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A chronology and list of
events in Cassavetes' early career, 1960-1962. To access a chronology
and list of events covering the last ten years of Cassavetes' life and
the seventeen years following his death, click
here.
1929
- 1956 / 1957
- 1959 / 1960
-1962 / 1963
-1968
Too Late Blues and A Child is Waiting:
1960-1962 |
- In 1953, JC collaborates with screenwriter
Edward McSorley (after a suggestion by Sam Shaw). He teaches
him literally how to write a decent script and this will forever
change JC's life.
- Between 1958 and 1961, JC announces
new plans to make movies in foreign locations, but these were
merely "talking-stuff," and nothing comes out of it
(The Hot Sun with Sidney Poitier, The Trial of Jesus with Carl
Dreyer and Evil with Dalton Trumbo). But the set-up serves to
press for real offers from elsewhere; for example, Hollywood.
- During the summer of 1960, JC asks
Dick Carr, whom he met on the set of Johnny Staccato,
to write something with him. The result is three scripts: The
Iron Man (written mainly by Carr), A Piece of Paradise (written
mainly by JC) and Too Late Blues.
- JC asks Marty Baum to try to sell
the scripts to everybody. Marty Racklin of Paramount is interested.
- The contract is drawn up in November.
JC's paycheck is $80,000 and the budget around half a million
dollars. The final script is dated January 16 1961 (with revisions
up to February 8).
- The story has many autobiographical
reminiscences. Starting from "Ghost" name, John, to
his "selling out" to get money and fame (as JC did
with Staccato).
- JC rents a house and moves the whole
family to Hollywood. They will establish in Laurel Canyon permanently.
- JC wants GR and Montgomery Clifft
but the studio imposes Darin and Stevens. The rest of the cast
is from AADA days.
- The shooting lasts six weeks, from
March 13 to April 21 1961.
- JC has his way in most of the thing
he asks except for two things: Racklin wants him to cut a ten-minute
dream-like scene where Ghost picks up a girl and spends the night
with her and insists in ending the film without showing Jess
walking away.
- Too Late Blues is released
in March 1962. It is a bomb. Reviews range from "serious
flaw" to savaging it. Many people of his Shadows days
are probably happy in seeing his failure, still considering him
a sell-out.
- After Too Late Blues, JC
considers himself finished, at least in Hollywood. To his surprise,
they ask him to sign a long-term contract and raise his salary
to $125,000.
- He decides to use one of the scripts
he wrote with Carr, The Iron Man. The producer thinks
it is too long and convinces him to switch to a United Artist's
movie, A Child is Waiting with Burt Lancaster and produced
by Stanley Kramer (Lancaster is to appear in The Iron Man but
withdraws).
- A Child is Waiting is based
on an Abby Mann novel and script and a successful 1957 CBS TV
production.
- Troubles begin from the start. Cassavetes'
youth and ego, Mann's suspicion about JC's improvisation and
changes, and Garland's insecurities. The experience becomes a
nightmare.
- To make things worse, JC, after wrapping
the movie in March 1962, goes to Racklin to ask to break his
contract with Paramount and to continue to work with Kramer.
Then, Kramer comes along.
- Editing goes from early March to
the middle of April in preparation of an important MGM screening.
The movie is approved by JC on Friday Apri 20th. Two days later,
he receives a call stating that Kramer is re-editing the film.
- After the screening, JC wants Kramer
to remove his name from the movie. They have a fight. He is finished
and knows it.
- The movie is released in February
1963 and, even if the new editing is not as bad as JC thinks,
the movie is a flop.
- Unable to find any kind of job, he
stays at home with his son, pondering what the future will allow.
Then, one day, he makes a decision that will forever change his
life and film history.
|
1929
- 1956 / 1957
- 1959 / 1960
-1962 / 1963
-1968
A chronology and list of
events in Cassavetes' early career, 1963-1968. To access a chronology
and list of events covering the last ten years of Cassavetes' life and
the seventeen years following his death, click
here.
This
is only the "To Print" page. To go to the regular page of Ray Carney's www.Cassavetes.com on which this text appears, click
here, or close this window if you accessed the "To Print"
page from the regular page. Once you have brought up the regular page,
you may use the menus to reach all of the other pages on the site. |