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by Rusty White
After viewing five Curtis Harrington movies in one weekend, I
found myself drawn into his world of elegant madness. Today's horror and
suspense directors would be well advised to watch Mr. Harrington's work
before stepping behind the camera. Harrington knows the Danse Macabre.
Veteran horror and suspense genre director Curtis Harrington is unique in
the film world in that he began making experimental and avant garde films
with other cutting edge filmmakers as Kenneth Anger and Maya Deren during the
post WW II era. Mr. Harrington went from experimental films to working for a
major studio as an associate producer to Jerry Wald. Mr., Harrington then
began his career as a feature film director in the world of independent
films. Like Francis Ford Coppola and countless others, Mr. Harrington was a
protege of Roger Corman's. With numerous theatrical and TV films, in addition
to some episodic TV work to his credit, Mr. Harrington has recently returned
to his roots with a contemporary short film "Usher" based on Poe's short
story.

Curtis Harrington in his latest film Usher |
Harrington's films include "Ruby" (1977), "What's the Matter With Helen?"
and "Who Slew Auntie Roo?" (both 1971), the cult classic "Games" (1967) and
Dennis Hopper's first lead role "Night Tide" (1961). A friend of director
James Whale (Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein), Mr. Harrington was called
upon to coach Ian McKellen for the movie "Gods and Monsters." Phil Hardy
states in "The Overlook Encyclopedia of Horror Films" that Harrington is one
of the most interesting American horror film practitioners and that he brings
an elegance not often seen to his films. I have to agree with Mr. Hardy's
assessment. In preparing for this interview, I rented as many of Mr.
Harrington's films that I could find. I think it is a pity that he has not
found financing for more recent projects. Mr. Harrington spent a couple of
hours on the phone with me recently from his home in Los Angeles. I found him
to be witty, gracious, a bit sardonic and cynical about the system run by
moneymen with no artistic insight. What follows is most of our conversation:
EInsiders.com: You started out making experimental short films. IMDB lists "A Fragment
of Seeking" as your first film. I wasn't able to find it anywhere.
Curtis Harrington: No, the short films are not on video. They are only available from "The
Filmmaker's Cooperative" in New York on 16 mm.
What was "Fragment of Seeking" about?
All of the short films were...it's so hard for me to describe them. The
whole point of the films is they were entirely visual. They had no dialogue
of any kind.
I did get to see Kenneth Anger's "Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome" in
which you acted.
Yes, that's a film I acted in but that is not my film. I had nothing to
do with the making of that film.
Did you play the character that looked like Cesare from "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari?"
Precisely. You got it. The resemblance was intention.
As I watched it, I was thinking it was a cross between "Tales of Hoffman"
and "The Trip" or it was visual MUZAK from Marilyn Manson's house.
(Laughs) That was made many, many, many years before Marilyn Manson.
What was Mr. Anger like to work with.
He was very pleasant. He was very intense in what he was trying to do.
Actually, we, well everyone who worked on it had a good time when we were
making it. It was a lot of fun.
You were also the cinematographer on his short film "Puce Moment."
You can call it cinematography. I did very little. The cinematographer
should do the lighting. I'm not sure that I even did the lighting. I think I
mainly did the camera work. I was more like a camera operator than a
cinematographer.
Anias Nin also appeared in "Pleasure Dome." Do you have any recollections
of working with her.
I became a very, very good friend of hers. Not because of the film, but
quite apart from the film. Like everyone else working on that film all the
people were friends, friends of Kenneth and friends of each other. It was an
amusing thing to do. Anias was very cooperative. She had appeared earlier in
a Maya Deren film in New York called "Ritual and Transfigured Time." You know
Maya Deren was sort of the pioneer of the post W.W.II avant garde film making
in America. So Anias had already appeared in her film in New York. Appearing
in an avant garde film like that was just fun.
It looked fun with the costumes. Technically it is an exciting movie. The
colors are rich, there are a lot of process shots.
Yes, he did a lot of optical work in laboratory after the final shooting.
This weekend I watched 5 of your films to get ready for the interview.
I'd like to get your comments on some of them. "Night Tide."
Yes, that was my first feature film. That had a relationship to "Pleasure
Dome" only in the sense that the artist Cameron appeared in both.
Was she the mysterious Greek woman in "Night Tide"?
Yes. She was an artist, not an actress.
It was a beautiful movie, especially considering the low budget you had
to work with.
Extremely small.
A couple of things stood out to me. The story is poetic, something you
normally don't find with AIP and the dialogue is a level above what you hear
in most movies. The dialogue is intelligent and elegant, but it doesn't sound
pretentious, if that makes sense. My thought was, that I would like to know
people who talk like that in their daily lives.
(Laughs) Well thank you. I think in terms of the general public, there
was a slightly higher rate of literacy in the 60s than there is now. When you
look at our President who went to a major Eastern university and still hasn't
mastered the English language that that is symptomatic of our times.
I can identify with that. I'm more literate on paper than
speaking. I apologize for stumbling along here. I just recently began
conducting interviews. I just finished interviewing William Windom and Kim
Hunter at the Memphis Film Festival.
Did you talk to Kim Hunter about one of my favorite films "The Seventh
Victim"?
She was asked about that during a panel discussion. She spoke very highly
of Val Lewton, said he was a pure gentleman, and the king of the horrors. I
followed that up with a question about working with Dario Argento in "The
Black Cat." You have two different takes on horror. One suggests rather than
shows the horror while Argento just lays it out there, stylishly though.
Yes. I like his films. He is a wild filmmaker. Although I just saw his
latest and there wasn't much to it unfortunately. I like the Mother's
trilogy, "Inferno" and "Tenebre" and I can't think of the third. I like
Argento. I met him once. I had lunch with him when he was in Los Angeles.
Do you speak Italian?
No, no. But he speaks a little English. It's interesting what you said
about Val Lewton, because I think "The Seventh Victim" is a particularly
interesting film.
He produced one movie that scared me to death as a child. I can't
remember the name. There is a small boy locked out of his house screaming for
his mother to let him in because a panther is coming....
That was "The Leopard Man." That was a wonderful one. He was an extremely
talented filmmaker. It is so interesting to me that Val Lewton is one of the
few producers whose mark is so strong on his films that it doesn't matter
much who directs them. He must have conceived them very fully at the script
level so it was more a matter of executing what was on the page rather than
the director's talent, although I do think of the directors who worked for
him that Jacques Tourner was the best.
Oh yes. I thoroughly enjoyed "Night of the Demon." I understand that you
were a bit disappointed that they showed the demon at the end.
It was so phony. It was a big comedown. It should have been done in the
Val Lewton manner, even if they suggested it with sound or something. The use
of the talisman is wonderful in that film. Several years ago a producer came
to me and said he wanted to remake it and wanted me to direct it.
Unfortunately it never happened. I would liked to have done it.
You mentioned last week that you got up in the mornings and did some
writing. Are you working on a script?
No, actually I''m working on my autobiography. My career in the film
world. I think I have an interesting story to tell. Almost every does you
know, its just a matter of being able to tell it. That's what I'm working on
now.
Well, you certainly have worked with or brushed elbows with some of the
greatest artists of the last 60 years.
I have. I've been fortunate that way.
When you direct do you storyboard?
No. I work from a shooting script. I've never storyboarded. My films do
not involve special effects as you know. If I had something like that I would
storyboard it or if I had an extremely complex action sequence. My films are
very human oriented. Even though they are suspense films they are more about
human relationships and human beings.
"The Killing Kind" really struck a chord with me. I'm a criminal defense
lawyer by profession and a long time true crime buff. I was overwhelmed by
the similarities between the relationship between John Savage and Ann
Southern and several real life serial killers.
In preparing to do that film, I didn't write the script, but in order to
be psychologically grounded to direct I read a book on serial murderers who
had made a great study of them at the time. The common denominator in the
kind who murdered women over and over again was a relationship with the
mother in which the mother punishes the child by withdrawing her love, or
ostensibly with drawing it. In other words, "If you're not a good boy then
mother won't love you any more." The psychologist pointed out that in the
male child that creates a terrible rage and frustration. So in point in fact,
what serial killers, the kind that murder women that is, are murdering their
mother over and over again. Of course, they can't kill their mother because
that is taboo, so they seize on other women to take their mother's place.
That's a simplification, but you get the idea.
The opening sequence, the gang rape under the pier is a great scene in
that it takes you in one direction when the other guys grab John Savage, pull
his pants down and pull him on top of the girl. You have that point of view
shot looking up at John and he screams in rage. I took the scene to mean that
here was a kid who knew what he was doing was wrong and doesn't want to be
doing this, and that his friends have gotten him into this trouble. As the
story unfolded, my thought became that the scream of rage was because he was
thinking of mama, that he wasn't being faithful to her.
Actually the scream had a lot to do with the fact that he was impotent.
That had a lot to do with it.
There was some subtleties later. When he was having a nightmare and he
revisited the scene under the pier. You had a close up shot of the victims
face, and she had a smile on her face that wasn't there before.
Yes. A subtle smile. A lot of people admire the film, and think it is one
of my best films. It is really sad that it never had a proper release, and
that's a long story. Everything was bungled by the people who were in control
of it. It is really sad to me that it never had a proper release. It was to
raw for television at the time, and it never had much of a theatrical
release.
There was one scene which was cut by the producer of "The Killing Kind."
There was one key sequence which was arbitrarily cut out by the producer.
I gave an interview about it and the wife of the producer got angry with me.
I didn't care because I was so deeply angered by this cut by a man who should
have known better. Other than that one cut, the movie is how I wanted it.
There was an absolute idiot involved in the distribution who wanted the scene
cut and the producer gave into him. He should have had the strength to stand
up to him.
What was the sequence.
It was a very important sequence psychologically. Do you remember the
scene when the boy is returning to the house and the old lady is coming down
stairs on the elevator? That scene was preceded by the cut scene. The boy was
at the zoo looking at the apes behind the bars so there would have been a
visual analogy to where he would have been before the movie starts. The
footage was wonderful. While he was there, he suddenly hears laughter that is
somehow familiar to him. He glances over and in another cage nearby is the
girl you saw in the rape sequence with her present boyfriend. The point is,
that he doesn't come home and just arbitrarily just call her. She has been
put back into his mind. It gives a different context during the phone call
when he is masturbating.
The phone call was also a very intriguing scene in that your treatment of
the rape victim. You didn't show her a some psychologically scarred, put upon
person, but rather as a someone who has gone on with her life and has healed,
and can enjoy her sexuality.
Yes.
When he asks her "Do you still do it under the pier?" and she didn't
freeze up and become terrified, it casts some doubts about his guilt. There
were a lot of ambiguous scenes in the movie which make it so rich.
Well thank you. I happen to be a filmmaker who loves ambiguity and uses
it very consciously. Of course, that is the opposite of what producers want.
I remember what Orson Wells said: "The trouble with my career is that I don't
want to make the films that producers want to make." The same is true of me;
I don't want to make the films the producers want to make.
I get upset with the moneymen too. With DVDs you see so many that are slapped
together without a single thought about the fan, and then you have a DVD like
"Fight Club" by Fox Home Entertainment in which the moneymen get it right.
That's one of the things I liked about the "Fight Club" DVD.
It seemed that VCI was taking another step up in the quality of their product.
I was glad that Piper (Laurie) was available to do the commentary with
me, and the interview with David Del Valle, who is a long time admirer of my
work, but it is unfortunate about the ending of the film. It is so truncated,
and even though I told them about the additional material, they were unable
to find it.
You have an idea of where it can be found?
No, oh no. I don't know where they found anything. And I'm not on
speaking terms with the film's producer.
I don't blame you after what he did. My feeling was that I wish VCI had
cut off that horrible ending that was tacked on and end with Piper Laurie and
her lover standing by the lake and cut to Stuart Whitman being restrained by
Roger Davis as Mr. Davis explained that this was the way she wanted things.
It would have been a little shorter but, I thought that would have been
closer to the spirit of the original theatrical release.
I don't know what happened to the footage.
I imagine the producer destroyed it.
I don't know, I wouldn't put anything past that terrible man.
So, you were among the ranks of the many Alan Smithees out there! (Alan
Smithee is a pseudonym used by studio's to replace the real director's name
when he has the credit removed.)
Yes, yes. The version that was available on video for so long with the
name Alan Smithee on it was not even remotely close to the version they just
released. It was filled with extraneous scenes which were shot by another
director and written by the producer as far as I know, that were just
ludicrous, ludicrous. Why that version was put out on video I'll never know,
because that version was specifically made to pass "Standards and Practices"
at CBS at the time. So they cut out every bit of violence, and then the film
only ran about 70 minutes and he had to add footage. That's why he did it.
Which for TV and the late show was one thing, but to subsequently put that
version out on video was insane...and not go back to the original feature.
I enjoyed sharing the movie with my kids. My 12 year old son hightailed
out of the living room during the scene when Piper Laurie and Roger Davis
entered Janet Baldwin's bedroom as she is levitating up side down.
(Laughs) Oh yes. I had her do what Salvador Dali talked about in his
book, and what Salvador Dali drew, and it was also used by Bunuel in one of
his Mexican films, it is called "the hysterical arch." I imagine that it is
written about in Freud. That back bend effect, that's what it is called, "the
hysterical arch." Fortunately Janet Baldwin was very limber and she was able
to do that.
The scene struck me for another reason. I saw the recent re-release of
"The Exorcist" with the famous 'crab-walk' scene.
Oh yes? I haven't seen that yet.
Linda Blair's double walks down the scene in that same position. When I
saw "Ruby" afterwards it hit me that this scene was never shown before, until
this year and 3 years after the original run of "The Exorcist" you include a
scene which almost the same, and just as terrifying. The similarities were
amazing. I guess great minds think alike.
I guess so, because I had no idea that they used that in "The Exorcist."
Did you watch my film "Games?"
Yes I did. When the film ended I wondered if you had seen the movie "Wild
Things" with Kevin Bacon, Matt Dillon and Denise Richards. It came out about
2 years ago.
I don't think so.
The ending of "Wild Things" popped into my mind as I watched "Games." I
wondered if Kevin Bacon had seen your film before they made "Wild Things"
because of the many similarities including the ending up to and including the
poisoned liquor celebration.
It sounds like someone saw "Games".
What was Don Stroud like to work with? He was one of the lesser players,
but he's been a favorite of mine since "The Buddy Holly Story."
He's adorable. He's such a sweet guy. He was a young contract player at
the time. I thought he was perfect for the part.
All of the memorabilia that James Caan and Katherine Ross had in their
apartment, was this just stuff that Universal had on hand in their prop
department?
Some of it was stuff that I owned and some of it came from friends. No,
it didn't come from prop houses.
The apartment was amazing. It helped so much in defining the characters.
It was a combination of things. A very interesting aspect of things was
that the studio...the studio they run things like clockwork, without any
intelligence or design to what they are doing. They automatically assigned to
this production a set decorator from their set decoration department, who was
an old timer who had mainly done Westerns. He no more idea how to decorate
these sets than fly to the moon. Finally we went to the head of the art
department and said "We can't work with this man because he hasn't a clue."
So how they worked it out was they gave him a paid vacation during the making
of "Games" which was strictly against union rules and allowed our costume
designer, who was our choice and who was a very creative person design the
set. So the man who was on vacation gets the credit on the screen, but the
costume design did the actual work.
Can you imagine the controversy if there had been an Art Direction Oscar?
(Laughs) Yes, that would have been terrible. Our set designer was fine.
He understood what we were doing.
Speaking of costumes in "Games" I was amazed how well the film holds up
today. I see a lot of contemporary films from the 60s and 70s and shake my
head to think that I used to dress that way. But the costumes as well as the
sets in "Games" seem timeless. It helps the film maintain its impact today.
That's because we had a marvelous designer working with us. The costume
designer had been nominated for an Academy Award. He did the original "Planet
of the Apes." His name is Morton Hack, and he had done some Broadway theater
earlier in his career. So he was a marvelous designer. He also did,
uncredited Sylvia Kristel's costumes for my film "Mata Hari." By then he was
semiretired and living in Rome. I called him and he agreed to do them. He did
them all at one of the big costume houses in Rome.
"Mata Hari" has taken fairly bad raps from a lot of the critics. Is there
anything you feel you could have done differently?
Well, yes. I was under terrible pressure from the producers on that one.
Not that they cut it so much. I was working with a line producer who made it
into a very difficult shooting situation. I had a cameraman who was foisted
on me. I didn't get along with him. I didn't like him. He did some beautiful
work, but he took all of my time for lighting, my shooting time. The line
producer had a deal with the Hungarians that they couldn't go into to one
minute of overtime. You can't shoot a film that way. In other words, at 5
o'clock, the Hungarian people would show up on the set and start looking at
their watches to make sure we quit on time. So there I was in Hungary with no
recourse. No one to appeal to, nothing. I was just stuck there, and I had to
make the best of it. Of course the emphasis was on Eroticism. The film did
receive some very good reviews in French and England. The film does have its
admires. Another problem with "Mata Hari" was Sylvia Kristel. While she is
lovely to look at, she can't act at all. She hasn't a clue. She appeared in
so many films, and heretofore, before "Mata Hari" all of her films, the
voice, you know which gets the inflection of acting into it, is all dubbed by
another actress. I wanted her to use her own voice in this, whether rightly
or wrongly. Since so much of the film had to be looped (adding the dialogue
track later rather than using the soundtrack from the actual filming) they
first looped the entire role with a credible actress. But then, they had
forgotten that they signed a contract saying that Sylvia could speak on the
film. There is nothing wrong with her voice, but....
Like any other tool, you have to know how to use it.
Exactly, so, the reason it was a good as it was, was because we put the
earphones on her with the other actress, and in all the looping she imitated
the actress, the inflections and everything. So that helped a lot. And
physically, I worked with her on the physical level in terms of acting. I
would tell her 'Look up, look down, now look off to your right, then look
back at him." And its kind of a simulated type of acting. But she wouldn't do
any of that on her own.
And you wouldn't need to do it with Debbie Reynolds or Shelly Winters.
No, no, no. You don't direct them that way at all!
You had some great character actors in "Who Slew Auntie Roo." I love
Ralph Richardson's work.
He is wonderful. He was an absolute sweetheart on the film.
As I watched "Roo" I couldn't figure out where I had seen Michael
Gothard, who played Almy the butler. It hit me that he was a Bond Villain in
"The Spy Who Loved Me."
Oh he was. Well, he was not a good actor. I had a lot of trouble with him.
It was also nice to see Hugh Griffith (Oscar winner for Ben Hur) as the
Pig Man.
He was also wonderful. Unfortunately he was a heavy alcoholic. His wife
came with him to the set everyday to keep the liquor away from him. Other
than that he was great to work with. And so unique and funny. That was great
fun making that film. I enjoyed working with the children.
Mark Lester and Chloe...
Chloe Franks.
They were excellent. It can make or break a movie going with the wrong
child actor.
Yes.
I noticed Jimmy Sangster (long time Hammer film director) was listed as
one of the screen writers. Did you get to know him?
He wrote the original script, but we did a lot of changes. We had no
contact with him at all. The final script, a lot of it uncredited, was
written by Gavin Lambent.
My favorite of all of the films of yours that I've seen has to be "What's
the matter With Helen?"
Well, that's my personal favorite, so I'm happy to hear that.
I love when someone takes historical familiarities and fictionalizes
them. Obviously Agnes Moorehead's part was based on Aimee Simple McPherson,
and the little girl who did the Mae West routine was amazing.
The little girl was an amazing actress.
How did it do at the box office?
I don't think it did very well. I haven't had very good luck in my career
with releases. "What's the Matter With Helen?" was released by United
Artists. The year that it was released, it was released in the summer. United
Artists had just made "Fiddler on the Roof" and they had invested a great
deal of money in "Fiddler." They were saving all their guns, and all their
publicity and all their money to launch "Fiddler on the Roof" in the fall.
Because "What's the Matter With Helen?" was basically financed through a deal
with NBC, which had to do with Debbie Reynolds and a deal she had with them
to do a series. In effect, the film was handed to United Artists free. They
didn't have production money in it to speak of, so any little amount of money
they made was profit. So, they had no advertising, no publicity. I don't even
think they had screenings for the critics in New York. It just came and went
so quickly during the summer. It was during one of the waves for nostalgia
for stuff from the 30s, and they didn't even offer a clue in the advertising
that this took place in the 30s. They tried to make the advertising look
contemporary. All of the qualities that would have appealed to the
public...no one in the audience had a clue going in what the film was. It
picked up admirers, but it never had a chance to let word of mouth build or
anything. It was dumped, it was just dumped.
That had to be heartbreaking.
It was heartbreaking. It was absolutely heartbreaking.
It is also asinine when you consider that fact the the story was by Henry
Farrell who wrote "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" and "Hush...Hush...Sweet
Charlotte." If you look at the Oscar track record for both of those, not
necessarily wins, but nominations. "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane" got, I
believe, 10 nominations, which is amazing for this kind of film.
Oddly enough, "What's the Matter With Helen?" got a nomination for best
costume design. Again, it was Morton Hack from "Games."
I though "What's the Matter With Helen?" would be a great double feature
with "Day of the Locust" (1975).
Well, yes, it would be a very interesting double feature to say the
least. He (director John Schlesinger) borrowed the Aimee Simple McPherson
character from my film, played by Gerry Page.
I also liked all the stage mothers. They were individuals while all being
highly neurotic.
Yes. We had a great time. As I said, it is the personal favorite of all
my films. It is the closest to my heart for the things it has to say.
Speaking of other directors, you stated earlier that you enjoyed Dario
Argento, what do you think of Wes Craven?
Wes Craven's films don't mean very much to me. They don't speak to me.
Who do you like in the genre?
Well, of course, the number one director in the genre is, or the two of
the greatest in America are long dead. James Whale, I love James Whale, and I
love some of the films of Tod Browning. "Freaks" is just an amazing film. Tod
Browning doesn't have much style. What is interesting about his films is the
content, because, stylistically, they are very plebeian Sort of by the
numbers, but so interesting on the level of concept. A film like "The
Unknown" for instance, and so, I like Tod Browning and his collaborations
with Lon Chaney Sr..
Going back to James Whale, there you had both style and substance.
Exactly, exactly. James Whale, I'm sure has had an influence on my work.
He had a combination of humor and horror which I have in my films.
You were given a THANKS credit in the movie "Gods and Monsters."
Yes. Well, that's because when I was very young I got to know James Whale
in his last years. And so, the director of "Gods and Monsters," Bill Condon
who is a good friend of mine arraigned for me to spend some time with Ian
McClellan, and I spent a whole afternoon with him talking about James Whale.
And Bill arranged for us to go to the actual James Whale house, which I had,
when I was younger, been to many times. Hoping that just being there would
evoke certain memories and I could convey them all to Ian, which I did to the
best of my ability. I think his portrayal of James Whale was very accurate.
The story is completely made up. but the character is well portrayed.
That's similar to "The Buddy Holly Story." While the story took liberty
with the facts, Gary Busey nailed the character of Buddy Holly.
The character, yes. The same thing here. All through the history of film,
directors who are commercially viable, do a lot of stuff for commercial
reasons. So for instance, one of my favorite films of the last 20 years or so
is "Blade Runner." "Blade Runner" is just magnificent in its own way. But the
director has directed a lot of guff too. So I can't say Ridley Scott is one
of my favorite directors because he goes from directing a masterpiece like
that to "G. I. Jane." So there's no consistency. I think there is consistency
in my work, except for "Mata Hari" which goes into totally different area.
Speaking of Ridley Scott, did you ever see "The Duelists"?
Yes. I thought that was a very interesting film. I was alerted that I
must watch the work of this director....And I love Val Lewton's films, but of
course he didn't direct them. I later got to know Mark Robson, and of course
we all know Robert Wise. Robert Wise went from directing "The Haunting" to
"The Sound of Music" so you can't say that these people are genre directors.
Even James Whale did a lot of films that are quite forgotten. The only films
of James Whale that are remembered are his horror films like "The Old Dark
House."
Which we have you to thank for saving.
I rescued it from sure destruction.
Well thank God you did. Did you know Karloff?
I only met him once. I didn't know him though. I can say that after I
rescued "The Old Dark House" one day I was on the Universal lot. I found out
that Karloff was playing a guest role on a TV series. So I just went on the
set and introduced myself to him and told him that the film had been saved. I
think he was pleased.
I think Karloff was the epitome of someone being the opposite of their
screen persona.
Oh yes. He was an English gentleman, very very nice. Of course James
Whale told me a lot of funny stories. One in particular that I love. Karloff,
when they made "Frankenstein"...James Whale had a very jolly set. His sense
of humor was paramount. They had fun making those movies. Lots of laughs on
the set. He said Karloff was very amusing and amused. He didn't take him self
to seriously. Then when he suddenly became a big star because of
"Frankenstein" and became the king of horror films, he began to take himself
very seriously. James said that one day he was sitting in his office and an
emissary from the makeup department at Universal came to his office and said
"Mr. Karloff would like to see you in the makeup department. He said he was
ushered with great ceremony into the makeup department, into one of the rooms
there, where Karloff was sitting in a chair covered by a sheet. They did a
kind of unveiling for Jimmy. He said it was the makeup for "The Mummy." The
way James Whale put it, he said it looked like he had every piece of makeup
on his face. He said Karloff looked at him and said (seriously and somberly
imitating Karloff) " I think this will be the most marvelous thing ever seen
on the silver sheet!"
Silver sheet?
That was an old term, sometimes used in the 30s for the silver screen.
James found that so funny.
Well, James knew him when.
Yes. James in essence discovered him. Karloff had been around for a while
acting in a lot of films. He made a star out of him, because nobody paid much
attention to him before that.
In the 50s you worked as an assistant producer.
Yes, I worked for Jerry Wald.
I thought it was interesting that you have backgrounds in studio, independent
and experimental avant garde films.
It's true.
When you worked on "The Harder They Fall" did you get to know Bogart?
No, in point of fact I don't think I was ever on the set of that. That
was the very first film when I got hired. It was already in production. I
don't even remember seeing any dailies on that. It was virtually in the can
when I began to work for Jerry Wald. The first film that I remember doing as
his assistant was Tyrone Power and Kim Novak in "The Eddie Duchin Story."
I've heard lots of stories about Kim Novak as far as...
I was on the set and I watched her work, but I have no specific memories
of her.
Was the first time you met Orson Welles on the set of "The Long Hot
Summer"?
No. I don't think I met him on that. I was in such awe of him. There was
no one to introduce me, and I wouldn't just walk up to him. Who directed "The
Long Hot Summer" I've forgotten?
Martin Ritt.
I should have gotten Martin to introduce me, but I didn't. No, I got to
know Orson later. Gary Graver, who worked with Orson in his later years as
his camera man was a very close personal friend of mine for some years before
that. Gary finally arranged for me to meet Orson and to have dinner with him,
and from then on I knew Orson Welles.
I had an auto accident because of Mr. Welles. I lived in Las Vegas, and
was having lunch in a small Mexican restaurant when Mr. Welles and David
Copperfield came in. I only lived a block away, so I got in my car to go home
and get a book for Mr. Welles to sign. I had a wreck speeding out of the
parking lot. Never did get that autograph.
(Laughs) What a shame.
CONTINUE INTERVIEW (Part II)
Rusty White
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