Hooray for
Hollywood
That
screwy ballyhooey Hollywood
Where any
office boy or young mechanic can be a panic
With just
a good looking pan
And any
barmaid can be a star maid
If she
dances with or without a fan
The
earnest young reporter asked, "What do you miss most about
Hollywood?"
Chris
said, "Not a fucking thing."
The
reporter switched off his recorder and said, "Can I paraphrase that?"
He shrugged. "It's a family newspaper, you know."
As an
ex-newsman I thought it was my duty to help. I said, "How about swapping
'not a damn thing,' for 'not a fucking thing.' That work?"
The kid
thought a minute, then nodded and scribbled a note to himself. "Long as I
don't put God in front of it," he said, "Damn is okay."
He
switched the recorder back on. "What about you, Allan? Do you feel the
same?"
I said,
"Not entirely. Chris is probably a little more burned out than I am. When
I think back on it, mostly I had a helluva good time."
Chris
scoffed. "It was mostly shitty, with occasional bursts of piss."
"We
made a lot of money," I pointed out.
More
scoffing. "What most people make in a year will get you through maybe a
month in LA," he said. "It hooks you. Then you're always Jonesing on
money."
I couldn't
disagree with that, but persisted, "Didn't you at least have a little
fun?"
Chris
grudged. "Okay. Maybe a little."
"And
we learned a lot, right?" I said.
Chris
nodded. "I could write a write a big fat natural science book on the Assholes
Of Hollywood - with illustrations."
"Can't
use that," the reporter said, but laughed anyway. Then he asked, "As
a writer, what's the most important thing you learned in Hollywood."
I said,
"Story, story, story. You have to come up with so many ideas, so fast, and
so frequently, that any smell, sound, or movement turns itself into a story
possibility."
"What
about you, Chris?" the reporter asked.
"How
to tell a boy stunt person, from a girl stunt person," he said.
The kid
chuckled. "Isn't that kind of obvious?"
"Not
really," I said. "Even these days the Town's pretty sexist. In a lot
of stunts involving women they substitute a small guy. You can usually catch
the switch just before the big gag. If the hero's best girl is dressed in pants
and a jacket and sensible shoes, she'll probably only do some of the action.
She'll run away from, or after someone, and it'll most likely be the actress
running."
Chris
broke in: "In the old days, actors and actresses had to take fencing and
riding lessons. These days they've practically got to be fucking
marathoners and world class sprinters."
I nodded
agreement, then got back to the point. "So, the actress is running. But
then there's a big jump coming up. One rooftop to the next... whatever."
Chris
said, "At that point you get a closeup of the chick - reacting - Holy
Shit. Then camera pullback and they swap a small stuntman dressed just like the
hero's best girl to do the jump, or the fall, or whatever."
I said,
"They try to make the costume loose, so they can hide the lack of a female figure
and also to put protective gear under the costume."
|
Xena And Her
Stunt Double |
Chris
said, "Of course, if they want the shot to be sexy - the audience gets to
see her pretty ass, and so on - they use an actual stuntwoman. But, then they
can't wear protective gear so they can get pretty banged up. In that kind of
situation, it's a helluva lot more dangerous - and takes more moxie and guts -
to be a stuntwoman than a stuntman."
"The
best Tell is when the action has a woman jumping or falling off a bridge into a
river," I said.
The
reporter leaned forward, interested. "How so?" he asked.
I said,
"If it's a woman, she'll protect her tits." I demonstrated, hands on
my chest.
"If
it's a dude," Chris said, also demonstrating, "he'll protect his
balls."
More laughter
from our audience of one. "What about the writing part?" the reporter
asked. "You obviously prefer books to scripts. What's the
difference?"
Chris
snorted, "You'll never hear anybody say they curled up last night with a
good script. And if you do, it'll be some lying sack of a producer who moves
his lips when he reads."
I agreed.
"A script's more like an architectural drawing. A model for a whole lot of
other people to stick their own ideas in."
"But
what really sucks big fat greasy donkey dicks," Chris said, "is that
Hollywood is the only place where a writer doesn't own what he writes."
The
reporter made a note to paraphrase the donkey business when he played the tape
back, then looked up. "I don't get it," he said. "You write it,
then it's yours. Or should be."
Chris
said, "That's true everywhere but fucking Hollywood."
I said,
"When you sell a book you're actually just leasing certain publication
rights to the publisher. And they can't change a damned word without your
permission. It's a piece of property. And it's yours for 99 years plus whatever
the latest copyright law says it is. You can will it to your wife and kids so
it'll take care of them when you're gone."
"Same
with a play," Chris said. "A playwright physically owns the play.
Like a book, nobody can change it without his okay."
"During
tryouts," I said, "when they're getting ready to run the play up to
Broadway, the playwright fine-tunes his work after every rehearsal, and every
performance."
"But
if the director tries to insist on something that the writer doesn't
like," Chris added, "The writer can tell him to go fuck
himself."
The
reporter hesitated. I could see that he was still having Eff-word issues. I
took pity. "Just say 'bleep' whenever we say 'fuck,'" I offered.
"After fifteen years in journalism and almost twenty in Hollywood, foul
language is an impossible habit to break."
"Plus,
I did six fucking years in the fucking Army," Chris said. "Getting
shot at will knock all the 'oh, dears,' and 'gee whizzes,' the fuck out of you
fast."
The kid
gave an apologetic shrug. "A lot of our readers are regular church
goers," he said.
"Then
God Fucking Bless them," Chris said.
"But
back to Books Versus Scripts," I said. "When Hollywood started out it
was the Silent Era. The only thing you needed from a writer was to map out a
scenario, then do Title Cards. They figured, who needs an actual Writer,
writer? Anybody can do 'I Can't Pay The Rent,' and 'You Must Pay The Rent,'
Title Cards."
"That's
why the writer is the lowest man on the shit pole in Hollywood," Chris
said. "Never did get any respect."
"But
the big thing..." I put in... "the really major thing, is that when
the whole system of screenwriting evolved into talkies, the hacks they had on
staff got a salary to write whatever crap the Studio bosses wanted. They might
get a little extra if somebody actually exposed film and made a movie, but
everything in the script - story, characters, dialogue - was owned outright by
the Studio."
"In
the end, you were just a hack for hire and they could do anything they wanted
with your script because They owned it, not you," Chris said.
"But
you get paid a lot," the young reporter said. "Plus you get rerun
money."
"You
do," Chris admitted."And, like I said, it's is a bitch of a habit to
break. If you're serious about being an ink-stained wretch you should be
working on your books. But, then some producer calls and whispers sweet dollar
figures in your ear and you shove the book aside."
"That's
why we got the hell out of La-La Land," I said. "And now we're in
Writers' Rehab in Ilwaco, Washington. Writing books and looking over tons of
ideas we've both had for future books."
Chris
thought of something else. He said, "Another thing you learn fast is how
to lie like a rug."
The kid's
eyebrows rose and I put in, "He means Writer's Lies. It's the only way to
deal with producers. You have to have a lie ready on zip notice."
Chris
said, "Sometimes you get a producer who calls for a progress report every
fucking minute. Gets so you can't think to write."
"Also,"
I said, "if you are a freelancer you'd better be working on several
projects at once, or you'll be Broke-City in no time. So, more than likely when
the producer calls you're not even on his project. But, you can't tell him
that. He wants exclusivity."
Chris
said, "I'll give you four of our favorite lies... Number One: 'No worries,
boss. We've got a good fucking start on it."
I
translated: "In reality that means that you're thinking about writing
'Fade In' - but only when your hangover lets up."
Chris
said, "Number two: 'We're smokin', babe! Half fucking done.'"
"This
means," I said, "that you maybe have the First Act firmly in mind -
now, if only that hangover will let go."
Chris
said: "Lie Number Three: 'Man, are we fucking whipped. Finished a First
Draft. Pretty rough, yet. But we're already marking it up for rewrite.'"
I said,
"This means that the Fade In is a definite possibility."
|
Carson As Carnac |
Then I put
a hand to my forehead like Johnny Carson doing The Great Carnac. Eyes closed, I
said, "Writer's lie Number 4: 'We're almost there, boss. Just need to do
some character tweaks.'"
Chris
mock-plucked an envelope up and blew into it - Poof. Pulled invisible paper out
and pretended to read: "We must have written these fucking notes drunk.
Can't make heads or tails of them. What's this, Hero does Talk, Talk,
shit?"
The
reporter loved it. "Maybe I'll censor that part," he said. "With
a couple of changes, those lies would work just as well on my editor."
"We've
tested them out on Random House," Chris said. "Works for book editors
too."
I said,
"Another list a writer has to know - if he wants to eat and pay the rent -
is the lies a producer will try to sell him about a deal. "
Chris
said, "If the producer says the deal is fucking set..."
I
finished, "It means the contracts may or may not be in the wind."
Chris
said, "If he says, 'No worries, boys. This deal is not just Set - it's
fucking Set-Set...'"
I
translated, "... It means he's possibly had his 'girl' mail the check to
your agent."
Chris
said, "If you're agent calls and says the deal is not only Set, but
Set-Set-Set..."
"It
means the check has not only arrived, but cleared the bank," I said.
The
reporter had a laugh at that. Then moved on. "You hear a lot of
scuttlebutt about censorship in Hollywood," he said. "Especially on
television. How did you deal with that?"
"When
we started out," I said, "we fought like hell.'
Chris came
in: "We'd say, 'Hey, this is fucking America. What about Free Fucking
Speech?"
I grimaced
at the memory. "And they'd say: "We're all for Free Speech. Just as
long as it doesn't violate Program Practices." I sighed, adding:
"Then we learned a couple of tricks to get around the censor."
Chris
said, "Put shit in there you don't care about, then give 'em hell when
they try to make you take it out."
"Then,
you very reluctantly give up the point," I said. "They get so full of
themselves they miss the stuff you really wanted to get in."
"Another
thing you do," Chris said, "is fuck with the descriptions of action
that might get you into trouble."
"If
you have a big fight scene on an eight o'clock show," I said,
"Program Practices will go bananas if they think there's going to be
massive bloodshed."
"So,
you don't say the people are wounded, or killed," Chris said. "You
say they're stunned. You know - car full of bad guys fleeing the scene... hero
shoots the tires out... car goes over canyon wall... crashes and burns... but
the guys inside somehow roll out - stunned."
"You
had to do that on A-Team a lot," I said. "Nobody was ever killed on
that show - even when Hannibal Smith let loose with his machinegun and chewed
down brick walls."
Chris
raised a finger. "Actually, one person was killed," he said. "In
the pilot. And the A-Team was on the run because they were 'falsely accused' of
the guy's murder."
I said,
"A producer friend - an old timer - was hired to do a mini-series about
the Roman Empire. Wanted lots of T&A, which was no problem. Tits and Ass
come cheap in Hollywood. But they also wanted some big set piece battle scenes.
Which was a definite problem.
"They
gave him shit for a budget, but said they'd had the foresight to buy the rights
to some old Italian flicks about ancient Rome. Said he could use all the
footage he wanted for the battle scenes and so on."
Chris
said, "It was pretty gory stuff. Especially the big Aftermath Of Battle
Scene. Arms and legs and guts all over the place."
I said,
"When they screened the rough cut for the network, the Program Practices
Lady pitched a fit. Said, no way, Jose."
Chris
said, "So our buddy scratched his head. Then got a flash. Rearranged the
footage some - but not cutting anything out, because then he'd be fucked for
time."
I said,
"Then he looped in a guy shouting: 'Help me with these wounded men!'"
"Showed
it to the Network again," Chris said, "including the Program Practices chick. And they bought it, guts and gore and all. Easy as bacon
through a goose."
I said,
"On the other hand, once in a rare while you agree with the censor."
Chris
said, "Like the time we were doing a fire show and sold a story about a
pyromaniac. The bad guy, who was no fan of Smoky The Bear, was burning up half
the State and Federal parks."
I said,
"The producer asked us how somebody could do that much damage and get away
with it for so many years."
Chris
said, "It's a simple trick. Cheap. And almost untraceable. We told the guy
how it was done."
I said,
"The jerk got all excited and said, 'Put it in! Put it in!'"
"We
refused," Chris said. "And it took some convincing to make the
Dimbulb realize that maybe twenty, twenty five million people would be watching a show
about firemen and there was bound to be a potential firebug among them. And
guess, what? We've just taught him how to burn down our National Forests."
|
Lindsay Wagner |
"Another
screwball case we agreed with," I said, "was when we worked on a
Lindsay Wagner cop-type show. She played a shrink working for the police
department."
"Before
we went in to pitch the show," Chris said, "we got a call from the
Network warning us that beautiful as Ms Wagner is... and talented as she is...
She's got a few screws loose about a couple of things."
I said,
"Like, they said she was an True Believer in homeopathic cures."
"Dipshit
science," Chris said. "Dilute the medicine until only a lonely
fucking molecule is hanging around, then feed it to a cancer patient, or
whatever, and bingo - They're dead."
"The
Network said Ms Wagner was determined to get some of her ideas about
homeopathic medicine into the show. You know - 'For the good of
Mankind...'"
Chris
said, "The Network didn't give a fat fuck about Mankind. But, they were scared
shitless that as the original Deep Pockets they'd end up in a big class action
suit."
I said,
"It wasn't easy. She was really, really nice to us. And so easy to look
at... Well, we're only human... even if we are writers."
The kid
reporter grinned. "But you resisted, right?" he said.
Chris
sighed. "Should've gotten a medal or something. But, yeah - we
resisted."
I said,
"Another way you can have some fun getting around censors is by
substituting foreign words for smutty language."
The
reporter, who had smutty language problems of his own, perked up at that.
"How so?"
Chris
said, "Instead of calling a guy a dick, you say he's a putz."
"Which
is Yiddish for 'dick,'" I said.
"We
got that through a lady censor who was Jewish," Chris said. "Back
brain she had to know, but it went right past her."
"Instead
of saying that your hero has big brass balls," I said, "you say he's
got big brass cajones."
"But,
that's 'balls' in Spanish," the kid said.
"No
shit," Chris said.
"You
mean, no 'drek'," I said.
Chris
laughed. "Try that out on your editor," he told the reporter.
"Bet you lunch it gets past him."
Guess who
got a free lunch?
*****
FADE OUT: BUNCH & COLE
Chris and I struck out on our own not long after we left Hollywood. He went on to write books like the very popular
Star Risk Ltd. Series, while I ventured forth with books like the
Timura Trilogy - loosely based Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat. I'd dreamed about writing such a work since I discovered a battered old book of his poems at a Middle Eastern bazaar when I was just a lad.
I also labored for more than three years on
Lucky In Cyprus - about my experiences as a CIA brat during the height of the Cold War.
During our years together Chris and I sold more than 150 screenplays, and published 16 novels together, amounting to many millions of words.
And, as Chris said more than once: "That's a fuck of a lot of dead trees, Cole."
NEXT: A
HOLLYWOOD CHRISTMAS FLASHBACK
(Note From Allan: After Christmas there are two more episodes to go - Sten In Hollywood and Chris Bunch: In Memoriam.)
*****
THE COMPLETE MISADVENTURES: IT'S A BOOK!
AND A GREAT CHRISTMAS PRESENT
THE VITAL LINKS:
The MisAdventures began humbly enough - with about 2,000 readers. When it rose to over 50,000 (we're now nearing the 200,000 mark) I started listening to those of you who urged me to collect the stories into a book. Starting at the beginning, I went back and rewrote the essays, adding new detail and events as they came to mind. This book is the result of that effort. However, I'm mindful of the fact, Gentle Reader, that you also enjoy having these little offerings posted every Friday to put a smile on your face for the weekend. So I'll continue running them until it reaches the final Fade Out. Meanwhile, it would please the heart of this ink-stained wretch - as well as tickle whatever that hard black thing is in my banker's chest - if you bought the book. It will make a great gift, don't you think? And if you'd like a personally autographed copy you can get it directly through my (ahem) Merchant's Link at Amazon.com. Click here. Buy the book and I will sign it and ship it to you. Break a leg!
*****
THE NEW STEN OMNIBUS EDITIONS:
IT'S HERE: JUGGERNAUT!
Sten Omnibus #2
Click this link to buy the book!
Orbit Books in the U.K. has gathered up all eight novels in the Sten Series and is publishing them as three omnibus editions. The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. Click this link to buy it. The Kindle Edition OF BATTLECRY, includes all three books but is only available in the U.K. and territories. Click this link to buy it. Available now: JUGGERNAUT, which features the next three books: Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of the Emperor. Click this link to buy both the trade paperback and Kindle version. Next month months Orbit (A division of Little Brown) will publish DEATH MATCH, which will feature Sten #7, Vortex, and Sten #8, End Of Empire. Those will be issued as Kindle editions as well. Stay tuned for
STEN #1 DEBUTS IN SPANISH!
*****
Sten debuta # 1 en español! Narrada en cuatro partes, Episode Dos ahora aparece en la revista Diaspar, la mejor revista de SF & F en América del Sur!
*****
THE STEN COOKBOOK & KILGOUR JOKEBOOK
Two new companion editions to the international best-selling Sten series. In the first, learn the Emperor's most closely held cooking secrets. In the other, Sten unleashes his shaggy-dog joke cracking sidekick, Alex Kilgour. Both available as trade paperbacks or in all major e-book flavors. Click here to tickle your funny bone or sizzle your palate.
Only two more?! Dude, you can't do that to me! There has got to be more you can talk about.
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking about starting a new series - Tales Of The Blue Meanie. It is sort of a prequel to the MisAdventures. Hope you enjoy them as much.
ReplyDelete