such a strong visual sense, and they sent him out to Los Angeles to open up a second studio, primarily to make Westerns. He made a film about the Oklahoma land rush called How States are Made.  When the starting cannon is fired, he covers everything in an amazing, extraordinary wide-angle shot that starts with an empty hill.  And you start to see the crest of the hill is covered in these little dots.  Then they start to move down the hill and you realize these are people on horseback, covered wagons, the horse-buggies -- they're all coming towards the camera. That shot lasts over three minutes and it's absolutely stunning to let it play out in real time in a single shot.”

How States are Made -- 1912


While Thomas H. Ince is credited with “inventing” the Western, and the studio system (and for dying on William Randolph Hearst’s yacht while sailing with Marion Davies and Charlie Chaplin), his younger brother Ralph Ince was one of Vitagraph’s finest Western directors. “I think Ralph Ince is second only to [D.W.] Griffith (for) his contributions to the language of cinema.  In The Strength of Men, with the two guys shooting the rapids with no protection, and then fighting in the midst of a real forest fire! It's in front of your eyes, the way it would be if that dramatic story were really happening for real.”

The Strength of Men – Ralph Ince -- 1913



Vitagraph also excelled in comedies, creating the first great movie comedian with John Bunny, here seen assisted by fourteen-year-old Moe Howard!

Mr. Bolter’s Infatuation – John Bunny -- 1912


Another huge comedy star was cartoonist-turned-actor Larry Semon.  Although his hilarious sight-gag comedies are forgotten in America today, “Around the world, Larry Semon's movies have been shown, non-stop to this day on TV in Spain, Germany, throughout South America, and Italy.” 

You can watch Semon perform with a yet-to-team Stan Laurel…

Frauds and Frenzies – Larry Semon, Stan Laurel --1918



… and Oliver Hardy.  If you’re offended by black-face jokes, you can skip Hardy.

The Show – Larry Semon, Oliver Hardy – 1922 Norman Taurog



While the story of the demise of the Vitagraph company is by turns infuriating and heartbreaking – they barely survived into the sound era -- their influence on film is inestimable.  Many of their discoveries went on to notable careers both in front of and behind the camera.  “Edward Everett Horton made his first movies at Vitagraph, and became a big silent star. Adolph Menjou started at Vitagraph, playing suave, debonair characters. Frank Morgan, who played the Wizard of Oz, got his start in Vitagraph movies, as a much younger man, back in the teens. And Larry Semon hired a young guy who had directed one or two films, a kid named Norman Taurog, to be his co-director and co-writer. And Northern Taurog went on to have an illustrious career. He directed Bing Cosby and Bob Hope, he directed six Martin and Lewis movies, he directed nine Elvis movies – he was Elvis' favorite director.”

Vitagraph is the winner of the 2022 Peter C. Rollins Book Award and received an award from the Popular Culture Association as one of the best books of 2022.  It’s available directly from The University Press of Kentucky, in hardcover and paperback, here: https://www.kentuckypress.com/9780813195346/vitagraph/

It can also be ordered from independent bookstores, Barnes and Noble, and Amazon.

I’VE GOT A BOOK DEAL!!!!!!!!!

I am thrilled to announce that I am writing a book for TwoDot Publishing!  Tentatively entitled The Greatest Westerns Ever Made, it will feature many of my articles from True West magazine.  It’s the perfect Christmas gift – but not this Christmas.  It will be in book stores in the spring of 2024.  

THE INSP ARTICLES

Just about a year ago, the very fine folks at The INSP Channel, whom I’ve known for a decade, and written for a little bit, hired me to write a couple of articles about Westerns for them every month.  I’ve been having a great time doing it, although between writing for them, and being the Film and Television Editor for True West magazine, I am sure you can understand why The Round-up has been appearing less frequently than it used to. 

One really exciting thing that has come from this was to chance to interview John Wayne’s son, Ethan, on camera.  I’m including below a link to that interview, and links to several of my INSP articles enjoy!

ETHAN WAYNE INTERVIEW:

w

ROBERT TAYLOR

https://www.insp.com/blog/robert-taylor-hollywood-star-husband-to-barbara-stanwyck-and-cowboy/

LANA WOOD INTERVIEW

https://www.insp.com/blog/exclusive-interview-with-lana-wood-child-star-of-the-searchers-with-john-wayne/

KATHARINE ROSS AND SAM ELLIOT

https://www.insp.com/blog/katharine-ross-and-sam-elliott-marriage-careers/

REDFORD, NEWMAN, AND GEORGE

https://www.insp.com/blog/redford-newman-and-george/?utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter&mi_u=a53c941bef4f26da066e8b43bd542dac4f7d4aa4&_hsmi=223373055&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9u5a1POqAkJUmj5-acWe7hQ2uqDPvfq6xoKeDFNl_IU_kisDRtZglcWJBc8fB08X&fbclid=IwAR0L1CTWJn3jfFYfWiOAzwxnz2Acf1Thyffg1zmpvb_IzXrniWqxG4YAi4s

JOHN WAYNE AND JAMES ARNESS - WHEN THE STARS ALIGN

https://www.insp.com/blog/john-wayne-and-james-arness-when-the-stars-align/?utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ddom0520&mi_u=%25%25emailaddr%25%25&_hsmi=213805588&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-8WdYG89h0ACFnY5hsam7usu14ojQcTfqAPuo_uWTHfO_0NjUhbaeFlGKLdUyC9ZFk46i2sxSUiwM7YbjAuikuqfXDpjOfZ3CbNUVgXcIEPRphq_b8&utm_content=213805588&fbclid=IwAR21saXKfQ-vXHEyCBRguGzUJhueMeq2rSuaNqtctgXyciqyimMeFHGRdSc

…AND THAT’S A WRAP!

What better possible way to follow up my interview with Tom Wopat?  I’ll be talking with John Schneider about Dukes of Hazzard, his Westerns, and his new movie, To Die For.  Please check out the December 2022 issue of True West, with my article on the best mountain man movie ever made, Jeremiah Johnson!  And if I don’t get to post before the holidays, have a very merry Christmas, a happy Chanukah, a happy New Year, and a joyous anything and everything else that you celebrate!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Content Copyright November, 2022 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

 

Monday, May 26, 2014

CANNES REPORT – TARANTINO ON ‘DJANGO’ MINI; ‘HOMESMAN’ NABS A DOMESTIC DISTRIBER, PLUS ‘B-MOVIE’ REVIEW!


TARANTINO AT CANNES: ‘HATEFUL 8’ AND ‘DJANGO’ NEWS


Franco Nero, Quentin Tarantino, Uma Thurman
picture by Getty Images


Quentin Tarantino was at Cannes to present A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS on closing night, and had plenty to say – or tease – about his upcoming Western projects, according to Deadline: Hollywood.  About THE HATEFUL EIGHT, once cancelled, then revived after doing the live audience reading: “I have calmed down a bit from the knife in the back. The wound is starting to scab.” He said the staged reading was “…a blast. I might do that on every script.  It was great to have three days of rehearsal and hear it out loud.” The second draft is nearly finished, and he’s contemplating a third. “I’m in no hurry. Maybe I’ll shoot it. Maybe I’ll publish it. Maybe I’ll do it on the stage. Maybe I’ll do all three.”

Also, with an hour and a half of unused scenes from DJANGO UNCHAINED, he’s considering a four-hour miniseries.  “The idea is to cut together a four-hour version…cut it up into one-hour chapters like a four-part miniseries and show it on cable television. People love those!”

SABAN FILM ACQUIRES ‘THE HOMESMAN’ AT CANNES



In what was described by Deadline: Hollywood as “a competitive situation,” Saban Films, a brand-new entity of Saban Entertainment, has acquired the North American distribution rights to the well-reviewed Western, for about $3,500,000.  Based on Glendon Swarthout’s 1988 novel, the film is directed by and stars Tommy Lee Jones, co-starring with Hilary Swank, with a supporting cast that includes Meryl Street, James Spader, John Lithgow, Hailee Steinfeld, and Barry Corbin. 

Saban Entertainment has a long history of kid entertainment, long associated with various incarnations of the MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS, but they have had considerable experience in distribution and production of features as well, beginning in 1988 with the remarkable HEATHERS.  They’ve also been involved with at least two previous Westerns.  In 1994 they distributed TRIGGER FAST, based on a J.T. Edson novel, starring Jurgen Prochnow, Martin Sheen and Corbin Bernsen.  That same year they produced the Western comedy SAMAURI COWBOY, starring Hiromi Go, Robert Conrad and Catherine Mary Stewart.  They also own the beautiful Saban Theatre in Beverly Hills, built in 1930 as the Fox Wilshire.

ORIGINAL ‘DJANGO’ ATTENDS CANNES ‘FISTFUL’ CLOSING SCREENING


Franco Nero with DJANGO LIVES producer
David Hollander


Franco Nero, the original DJANGO, soon to star in DJANGO LIVES!, attended the Cannes closing screening of A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS; he’s seen here with DJANGO LIVES! producer Davis Hollander.  The screening was to honor the 50th anniversary of the Spaghetti Western, and it’s amusing that Nero attended, as the great debate among fans has always been whether the Sergio Leone/Clint Eastwood films or the Sergio Corbucci/Franco Nero films are the greatest of the genre.  I refuse to choose.  But what is inarguable is that Clint Eastwood is the image of the Spaghetti Western in the United States, and Franco Nero is the image in Europe.

‘RESURRECTION OF EL PURO’ STARTS PRE-PRODUCTION



Not all the Western action was at Cannes this week!  Here’s Chip Baker Film’s Cesar Mendez with the original El Puro, Robert Woods in Los Angeles, on the first day of pre-production of RESURRECTION OF EL PURO, the sequel to the 1969 EL PURO (a.k.a. La taglia è tua... l'uomo l'ammazzo io) .  The script is finally locked, and they plan to roll camera in late September, after the 2014 Almeria Western Film Festival has wrapped.  Starring Woods, of course, the cast will include Western stalwarts Brett Halsey, Simone Blondel, Nicolleta Machiavelli, and Antonio Mayans.




B MOVIE – A Play by Michael B. Druxman

A Review





In a way, traveling to the period of B-MOVIE, Michael Druxman’s play about the Barbara Payton/Franchot Tone/Tom Neal scandal, is more of a time-warp than going back to the Civil War: it’s a trip from the Post-Morality present to the 1950s, when a morality clause was something to keep an actor, not a basketball-team owner, in line. 




Today, there may be no such thing as bad publicity – the once-clear line between fame and infamy has been erased.  Kim Kardashian became a media star with no other talent or credentials than staring in a home porn video: this week she and rapper Kanye West had an exorbitantly expensive wedding in Italy, her third, and she wore white.  In the 1950s, one single still photograph was taken of Barbara Payton and Tom Neal doing something similar to Kim’s video: it ended both of their careers.



B-MOVIE is a two-act, three-character play about three very real characters, who suddenly were forced into the spotlight of public moral judgment.  They were all known actors with varying degrees of success.  Franchot Tone was the big star, ever since 1935, and the splash he made with MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY.  Under contract to MGM, and later other studios, he worked regularly with Jean Harlow, Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy.  Suave, elegant, educated; but his character rarely got the girl.  He was Ralph Bellamy until Ralph Bellamy came along.   His first marriage was to Joan Crawford, and he’d have three more, including Payton.  I liked him best, cast against type, in an underrated noir from Universal, THE PHANTOM LADY.  It’s the only role I recall where his character was as dangerous as Tone could really be, when crossed.



Barbara Payton, 22 years Tone’s junior, was a platinum blonde beauty who impressed in the early 1950s opposite Cagney with KISS TOMORROW GOODBYE, opposite Gregory Peck in ONLY THE VALIANT, and opposite Guy Madison in the Civil War drama DRUMS IN THE DEEP SOUTH.  Not coy, she admits in her autobiography that she slept with most of her producers, directors and leading men.  Gregory Peck found her presence so distracting and disturbing that he had her banned from their set when she wasn’t working.  Even when she was going with Tone, she and Guy Madison were less than discreet about their relationship.


from JUNGLE GIRL


Compared to Tone and even to Payton, Tom Neal was a bit out of his league.  Even with a long list of credits going back to 1938, his roles were usually minor, often unnamed characters  – typically, in an episode of THE GENE AUTRY SHOW his character is ‘animal abuser.’  But he was a big, handsome guy with a strong jaw and a great physique, shown off well without a shirt, as the male lead in the Republic serial JUNGLE GIRL.  He was with the Duke in FLYING TIGERS, with Rondo Hatton in THE BRUTE MAN, and his biggest break doubtless was as the star of Edgar G. Ulmer’s no-budget noir, DETOUR.  But what a picture to be the lead in; sometimes described as the best B-movie of all time, it is only considered that by the sort of moviegoer who would rather laugh at a bad movie than enjoy the qualities of a good one.  It is ironic indeed that Neal plays a hapless dope traveling to L.A. to meet up with his fiancé, and en route keeps accidentally killing people.  When he finally did kill someone in real life, he’d claim that was an accident, too.
Druxman’s play starts in the 1960s, with Tone, his career and dignity somewhat recovered, living in a New York brownstone.  Neal is in Palm Springs, in a cell, waiting to go on trial for the murder of his third wife.  Tone is astonished and amused to be asked to contribute money to Neal’s defense – the former Golden Gloves fighter nearly beat Tone to death over Payton.  And yes, it really did happen.  And yes, Tone did contribute.


Gregory Peck and Barbara Payton in
ONLY THE VALIANT


They sometimes address each other, sometimes speak directly to the audience.  The story bounces back and forth between the two men and their memories of Barbara Payton, the woman who loved them both, who made and changed decisions, who made and broke promises, and ruined both men’s lives, and her own.  Although some would say that what ruined Payton and Neal was the photograph, and what ruined Tone was being a husband brought so low that he papered the studios with it.


Payton and Tone


It's a fascinating and tragic story, told with humor and empathy, and a great sense of the people and time and place involved.  After I read it, I watched MUNTINY ON THE BOUNTY, and DETOUR, and Payton in BRIDE OF THE GORILLA, and was struck by how well Druxman captured their voices in his words.  No surprise, really.  After a long career as a publicist, Michael became a very busy writer and sometime-director for Roger Corman, scripting CHEYENNE WARRIOR, one of the best Westerns of the last twenty years. 




As much devoted to theatre as he is to film, Druxman has written and published a series of one-person biographical plays of the stars, called THE HOLLYWOOD LEGENDS, which have seen numerous productions.  Their subjects include Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable, Orson Welles, Errol Flynn, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald, Clara Bow – his best-selling, and Al Jolson – his most successfully produced. 
In addition to his talent, all of us struggling writers can take a lesson from Michael, who aggressively gets his work out there like no one else I know.  B-MOVIE is in negotiations currently, but it is a very new play, and there have been as yet no stage productions.  If you’re looking for a two male, one female play with simple sets, check it out.  You can purchase this play or his others through Amazon.com.  If you’re interested in licensing a play, write to him: Michael B. Druxman, PMB 142, 6425 S. IH-35, Suite 150, Austin, TX 78744, or email him at druxy@ix.netcom.com.  You can visit his official site HERE . You can read my interview with Michael HERE .



Neal and Payton


SILENT SCREENINGS SAT. AT EGYPTIAN FEATURE MICKEY ‘MCGUIRE’ ROONEY!



On Saturday, May 31st, the Retroformat folks, the ones who show rare silents in 8mm, are taking a break from their D.W. Griffith series to show a varied program including the role that made Mickey Rooney a star – and no, it’s not Andy Hardy.  It’s the Mickey McGuire films, a silent series capitalizing on the success of Hal Roach’s Our Gang comedies.  They’ll be screening Mickey in MICKEY’S MOVIES; Harry Langdon in SOLDIER MAN, one of his earliest collaborations with Frank Capra; DANGER GIRL, a Mack Sennett Comedy starring Gloria Swanson; Larry Semon (why didn’t he change his name?) in THE SHOW; and chapters 11 & 12 of the serial THE WOMAN IN GREY.  There will be a live musical accompaniment by Cliff Retallick. 

THAT'S A WRAP!

I hope you had a great Memorial Day weekend, and I hope you took time to remember that it's more than a three-day weekend: it's a day to honor the memory of men and women who gave their lives to preserve our freedom!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright May 2014 by Henry C. Parke - All Rights Reserved



Monday, April 29, 2013

MELODY RANCH HOSTS 20TH ANNUAL COWBOY FESTIVAL!




On Saturday and Sunday, April 20th and 21st, the Veluzat family’s Melody Ranch welcomed fans of western art, movies, poetry and culture to the 20th Annual Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival.  The event, which started two decades ago as strictly a cowboy poetry festival, held in the Santa Clarita High School Auditorium, has grown by leaps and bounds.   When the 1994 earthquake toppled the auditorium, the Veluzat family offered the use of what had once been the Monogram Movie Ranch and then Gene Autry’s Melody Ranch.   It’s been the Festival’s home ever since, and that weekend is the one chance the general public has each year to visit Southern California’s finest western movie town.
Indian posing for visitors
 
Visitors posing for Indian

And boy, did they visit!  I haven’t seen any official numbers, but everyone I spoke to confirmed that it was the largest attendance on record – I arrived on Saturday at noon, and had to wait on line fifty minutes for the shuttle bus that transports visitors to the ranch.  Happily, the ranch is so big that once you arrive, even with thousands of visitors strolling along the famed western street seen most recently in DJANGO UNCHAINED, you never felt mobbed.  And while I waited, in addition to studying the program schedule, I read a 12-page booklet I’d been handed, called MOVIE MAGIC AT MELODY RANCH.  Written by Leon Worden, it gives the most clear and concise history of filmmaking and television production at the ranch that I have read.
 


 

Dodging horses and lariats, I spotted a new addition to the event (actually added last year), a display by the Art Directors Guild.  Walking across the porch, where artists sketched free while-you-wait ‘Wanted Posters’ of visitors, I entered the storefront and found a striking collection of film production art, including set sketches from BIG HAND FOR A LITTLE LADY; designs from DEADWOOD, THE MISSOURI BREAKS and SILVERADO; Albert Brenner’s costume designs for ZANDY’S BRIDE and MONTY WALSH; blueprints for a Mission building from THE MASTER GUNFIGHTER; and a three-dimensional paper model of the western street for DJANGO UNCHAINED.  
 
BIG HAND FOR A LITTLE LADY
 
Costume designs for ZANDY'S BRIDE and MONTY WALSH
 
Unidentified saloon design
 
Paper model of the western street for DJANGO UNCHAINED
 
 
At 2 p.m. I hurried over to the hangar-like building that houses the Melody Ranch Museum, which contains props, sets, vehicles and other production-related displays.  There by the big saloon set was the dedication ceremony for a framed display honoring two series that were filmed extensively at Melody Ranch: GUNSMOKE and DEADWOOD.  Writer/historian Julie Ann Ream, whose uncle Glenn Strange played the bartender at the Longbranch for many years, was coordinating the event.  Attendees included DEADWOOD regulars Geri Jewell and Ralph Richeson; GUNSMOKE – AN AMERICAN INSTITUTION author Ben Costello, and Inga Ojala, daughter of Arvo Ojala, the man whom Marshal Dillon would out-draw and shoot at the opening of every GUNSMOKE episode (Arvo was a legendary quick-draw artist, who taught Jim Arness how to shoot him).     

Julie Ann Ream with several men I'll need her to i.d.
 
 
A closer look at the GUNSMOKE and DEADWOOD display
 
Ralph Richeson, Ben Costello, Inga Ojala
 

Speaking of quick-draw artists, there I ran into quick-draw champion gunslinger Joey Dillon.  Joey trained Joseph Gordon Levitt in gun use for the recent LOOPER.  I asked him what his next film was.  “REACH ME.  It’s a cop drama, modern day, starring Thomas Jane, Sylvester Stallone, Kyra Sedgwick, and Nelly.  Tom Jane does some quick-draw gun-twirling, so they had me on-board to help teach him how; then they gave me a part as a gang-banger that he gets to kill.”  Sounds a little Arvo Ojala and James Arness to me.   I mentioned to Joey that I’d recently interviewed Thomas Jane (you’ll be seeing the interview here shortly) about his next project, MAGNIFICENT DEATH FROM A SHATTERED HAND, a western he co-wrote, and will direct and star in with Jeremy Irons and Nick Nolte.  “I’ve read it.  We did a lot of talking about it when I was doing this other movie with him, so we’ll see.”   
 
Joey Dillon demonstrating the sideways spin
Michael Biehn popularized in TOMBSTONE

I hurried back to the western street, looking in on the various entertainments and businesses that lined the boardwalk.  There were several places to have your picture taken in a western way, from the low-tech stick-your-head-through-hole-and-grin style, to a green-screen set-up offered by one of the event’s sponsors, Logix – Smarter Banking.  They also gave away a cool flip-book of a gunfight shot on that very street.

There were many choices for western clothes and cowboy hats, and one innovator had a vast collection of women’s shoulder-bags made from the long part of cowboy boots.  The delicacies offered along the way included kettle corn and jerky, which all cowboys know combine all the major food groups.
Shoulder-bags made from boots
 
Sampling gourmet jerky by Papa Nacca's
 
Ed Erlac
 
At the bend in the road I reached the Buckaroo Book Shop.  Drifting inside (I do a lot of drifting and moseying in western towns), I met western novelist Ed Erdelac, who writes the Merkabah Rider stories about a Hasidic gunslinger – you can learn more about him HERE .

Steve Deming

Beside him was cowboy poet Steve Deming, who told me that he became a poet out of necessity.  “When I was eleven years old, I found myself unable to afford a Mother’s Day card.  So I wrote a poem; and she loved it so much that she encouraged me to continue writing poetry.  So when I got into horses about thirty-five years ago I changed to the ‘cowboy poetry’ genre.”   His recent book THE SOURCE – POEMS OF THE TRAIL, won the Academy of Western Artists’ poetry book of the year award You can learn more about Steve’s poetry HERE.   

Peter Sherayko and Lenore Andriel

In front of the book store, a table was covered with all the different foreign editions of the DVD of YELLOW ROCK, the multiple award-winning Western shot at both Melody and nearby Veluzat Ranch.  Co-writers and co-producers Steve Doucette and Lenore Andriel were there – Lenore also stars in the movie, opposite Michael Biehn and James Russo, taking a break from writing their next western script, which might be either prequel or sequel to YELLOW ROCK.  To learn more about YELLOW ROCK, see the trailer, or purchase the movie, go HERE.  Coming soon is Randy Miller’s original score on CD.
 
Steve Doucette
 
Another Yellow Rocker, Peter Sherayko, who wrote the book – actually two books -- on western movie authenticity, was eager to talk about his next project, THERECKONING OF SCARLET WATERS , on which he’d just signed on as a producer and actor.  He’ll be portraying TEXAS JACK, the same real-life gunfighter he played in TOMBSTONE. 

Also there was actor David R. Booth, and White Wing Entertainment producer Terri Marie.  Terri was a protégé of the excellent director Irvin Kershner, perhaps best known for his STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK.  But he also directed RETURN OF A MAN CALLED HORSE, and 35 episodes of one of the best western series of all time, THE REBEL.  Kershner tried to put together one more western film before he died in 2010, and now Terri Marie is trying once more with that project.
 
Barn facade, with soundtage B beyond
 


Continuing on the street, passing the Children’s Corral and the Rancho Camulos table – the historic ranch where the novel RAMONA was both conceived, and later filmed by D. W. Griffith – I passed through the open door of a barn, which turned out to be a façade, and soon found myself in the land o’ food.  There was a wide and appetizing array of chow, from burgers to Mexican food to Indian fry-bread specialties, but as usual I headed straight to the Cowboy Cultural Committee, where I got their famous peach Cowboy Cobbler, cooked in Dutch ovens, and got a ten dollar cup of coffee: every year they have a new tin coffee-cup design, and my wife could not be less pleased that I have found something new to collect and cram into the kitchen cupboard.  On the other hand, it comes with as many refills as you can drink for both days. 

brewing cowboy coffee

The focus of the festival has shifted more and more away from cowboy poetry to cowboy music, and next to the Gold Rush Food Court is the Melody Ranch Stage, the biggest of the four venues that present continuous music from its finest practitioners.  Among the excellent acts I was privileged to hear perform that afternoon were Native American musician Tracy Lee Nelson; The Band of the California Battalion, a recreation of a Union Civil War brass band; Fort Worth singer/songwriter Ginny Mac; and a pair of legendary and brilliant bands, The Sons of the San Joaquin and Riders in the Sky.  I didn’t manage to see Baxter Black, Don Edwards, Hot Club of Cowtown or The Saddle Cats, but heard great things about all of their performances.

Tracy Lee Nelson
 
Band of the California Battalion
 
Ginny Mac

Son of the San Joaquin
 
Riders in the Sky
 
I distract Joey the Polka-King in mid-song!

After scalding my throat with as many coffee refills as I could handle, I made my way through the Trading Post and Mercantile Row areas, checking out their wares and visiting the booths of The Autry, True West Magazine, the William S. Hart Union High School District and others.  I ended my visit by dropping into the Buffalo Soldiers exhibit.  It was a wonderful way to spend a day, and like I say, it only comes along once a year, so don’t miss it!  It’s $20 for adults, and ten for kids, and if you want to make sure you know when the next one is coming, you can visit their website HERE and register for updates. 


 

WESTERN FICTIONEERS ANNOUNCE ‘PEACEMAKER AWARD’ NOMINEES

The Western Fictioneers, an organization of professional western fiction writers dedicated to traditional western storytelling, has revealed their nominations for their 3rd annual Peacemaker Awards.  The Lifetime Achievement Award will go to Robert Vaughan, who started writing novels at the age of nineteen, fifty-five years ago.  Under various names he’s authored about 350 books, roughly a hundred of them westerns, the first being a Jake Logan entitled CHEYENNE BLOODBATH.  Among the competitive awards, nominees for Best Western Novel are CITY OF ROCKS by Michael Zimmer, UNBROKE HORSES by D.B. Jackson, APACHE LAWMAN by Phil Dunlap, and WIDE OPEN by Larry Bjornson.

The Best Western Short Story nominees are Christmas Comes to Freedom Hill  by Troy Smith, Adeline by Wayne Dundee, Christmas For Evangeline by C. Courtney Joyner, Keepers of Camelot by Cheryl Pierson, and The Toys by James J. Griffin.  Incidentally, the last three nominees were all published in SLAY BELLS AND SIX GUNS, a collection of creepy Christmas stories published by Western Fictioneers.
The Best Western First Novel nominees are HIGH STAKES by Chad Strong, WIDE OPEN by Larry Bjornson, RED LANDS OUTLAW – THE BALLAD OF HENRY STARR by Phil Truman, LAST STAND AT BITTER CREEK by Tom Rizzo, and SIPPING WHISKEY IN A SHALLOW by Mark Mitten.  The winners will be announced on June 1st.  You can learn more about the Western Fictioneers HERE
 

TCM FANATIC - WESTERN NOW ONLINE!

And speaking of TCM (okay, nobody was), have I mentioned that the segment I was interviewed for is now viewable here?








THE AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER

Built by cowboy actor, singer, baseball and TV entrepreneur Gene Autry, and designed by the Disney Imagineering team, the Autry is a world-class museum housing a fascinating collection of items related to the fact, fiction, film, history and art of the American West. In addition to their permanent galleries (to which new items are frequently added), they have temporary shows. The Autry has many special programs every week -- sometimes several in a day. To check their daily calendar, CLICK HERE. And they always have gold panning for kids every weekend. For directions, hours, admission prices, and all other information, CLICK HERE.



HOLLYWOOD HERITAGE MUSEUM

Across the street from the Hollywood Bowl, this building, once the headquarters of Lasky-Famous Players (later Paramount Pictures) was the original DeMille Barn, where Cecil B. DeMille made the first Hollywoodwestern, The Squaw Man. They have a permanent display of movie props, documents and other items related to early, especially silent, film production. They also have occasional special programs. 2100 Highland Ave., L.A. CA 323-874-2276. Thursday – Sunday 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. $5 for adults, $3 for senior, $1 for children.



WELLSFARGO HISTORY MUSEUM

This small but entertaining museum gives a detailed history of Wells Fargo when the name suggested stage-coaches rather than ATMS. There’s a historically accurate reproduction of an agent’s office, an original Concord Coach, and other historical displays. Open Monday through Friday, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. Admission is free. 213-253-7166. 333 S. Grand Street, L.A. CA.


WESTERNS ALL OVER THE DIAL


INSP’s SADDLE-UP SATURDAY features a block of rarely-seen classics THE VIRGINIAN and HIGH CHAPARRAL, along with BONANZA and THE BIG VALLEY. On weekdays they’re showing LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, BIG VALLEY, HIGH CHAPARRAL and DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN.


ME-TV’s Saturday line-up includes THE REBEL and WAGON TRAIN. On weekdays it’s DANIEL BOONE, GUNSMOKE, BONANZA, BIG VALLEY, WILD WILD WEST, and THE RIFLEMAN.


RFD-TV, the channel whose president bought Trigger and Bullet at auction, have a special love for Roy Rogers. They show an episode of The Roy Rogers Show on Sunday mornings, a Roy Rogers movie on Tuesday mornings, and repeat them during the week.


WHT-TV has a weekday afternoon line-up that’s perfect for kids, featuring LASSIE, THE ROY ROGERS SHOW and THE LONE RANGER.


TV-LAND angered viewers by dropping GUNSMOKE, but now it’s back every weekday, along with BONANZA.

AMC usually devotes much of Saturday to westerns, often with multi-hour blocks of THE RIFLEMAN, and just this week began running RAWHIDE as well.  Coming soon, LONESOME DOVE and RETURN TO LONESOME DOVE miniseries!


THE WRAP-UP

That’s it for this week’s Round-up!  I’ve been attending the TCM Classic Film Festival for the last four days, and I’ll have plenty about that next week, as well as my review of the new DVD restoration of THE GRAND DUEL, and hopefully my review of the new Pat Buttram biography.


Happy Trails,

Henry

 

All Contents Copyright April 2013 by Henry C. Parke – All Right Reserved