I agree.  I love Wyler!
Toochis



________________________________
From: Richard Halegua Comic Art <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, July 2, 2009 4:18:18 PM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Karl Malden, RIP at 97 (+ Sage Words from Orson Welles)

Dave

I think Selznik just felt that way because in Hollywood - it's all about
ego in that job (Producer)
if instead of trying to feed his ego, he  looked at himself as being
in lifelong a career.. he may have been able to make that better movie
than GWTW.

Look, I keep saying that William Wyler is one of my top directors.. every
film he made was a masterpiece on it's own. He made great films because
he was focused on what he was doing now.. not what he hoped to accomplish
in the future, and that by doing his job well is how he cemented his
legacy and he made some of the most highly revered films of all
time

Selznik was always looking past what he was doing and his focus suffered
from it. He wasn't trying to make money - he was trying to make the
blockbuster of all time. that's a hard task.

John Ford was once asked on a 1950s tv show by a British interviewer
"when you made a movie, what were you trying to
accomplish?"

Ford thought for a second and then slowly lifted the cigar from his mouth
and said (slowly raising his cigar as he spoke in a slow deliberate
manner) "I was trying to accomplish... a check!" (and he
stabbed the air with his cigar)
it was the funniest thing I'd ever seen with Ford.. If Selznik had
applied that kind of focus to his ideas.. he made yet have done what he
was trying to accomplish

Rich

At 03:22 PM 7/2/2009, David Kusumoto wrote:

** Joe -- Your story about
Selznick forever trying to top GWTW reminds me of Orson Welles, who
could never top "Citizen Kane."  
 
** Many years ago, writer-director Peter Bogdanovich was reminiscing
with Welles about Greta Garbo -- lamenting how sad it was that
someone so legendary -- only did 2 films that were great.  
 
** Orson responded with a sage grin, "Well, Peter.  You only
need one."
 
** That's a great attitude to have about life's
accomplishments.  If more people could look back and say they
did at least one thing that was near perfect -- whether it was
raising their kids, finding the right soulmate, finishing that titanic
project, whatever it was -- that's good enough.  Then everything
after would be a bonus.  I think the root of unhappiness is the
constant benchmarking of what we hope to accomplish -- with our careers,
relationships, sex, money, material things, whatever -- against a
manufactured snapshot in time.  Riding with goal-oriented friends
shouldn't stop us from sometimes going our own way.  We just have to
tune the negative shit out, otherwise we'll never stop beating ourselves
up for not reaching goal "x" by age "y."  I give
people -- and myself -- pep talks about this all the time.  
 
** So while Selznick was sad that he never topped GWTW -- most
would take that in a heartbeat.  Thus when people say, "Gee,
poor Mark Hamill, he never did anything important after "Star
Wars."  I say, "so what?  If his legacy is only about
being Luke Skywalker, that's better than nothing.  He'll never be
forgotten."  I think that's why Carroll Baker feels the way she
does about "Baby Doll."  Big things were expected of Baker
after that fabulous picture -- but they didn't happen.  That's
OK.  Because she'll always be "Baby Doll." 
-d.

-----Original Message----- 
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 22:46:48 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Karl Malden, RIP at 97
To: [email protected]

Thanks right back, David.
 
It's sadly amusing that Malden himself chuckled that when he passed, all
the obits would say that he would be "most famous for" the
American Express commercials and the "Don't leave home without
it" line.  
 
Like David O.Selznick, who always cried that his obits would lead,
"David O. Selznick, the man who made 'Gone With the Wind,"
Malden was right.  The difference is, Malden had already excelled in
many different roles and types of characters.
 
Selznick, argueably the greatest of Hollywood producers, strived
(strove?) the rest of his life to top GWTW.  He didn't
succeed.  I expect Selznick's Revenge will occur when Michael Bay
remakes GWTW --- and the entire 4-hour spectacle is the explosive
destruction by fire and brimstone of the 1864 city of Atlanta. Selznick
will smile upwards and say, "Frankly, my......" 
 
Joe
-----Original Message-----
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 21:22:59 -0700
From: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: Karl Malden, RIP at 97
To: [email protected]

** Thanks Joe!  That's a great story about Malden; I never knew
about that tidbit you wrote below, e.g., how he slipped in references to
his birth name in his own pictures.  I saw the picture you
mentioned, Baby Doll, again last year and man oh man, that's still a HOT
one.  Made zero money because it was "condemned," but what
stands out is its timelessness.  That horny Eli Wallach.  That
repressed Karl Malden.  And geez, that jail bait Carroll Baker; I
like the fact that Baker acknowledges she now LOVES IT when people call
her "Baby Doll."  (Apparently she didn't like it when she
was younger.)  
 
** And thanks to everyone who wrote me publicly or mostly privately about 
crossing paths with that ultra-gentleman, Karl Malden.  I
appreciate it very much!  It's not often a person like myself can
come even close to matching the stories told by other members at MoPo
who've crossed paths with bigger stars in New York or Hollywood. 
The only upside to San Diego is its climate (it's better than L.A.'s
because we're on a harbor, not a basin) -- and the fact that many
glitterati choose to retire here because its quiet.  But we still
have to drive three hours to L.A. to see stars in person -- that is, when
they're still, as they say, "ambulatory" and in their
prime.
 
** I was obviously impressed with Malden.  Oh, I know he'll
never be considered a "legend," but he was so total class
off-screen -- and made many movies better -- by just being
on-screen.  As I wrote to a fellow MoPoer, he had a stature about
him, almost regal in his old age -- that one would never think of when
you saw him playing the "everyman" in his pictures.  He
was just a consistently great character actor.  That he lived
large -- and lived to be 97 -- I'm sure his family is satisifed with
that.  He outlived them all.  Best, -d.

-----Original Message-----
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 19:52:44 -0700
From: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Karl Malden, RIP at 97
To: [email protected] 
CC: MOPO ListServ
([email protected]) 

Wonderful story, David!  I'm totally envious.  The great Karl
Malden is one of the actors I would have loved to meet.  
 
Just yesterday I remarked to a friend that there was only one film of a
Tennessee Williams play (first filming) that still was represented by the
three surviving leads--- "Baby Doll."  Now that statistic
is gone forever!
 
Caroll Baker is still with us at about 78 and the indestructable Eli
Wallach-- 95-- is still giving readings with his wife of about 60 years,
Anne Jackson.  He also still does films and tv occasionally. 
The last two things I remember were a cameo in "Mystic River"
at the request of director Clint Eastwood and a wonderful turn on that
excellent but short-lived tv series that was a backstage view of a
"SNL"-type show a couple of seasons back. 
 
When the term, "They don't make 'em like that anymore," is
heard, the reference is to actors like these.
 
Jeremy Piven--- eat your heart out!!!!!
 
Joe B in NOLA
 
PS-- Malden always regreted having to change his real name (Mladen
Sekulovich) for a sho-biz career.  As he became more known he
enjoyed inserting his name into scripts.  The next time you watch
"Patton," note when "General Bradley" turns to an
officer and orders, "Sekulovich, take this ......"  But my
favorite one is:  Malden is the prison warden in "Birdman of
Alkatraz."  He takes a reporter on to see Stroud (Lancaster)
and, passing each cell, indicates the prisoner
within...."Jones....Smith...Sekulovich."
 
Joe
-----Original Message-----
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 16:43:48 -0700
From: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: Karl Malden, RIP at 97
To: [email protected]

 
 
** In April 1998, when Karl Malden was 86, my wife and I got a chance
to meet him and his daughter Carla at a screening of "On the
Waterfront" at a theater in La Jolla, north of San Diego.  He
was also there to promote his fabulous and somewhat dishy memoir, "When Do I 
Start?" -- which had been released the year
before in hardcover -- (and as of this writing, is still gloriously in
print in paperback because it's that fantastic, esp. his impressions of
the stars he worked with -- which he felt OK writing about -- given the
fact that even in 1998, he had already outlived most of 'em).
 
** In conjunction with his appearance, I loaned my LB one-sheet to
"On the Waterfront" to the film society group hosting his
visit.  It was displayed on stage after the screening -- and also at
an adjacent bookstore where he signed copies of his books with his
daughter, who wrote the text.  He answered a ton of questions from
the huge audience that turned out -- esp. what it was like working with
Brando, Elia Kazan and Vivien Leigh.  He said Kazan was a genius,
that Leigh was closer to Blanche DuBois in real life than Blanche
herself, and that Brando was the greatest actor he'd ever worked
with.  He spoke of Brando with great sadness, calling him a man who
had everything -- drop-dead looks, talent and money -- but who became a
corpulent, tragic figure who lost it all, squandering his money and
becoming increasingly eccentric, working in bad projects after the
Godfather, desperate to make money just to pay his bills.  
 
** The entire night, Malden was sharp as a tack -- and had the
command and respect you'd expect as a president of AMPAS -- but who
also had that self-deprecating persona that made him endearing, esp.
jokes about his lack of matinee idol looks, his Broadway stage experience
vs. his work on film -- and his conviction that his years as a spokesman
for American Express ("don't leave home without it") made him
more famous than all of his other work combined.  In fact, he joked
that his obituaries would all mention his Oscar -- and predicted ALL
would also mention his work for American Express -- saying it would be
the "signature role for which he was better known to most of the
public."
 
** The man we met that evening was gracious and accommodating to every
fan present.  He represented the "old Hollywood," the
type like the late Gregory Peck and Charlton Heston -- and the
still-with-us Tony Curtis out here in California -- who have good manners
and love to mix with fans.  Malden loved the attention -- and I got
the impression he was ultra-surprised and ecstatic that a
"supporting actor" could generate such a large turnout. 
He and his daughter signed our book thus:  "To Koose and Yoe,
best always from Carla Malden and Karl Malden."  I took my
"On the Waterfront" poster off its easel and asked him to sign
it.  He did, just above his name credit.  I've mentioned this
poster several times to the MoPo group -- in the context of certain
signatures which add sentimental value -- but don't add $$ value to
vintage movie memorabilia.  That poster is no longer in my
collection -- but I recall it fetched an OK price.  But I kept his
book, personalized as it is.  I view it similarly as my
"Psycho" poster, whereby Janet Leigh, during a visit in 2000,
personalized her signature, "To David -- Psycho-tically yours, Janet
Leigh."  -d.

  

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