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First
posted: 7-23-01
Koch Records recently released
"Give Me Your Hump!" The Unspeakable Terry
Southern Record. Featuring Terry Southern, of course,
the CD also includes special guests such as Marianne Faithfull,
Allen Ginsburg, and Jonathan Winters reading selections
of Southerns writing. By no means definitive, "Give
Me Your Hump!" gives a picture of the biting and
zany nature of Terry Southern.
Southern penned
Candy and co-wrote the screenplays for Easy Rider
and Dr. Strangelove, transforming them from ordinary
pictures to the cultural icons they are. The Beatles admired
Southern so much that they placed himon their 1967 Sgt.
Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover. He was
the hottest writer of the 60s and one of the most
sought-after celebrities of his time. Still in his prime
as the 70s rolled in, Southerns life came
to a screeching halt. No longer the darling of Hollywood,
Southern faded toward the Third Millennium and death.
What happened and why?
In the last few months,
a major biography on Southern was published, followed by
a collection of his work. Since then, in magazine articles
and newspapers, pundits have tried to decipher the mystery
behind the fall of the house of Southern. But none of these
people really knew the man. Now Nile Southern, Terrys
son, gives us an up-close look at his father and helps explain
the demise of one of the great minds of the twentieth century.
John W. Whitehead, Editor-in-Chief,
Gadfly Online
For the Benefit
of Mister Kite:
I was
only six years old in 1967, so I didn't really know that
dad was "out inventing the culture." But I always
felt that he was "working on something really important."
As the music from the Beatles' Sgt. Peppers Lonely
Hearts Club Band wafted through all our lives that
summer, I experienced it the same way everyone else didas
a cultural product so strong, so rich, so complete that
it seemed to have an organo-metabolic effect over the
whole populace. I didnt know dad was on the cover
of the albumI only knew that the haunting strains
of the songs were touching us all and helping to express
the inexpressibly beautiful agitation that was in the
air at that time. I recall walking with my mother during
a protest march, wearing a hand-knit pancho covered with
"Peace Now" buttons, and how the entire graduating
class of my elementary school sang "To Everything
Turn, Turn, Turn" by the Byrds for our graduation
song.
The 60s became a
hotwax of agit-prop psychedelia and Terry was its moltenman-on-fire,
the guy who enflamed every scene worth ignition. Statements
were being made, art was being stretched and everyone
who was doing anything worthwhile in film looked to Terry
for his imprimaturnot because of some "wild
and crazy" zing he could add but because he had "the
information" and the deadly accurate (hipster) instincts
that could make your project relevant to the urgency of
the times.
He
was also trying all the "new tastes" that were
exploding on the scene. And there were many, from the
wonder-drug Dexamyl, a favorite "working stimulant"
of Lenny Bruce, to Divorce, which was a novelty at the
time. Terry disappeared from my world while the world
itself was somehow taking shape in his image: Barbarella,
Candy, Easy Rider, Dr. Strangeloveall the pop-vulture
symbols of social change had his stamp (and his name)
on them. But he was not leaving a stamp as a father on
me that I could easily trace. Well, in a way he was, but
in his own amazing way.
My Dear Son...
Over the
years, and through the mails, postcards would comesigned
by Clint Eastwood, my fave at the time, and Ringo, who
was everybodys favorite Beatle at the time. One
day in the dead of winter, a small red automobile arrived
at Kennedy Airport addressed to "Master Nile Southern"
from the Ferrari plant outside Rome. My mother went to
the airports cargo terminal to pick it up. Terry
was all over the placeLondon with the Beatles and
Stones (making The Magic Christian), Hollywood,
where he lived with Gail, his new woman (a ballerina/actress),
doing The Cincinnati Kid, The Loved One, The Collector)
and now Rome where, as if in explanation of everything,
he sent me a virtual Batmobile. TV's Batman
was all the rage for us kids at the time, and this grand
toy had a sculpted fibreglass body, chrome wire wheels
(with brass lions heads in the center!), an Italian
pull-cord outboard motor under the rear hood, a plexiglass
windshield, emergency brake and gray leather upholstered
seat. The car was too fast (and illegal) for the streets
of New York, but it became the hit of the Hamptonswhere
my mother and her friends and their kids began spending
summers of the 60s.
Groovin
Up Slowly
When Terry
finally came back to New York, he lavished me with gifts.
As I grew older, I came to realize that generosity was
part of his make-up so the line between his guilt assuagement
and simple grand gesture was often blurred. I remember
many trips to Rappaports Toy Shoppe on 2nd Avenue.
Terry once bought a metal target practice device from
Hammacher Schlemmer on which colored lenses lit up, according
to which one you shot out on your target. Using a powerful
air pistol, we used to target practice with this thing
in his living room on 34th Street. He used a couple of
telephone books to stop the bullets.
He
knew I loved Dark Shadows and took me to the offbeat
soap opera set to meet Barnabas Collins. I have Polaroid
pictures of me posing with the Wolfman, who had just that
week been introduced as a "character" on the
vampire show. My introduction to T-Rex and the Slider
album (probably the coolest album of the early 70s)
happened when Terry took me to the recording studio where
Ringo and Marc Bolan were having a session. As incense
(and other sweet-smelling herbs) wafted about the small
studio, T-Rexs soul-melting smile emerged from within
the frame of the mighty ringlets of his long brown hair,
and Ringo loaded me up with the album, signed by both
of them. He also gave me a "T-REX Slider" T-shirt,
which I wore everyday through middle school, especially
around dodge-ball time.
Dirty Old Man
I didn't
talk about Terry much in school. I remember a girl who
sat behind me and seethed like a serpent in my ear: "Your
dad's a dirty old man. He wrote a dirty book called Candy!
Its dirty! And everybody knows it! My parents told
me." I had the wherewithal to point out that they
must like dirty books if they read it and still had it
on their shelf.
I had a kind of silent
chip on my shoulder, as I became more aware of Terrys
film work. I remember a page of the New York Postthe
"Top Ten Grossing Movies of All Time" chart,
a little box they ran every week. Of the top ten films,
something like four of them had his touch: Easy Rider,
Dr. Strangelove, Barbarella. Even The Magic
Christian did well at the box-officeits irreverance,
sex, drugs and psychedelia further fueling the buzz kids
needed. This was pre-Jaws, pre-blockbuster. Whenever
Id hear classmates talking about a film they had
seen, the hairs on the back of my neck would stand up
and Id suppress myself from saying, "If my
dad had written that movie, it would have been much better."
It was probably true. Good thing I didnt say it,
though.
What Happened?
The sad
thing is, of course, that Terry was not given more opportunity
to write for the commercial cinema. The daring people
and projects that he fueled in his heyday became jaded
by the very success he helped bring them. They started
settling for less because the money was good. Unlike the
businessmen and occasional dilettantes who used him on
their films and then went on feeding the "machine
of mediocrity" or their social scenes, Terry continued
to push the envelopeto try out the new.
One
project that spelled his downfall was his tireless pursuit
of producing Blue Movie. Although this is the perfect
film to make today, in the early 70s (when blockbusters
and "American realism" were in vogue), an erotic
satire about making an A-list Hollywood porn film was
professional suicide. Ringo Starrs offer to put
up the money and Julie Andrews offer to (appear
to) suck-off a team of giant Africans encouraged Terrys
mistaken belief in the viability of the project. But the
thing was doomed, and Terry spent a good deal of the early
to mid-70s trying to get his friends to join what
was now, with the independent rise of the porn industry,
like a political act challenging Hollywood. In trying
to get this movie made, a movie that depicted the Producer
as Krassman, Terry alienated those who were just trying
to make a living in the film business. Even in his early
poverty, Terry never took the safe roaduntil it
was too late to save himself.
Down (and Out)
on the Farm
Moving
to a farmhouse on the East Coast also didnt fortify
his reputation as an "available" writer, although
there were then (and certainly are today) many examples
of screenwriters able to make a living without having
to live in Tinsel Town. So, what really happened to his
career? Being a stubborn Texan, and an Existentialist
to boot, he didnt care much for the "quality
lit" and "Gollywood" protocols of maintaining
an agent, lawyer, accountant or secretary. Instead, he
took whatever job miraculously came down his long driveway
in Canaan, Connecticut. He wrote a page at a time in longhand,
then drove it (or hopefully them) 20 miles to a typist
and repeated the cycle daily. Whenever a fax came for
him, hed drive into town to pick it up at the pharmacy
because he didnt own a fax machine, and couldnt
afford it.
Terry had liked living
large, and all the Big Money he made in the '60s got burned
upsomewhere between the casinos outside Rome and
the Mardi Gras of Easy Rider. By the time Easy
Rider came out, Terry was so broke that he had to
break his agreement for a deferred three-way split of
the profits by taking a $5,000 payment for writing the
script.
Financially, these were
brutal times for Terry as the IRS was now hot on his trail---most
likely, he was targeted by Nixon and the FBI as part of
the COINTEL operation against anti-Vietnam activists.
Easy Rider's runaway success had the eerie deja
vu of his other big hit that made millions of dollars
(for other people) just five years earlierCandya
book that was the first to have great staying power on
the New York Times bestseller list. But because
of a gap in copyright law, it did not bestow any rewards
on Terry or its co-author, Mason Hoffenberg.
Southern and Son,
Productions
Terry
spent a lot of time with me making Super-8 films. I am
so grateful for that, as we bonded through the outrageous,
multi-genre fictions we were laying down. But it also
offered him a chance to do what no one else was asking
him to do---work on a movie. We built a Super-8 editing
bench from instructions in a Mother Earth magazine.
I used to fall asleep at night to the sound of the editing
reels turning, as the film flickered through the light
of the viewer in my bedroom.
And there was much writing
work. Besides Blue Movie, there were original screenplays,
treatments and speculative rewrites. But more poignantly,
I think, there were many collaborations and grand gestures
of good faith---some paid, some not---such as a screenplay
of Merlin written for Mick Jagger, a film adaptation
of Norman Mailer's Why Are We In Vietnam and a
screenplay for photographer Peter Beard's End of the
Game, an adaptation of jewel thief Albie Bakers
autobiography (written with him). Then there were the
many "development projects" like a script about
the assassination of the Pope for Gore Vidal and James
Coburn, any number of pilots, sci-fi scripts and satires
with theater director/Yippie Jo LoGuidice and would-be
"star-vehicle" projects for Michael Parksthe
"Then Came Bronson" amazing talent whom no one
else would work with. Terry did not discriminate when
it came to collaboration, much to the horror of Hollywood-types.
For Terry, everything was improvable and everyone deserved
a chance to realize their visioneven if they could
not quite express it well themselves.
So, to say Terry Southern
somehow "burned out" is ridiculous. He was burned
out on amateurs and nowhere deals, which is different
than burning out on yourself. And it is so easy to say
"he lost his touch"especially easy for
journalists who cannot conceive of having anywhere near
the success in any literary field that Terry had in all
of them. For Terry, writing dialogue was effortless, and
it was his key gift. He did it in his sleephe did
it dailyhe did it in the 70s, the 80suntil
the day he diednot with Hollywood productions in
full-swing but often with speculative scripts he agreed
to work on just to see him through.
"Oh, I Can
See It Now, for Another Five-Thou"
Terry
used to say to me, "Never take a job just for the
money." I was ten years old at the time, and he continued
saying it as my friends were doing their summer jobs,
which I eventually did as well. "Only take a job
that somehow relates to film work, or that informs or
facilitates your creativity..."
"A night watchman"
was his favorite suggestionwhich, for a kid, of
course, was not possible. But the irony is that Terry
himself ended up taking so many jobs "just for the
money"and yet they never paid well. It worked
like this: someone would find out how to contact him (often
by looking him up in the phone book), call him up, bottom-line
it by saying they could pay him $5,000 ($2,500 now and
$2,500 when he finished), he would say "yes"
and it would be another (failed) project under way. If
he was lucky, there would be some sort of contract where
the Guild minimum was promised. But that would only kick
in when a studio picked it up, which they never did. Although
Terry didnt have any money in the bank, he always
seemed to have a little cash in his pocketwhich
was important to himfor he liked to treat his friends.
But was it only the fact
that he was stubborn, a recluse, that no agent trusted
him anymore (because he had been with so many), that he
was "out of the Hollywood loop," that he was
an Existentialist (instead of a writer out for the all-mighty
dollar), that he worked on non-union films in Europe,
that satire was dead and that he worked with "fringe
people" such as Larry Rivers, Harry Nilsson, William
Burroughs, William Claxton, ex-Warhol Factory member,
Nelson Lyon, and Peter Beard. Was it these thingsthese
qualitiesthat kept his earnings frozen and
the serious movie makers away? Or was it something else,
too?
The Executors
Analysis
I have
a couple of theories about this, which Ive developed
from working with Terrys papers, contracts and scripts
and from knowing him so intimatelyknowing his character.
Contrary to much recent conjecture (in the Washington
Post, Village Voice and elsewhere), Terry never lost
his touch, his edge, nor his ability to deliver. Nor did
he lose his discipline for writing. Rather, he lost the
incredible pull he had as a force in the cosmology of
urgent creativity, which was the 60s. But he also
lost something elsehis salary base.
When he was working, Terry
was one of the highest paid screenwriters of his day.
By the mid-'60s, he was earning more money per week writing
for the studios and feature films than he had earned in
a previous lifetime of writing literature and journalism
(from 1948 to 1963). By 1969, he was being paid $100,000
per screenplay. They say in Hollywood that youre
only as viable as the size of your last paycheck---and
that your "street cred" is tied to its girth.
$5,000 was the last fee Terry was paid, and that was for
Easy Rider. This would haunt him the rest of his
life---it was the sum everyone seemed to get away with
paying him throughout the years when he needed money most.
What a terrible curse---to bear the whorish mark of cheapness
on the hit you helped create. The $5,000 Factor is one
aspect of how Easy Rider helped destroy Terrys
credibility in Hollywood. Another is what I call the ushering-in
of Independent Cinema with a capital "I."
Independent with a Capital
"I"
"I
know youyoure the guy who showed me how to
do itwho showed me how you can make a half-million
dollar picturewithout a studioand make a lot
of money! I know you!"
--Sylvester Stallone, upon meeting
Terry Southern for the first time, at Harry Nilssons
house, 1980
In 1967, Terry was about
as hot as he could be, coming off The Cincinnati Kid
and then onto Barbarella. It was also the year
Jane Fonda appeared with Terry on the cover of his anthology,
Red Dirt Marijuana and Other Tastesthe two
obviously intoxicated by each other. Peter Fonda approached
Terry with an idea for a movie, a movie that would be
filmed entirely "on the road" without studio
support about "a couple of stock car drivers barnstorming
across America." Terry did not shy away from the
offbeat idea and said, "Im your man."
Not only that, he started actively producing the picture
with Fondahaving script development meetings at
his 55th Street office and attracting the first star to
the film, Rip Torn. To create more of an actual story,
Terry also invented a role for Ripthe Southern lawyer
(which became the Jack Nicholson character).
Born
out of these organic events was Independent CinemaIndependent
with a capital "I." Terry essentially ushered
in low-budget filmmaking on his back and reputation, bridging
the gap between the Beats and the Systemmuch to
his own detriment. For at the time, Independent Cinema
was a threat to the studio systemit questioned the
status quo and creatively democratized a rigidly totalitarian
capitalist regime. Add to this a little post-release bad-mouthing
by Hopper and Fonda about Terry "walking off the
picture" and belittling his writing role, and you
have a double stab in the back. The piece de resistance
was when these previously indiscernible blips on the Hollywood
radar screen (Hopper was known as a photographer and Fonda
as the "son of"...) suddenly received Academy
Awards for their writing abilities. With thinly veiled
resentment, Terry often described how he waived the Writers
Guilds right to deny Fonda and Hopper screen credit
because "they need thisthey need it so they
can finance their next movie." This mantra of "just
enough for the next one" became the battle cry of
Independent Cinema for the next decade and was put into
effect and shouted at full-volume by the likes of Coppola,
Lucas, Scorsese and Woody Allen.
The End of the
Road
If Hollywood
did not quickly forgive Terry's Easy Rider trespasshis
betrayal of the System's faith in himit never forgave
him for End of the Road. The ingredients of this
film, a beautifully shot, at times psychologically brutal
meditation on the end of the 60s, reads like a recipe
for personal disasterif you were trying to make
good with a Hollywood already mad at you:
- Anti-Vietnam War sentiment:
the opening montage has images of the war, the American
Flag blood-red and pulsating, the student take-over
of Columbia University and a montage of all the assassinations
of the time---from Martin Luther King through the Kennedysall
to the soulful wails of Billy Holidays "Dont
Worry Bout Me."
- Rated "X"
(for no declared reason by the MPAAmuch in the
same way Midnight Cowboy received an "X"
around the same time).
- Shot in the Berkshire
Mountain region of Connecticuteven more "outside
the Hollywood beltway" than Easy Rider was.
- Actors Studio
productionthe "radical" theater put
its New York stamp on the production by offering James
Earl Jones and Stacy Keach in their first starring roles.
- Non-union production
(this was the first feature film shot by Gordon Willis,
the (now) legendary cameraman who lensed Annie Hall,
All the President's Men, Klute, etc.).
- Abortion theme: the
film ends with the disturbing death of one of the main
charactersat the hands of the "backstreet
abortionist" (James Earl Jones). Although harrowing,
the scene is completely non-graphicdone entirely
in wide shot.
- First-time director:
Aram Avakian, a hipster jazz enthusiast and Terrys
roommate in Paris and Greenwich Village of the mid-
and late 50s.
- Financed by a New York
City garment industry tycoon, Max Raab.
- Based on novel by John
Barthintellectual, artistic and "experimental."
Not wanting to repeat the
same blunder that he made with Easy Rider, Terry
made sure to get co-producing credit on End of the
Road. When the film opened, Judith Crist, the most
powerful film reviewer in New York at the time, summarily
killed it by saying: 'Go see Patton insteadit
just opened also, and is the kind of patriotic film this
country needs right now in this time of national crisis.'
End of the Road closed almost immediately, and
the "X" rating made sure it stayed closed for
good. Only Cinema Village, an art house in New York, played
the film religiously throughout the 70s and early
80sbefore the deteriorating 16mm print faded
into oblivion.
Terry never worked on a
major film again. The new industry he helped nurture,
Independent Cinema, went on to become the production
method for making interesting movies.
I've been working to get
End of the Road restored and back into movie theatres
so a new generation can experience the cinematic wonders
of this filmand also so we can better examine the
object perhaps most responsible for Terrys ultimate
demise in Hollywood. My efforts to revive and restore
Terrys work are not so much out of reverence for
the man, my father, but out of respect for his visiona
vision of art as a cathartic and culturally relevant endeavor.
"Beauty in every form!" he used to say.
I believe the power of his work will withstand and perseverenay,
will shatter and transcend any limitations that were imposed
on him during his lifetimefor his work, his novels,
his short stories, unadapted for the screen, have not
yet seen the light of day.
(c) Nile Southern. All
photos courtesy of The Estate of Terry Southern.
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