Showing posts with label REMEMBERANCE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label REMEMBERANCE. Show all posts

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Ben Gazzara: You Know, I'm Just Fucking With You?

Take a Bow, Benny
“Bukoswki’s was a pussy!” He growled to the laughter of the audience. They had opened up the Q&A to the audience. I got the chance to ask one question of Ben Gazzara. I asked him about the film; Tales of Ordinary Madness. The movie which he played the infamous L.A. skid row poet Charles Bukowski. “I spent the day with him,” Gazzara said. “He came in carrying fine French wines, while I was drinking Night Train,” with a roll of his distinctive eyes. This special night was called an Evening with Ben Gazzara, it took place last year at the Cinefamily Theater, located on Fairfax Ave. in Los Angeles. And it was a rare occasion indeed... and I had my camera.

Photo by Ray Ramos
With Ben Gazzara’s passing yesterday, it is truly the end of a special era. Probably the last of the great Broadway actors of the 50’s… when New York Theater was breaking new ground with productions like, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and A Hateful of Rain (both starring Garraza.) Gazzara to his credit, never lost the lead in his pencil like Brando, who for his last twenty years had grown to distain acting as profession and did it only to pay his overhead… unlike Brando, you never saw Ben Gazzara dial it in; this guy loved acting. Gazzara never quit it.


“Getting old’s a bitch,” Gazzara said. Gazzara, who was 80 at the time (not 81, as he corrected the nights moderator.) “I was born in August… I’m 80!" Having had suffered a stroke several years back, the only remains it seemed that night last March, was the  loss of that great timber in his usually gravely voice. Otherwise the guy was sharp and as funny as hell… as he warmly entertained the SRO Theater for about an hour with tales of his 60 years as an actor, and proving that he was still Benny from the block. 

 
Gazzara spoke of growing up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, and as a youth spending time at the local Boys Club. It was after a pal invited him to watch him in a play that Gazzara said he became jealous when he saw his friend getting applause. He soon asked his friend, how he can do that? Eventually Gazzara’s talent got him an audition at The Actor’s Studio (and he was asked to join.) Gazzara stressed that the “Studio” wasn’t a theatre group but a workshop, for actors to experiment and hone their talents. Gazzara really was there during that magic time with names like; Lee Strasberg, Eli Kazan and Tennessee Williams. Gazzara originated the part of Brick in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof on the stage, spoke of how he thought he had the part in the big MGM movie with Elizabeth Taylor. Upon his first trip to Hollywood, he said that the head of MCA, Lew Wasserman, met him at the stairs of the plane.


Wasserman whisked him off to lunch at the famed movie star hangout, Romanoff’s, where he met Humphrey Bogart, John Huston and Gregory Peck. He said he had a nice meeting with director George Cukor (who was originally slated to direct the movie adaptation) who pressed him about the homosexual aspect of the Tennessee Williams piece... which the studio was trying to suppress from the piece. He felt the meeting went so well, he went whistling out of MGM’s Thalberg Building. Gazzara got a call not long after, telling him that the studio gave the part to a contract player named, Paul Newman… and we know what happened to him?
Gazzara went to make his film debut in a picture called The Strange One. The story took place on in a Southern Military Academy, with Gazzara playing a character with name Jocko De Paris a sadistic character, that Gazzara corrected the night’s moderator by letting him know that he was the films lead character even though he wasn’t its hero. Gazzara revealed that The Strange One (as well another piece A Hat Full of Rain) originated as a play, and were created with several of his friends as experimental stage pieces. 

Ben Gazzara: The Young Lion, 1950's

 Gazzara recalled his first big picture was Otto Preminger’s Anatomy of a Murder, a courtroom drama, which had him cast opposite screen legend Jimmy Stewart. Gazzara spoke of how he watched the old movie pro prepared for his scenes and said that Stewart like Gary Cooper (who Gazzara said, for him was the greatest film actor ever) seemed to do so little, but on screen they showed so much. That amazed the young novice screen actor.

In the 1960’s television series Run for Your Life, Gazzara played a young lawyer, who’s told he’s dying with two years or less to live. Gazzara’s character Paul Bryan’s mission in the show was to cram as much living as possible, into whatever time he had left. I remember this was the favorite show of my uncle Forrest, whose own life was ironically cut short at the age of twenty, while serving in Vietnam in 1967. Often when I would see Ben Gazzara, I would think of my uncle Forrest. So that night last year with Gazzara, it made me feel like I was paying my respects to both of them in a way. 
Uncle Forrest
 After his series ended its three year run, Gazzara returned to being a busy journeyman actor. He told a great story that night about filming a World War II film, The Bridge at Remagen in Czechoslovakia. During the production the Soviets decided to invade the country and the company had to relocate the whole production to West Germany. But not before Gazzara and fellow actor Robert Vaughn decided to personally smuggle a Czech waitress they had become friendly out of the country in their car... luckily they were successful.


That night at Cinefamily, the featured film was, Husbands. Gazzara’s first collaboration with director &  pioneer iindependent filmmaker, John Cassavetes (whom he also co-stars with along with Peter Falk.)  The film was about a trio of pals who take a wild impromptu trip to London after their close friend suddenly dies... think a method actors version of The Hangover. The project turned out to be a great experience and turning point for Gazzara as an actor. Gazzara, who hardly knew Cassavetes and Falk at the time, but jumped on to the project after seeing a screening Cassavetes film cinema verite film, Faces. In Ben Gazzara, Cassavetes found the perfect leading man, who processed a certain earthiness, which worked so well in his work… and to Gazzara, Cassavetes was not a just filmmaker, but a poet. When Cassavetes died in 1989, Gazzara lost his great collaborator and friend, and it was said that he went into a depression for many years over the loss. When Gazzara spoke of Cassavetes that night he became teary-eyed. 

Husbands 1970


I took this portrait of Gazzara, as he took a moment after speaking about his pal, John Cassavetes.

These Two: The Poet & The Lion
 For me personally, when I really first started to dig Ben Gazzara, I was a 14 years old kid. Somehow, I ended up seeing this crazy movie with a strange title; The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (and another film by John Cassavetes) at the local theater (The UA Cinema in Marina Del Rey) it must have been rated R? But somehow, I saw it? But I’ll tell you, it left an impression on me to this day.


The grainy neon noir piece set on the Sunset Strip, had Gazzara as a nightclub owner Cosmo Vitelli who owes the mob twenty-three large. His only way to clear the books is to take a hit for them in Chinatown.
Filmed at the famed Gazzarri’s night club in Hollywood, I would find it also ironic, that it would be the first nightclub I would ever step into a few years later at the age of sixteen.
Again in jest during a clip of the film that night, Gazzara chimed in, “In this scene, I was going to kill a Chinese bookie!” I didn’t know what it was at the time? But that film and especially Gazzara’s performance as a desperate man on a run of bad luck, but who never loses his vision or his touch of class; that always stuck with me... such a performance! From that point on, if Ben Gazzara was in the cast, I was interested… when it comes to presence, he was a fucking lion!

Even to have loved and lost Audrey... is to have lived a life!

 He was truly great in whatever role he played. He was the charming, rogue private eye in Peter Bogdanovich’s romantic comedy The All Laughed, where Gazzara wooed non-other than Audrey Hepburn herself (the two also made the picture Bloodline together… which they had an ill-fated, love affair off-screen.) To this Gazzara just confessed "I loved Audrey..."Gazzara said he’s probably remembered most for the villainous Brad Wesley, the part he played in the Patrick Swayze picture Road House. Gazzara laughed and said it was his most played picture on television. But many remember Gazzara as pornographer Jackie Treehorn in the Coen’s cult classic, Big Lebowski or as Vincent Gallo’s crooning pop in the quirky indie film Buffalo 66. He also lent his presence to David Mamet's little masterpiece, The Spanish Prisoner.

"You know, I'm just fucking with you?"
Gazzara was an Emmy winner, but amazingly was never nominated an Oscar… times in Hollywood have changed, I’m sure many of his performances like Chinese Bookie or Saint Jack (another Bogdanovich picture set & shot in Singapore at the end of The Vietnam War, with Gazzara as Jack Flowers, a Yankee pimp with a heart of gold)  were to be released now, they would be considered Oscar worthy… Gazzara was just to ahead of the game. With Cassavetes long gone, and Peter Falk passing last year and now Benny… like I said; the end of an era. During that evening last year, my favorite moments came watching the feisty actor from the Lower East Side, having some good natured fun, by busting the balls of his 40 something bearded moderator. At one point, towards the end of the night, Benny gave him a little slap on the face, and said with a smile, “You know, I’m just fucking with you?”   

Saturday, July 16, 2011

"The Big Woogie: 4 Noir Acts" or How (ME) Ray Ramos... Became an 'FN' Playwright?

What's "The Big Woogie" you ask? Well, it's my (Ray Ramos') first venture into the theatre! And so far it's been a great experience. I saw my pal, Dave Mamet (we met on a film) not long ago, he asked me what I've been up to? I said "I'm embarrassed to say (semi-sheepishly) I just wrote a play, I was planning to put up." To which the Pulitzer Prize Winning Playwright said; "But, you just told me?" So, I did, Dave..so I did? I guess, that I wasn't that embarrassed to say?


The fuse that ignited this project was a couple friends (we'll call; Sarah & James? ) asked for submissions for something, "film noir." Well, at the time, I needed something to do... and film noir style & stories were something I'm well versed in (I couldn't tell you about a lot things, but I could tell you who was floating dead in Gloria Swanson's pool in Sunset Boulevard... Joe Gillis a.k.a. William Holden) So, I wrote a story and submitted it, then I wrote another... I didn't hear back from my friends? But my brain was clickin' away, so I wrote yet another story... (and I thought they were pretty damn good!) I didn't want to write your standard cliche detective yarn. I wanted to write things that were really off-beat (and may I say; even a little "wacky")  but still with a homage of all the great stories and wild characters from those classic type films. With tips of the cap to folks like: Lon Chaney, Tod Browning, Barbara Stanwyck, Billy Wilder, Louise Brooks and the noir master, Orson Welles. Another kick is, I've set some of the action in one of the acts at L.A.'s famed The Ambassador Hotel (where I had actually worked during it's last seven years, before it was demolished in 2005) So, I got to do my little tribute to her with a tale that's loosely based on a strange story someone told me once in my office at The Ambassador.

Our fantastic key art by Jim Pierce

Well, my friends actually never ended up doing their show, but I though "what the hell?" I have three one acts, I just needed one more to fill out a whole show... so I thought finish "this muhtha" (and I did just that!) I've loved writing for years, I've written a least a half a dozen screenplays (and yes, they're pretty good!)  but, to bring one of my scripts to the screen, would take a hell of a lot of money... I thought, this play was something doable?

Perhaps, this noir photo (taken by me ) of my friend, actress Brittany Murphy at the Ambassador Hotel in 2005 with Louise Brooks (painted by artist Ana Rosa Amaral) in the corner was an inspiration for  my Act Two; ROOM 509?
 So damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead! Don't think twice, like Bob Dylan said. I showed these stories to a few friends, who I thought might find them interesting? In fact, an old school pal, Gordon Alatorre (whom, I've known since dinosaurs roamed the planet) had in recent years, been drawn into acting,  I thought would be as great one of the leads in "Forgive Me Charlton, I Have Sinned" (as in Heston...the First Act) Gordon liked the idea so much, that he became of of the shows producers (and quite frankly, I couldn't have pulled this off with out him.) Also, out on the limb with me, another old pal. Stan Matasavage.  I met Stan, many years ago doing stand-up at the Comedy Store in Westwood (that store's long gone by the way) he'd been wanting to do something like this for a while, so he was crazy and jumped in with us. Another feather in the cap on this project was my friend Candy (Candice) Martin, who I had always envisioned as the main character of Mrs. Pierce in Act Three, A Touch of Murder. I have to tell you that both Gordon & Candice (not to mention, her understudy Carolyn  Blais, a fantastic new find!) are just fantastic in their roles. And even luckier, Candy's a veteran of producing at The Raven Playhouse in North Hollywood (where "The Big Woogie's" running.) This goes to show you, that you have to take the momentum in life (when the riptide catches you, ride it! Don't fight it!) Because if I (actually all of us producers on "Woogie") would have thought too much about it... there would be a million reasons (blah, blah, blah) not to do it!

I can tell ya who this "dead screenwriter" is!
So what I (we) have in store for all of you who come to see "The Big Woogie" (and I wish you all really would!) is a really fantastic, fun show that gonna have you both at the edge of your seats and then rolling in the aisles... We have a great cast; marvelous performers that are really bringing my characters to life (I'm even in the production, as the voice of Orson Welles!) And I might add, that it's really wonderful to see actors, who you have no preconceived notion of, walk out on stage and do their thing! And might I add, this production has actual "real sets"... production value!! So there it is! I've laid it all out there for you... my "Big Woogie."  Am I (Ray Ramos) a tormented writer? No, I love it! It fuckin' fun!... Especially, when it's clickin'... you be the judge? Come see "The Big Woogie: 4 Noir Acts," and remember "don't think about it, just do it!"

"THE BIG WOOGIE: 4 Noir Acts"Premier Engagement @ 
The Raven Playhouse 5233 Lankershim Blvd. NoHo, CA 91601 Runs 4 Weekends (Friday, Saturday & Sunday - From July 29th to August 21st, 2011)
* SUNDAY PERFORMANCES go up an hour earlier @ 7pm.
more info @
www.bigwoogie.com
Question & reservations @
thebigwoogieplay@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

My Quick Liz Taylor Story...

If I Ever Get A Hold Of A TIME MACHINE ... Marfa, Texas 1956!!
Back in the early 90's, I was working the Academy Awards. The big news that show was, Elizabeth Taylor was going to be receiving an honorary award. She's the big momma of all divas; she was the original! Liz and her husband, the late actor Richard Burton tore up the headlines in the 60's and 70's ... no couple were bigger items back then (and FYI the Jolie-Pitts are bush league compared to the Taylors in their heyday!)

Dick & Liz: Love is a Battlefield!
Well, Liz appearing at the Oscars that year was a real big deal (even though she hadn't done a real boffo picture in about 25 years.) There was an electricity back stage at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion waiting for her to show up that night (like a bed-wetter sleeping with an electric Snuggie... you know you liked that one!) I was in this narrow backstage area when the word came down; Elizabeth Taylor's car is here!  Yes, the eagle had landed at the back entrance! When she came down this narrow corridor it was like the were bringing the real Cleopatra! An army of men in black surrounded her, they were keeping fellow celebrities at arms length; The rat pack's gal, Shirley Maclaine, Liza with a Z, "Dalton from Road House himself"; Patrick Swayze pushed aside like a girlie man! even the great Paul Newman (who was to present the award to her on stage that night) was steered to the side like a mere mortal!  What really was funny, her husband at the time, the construction worker named Larry Fortensky, he looked like a blond deer caught in the headlights, It was the craziest damn thing (I myself made myself invisible next to the Xerox machine)  and yes, the most entertaining things do happen backstage!

Larry & Liz!
Hurricane Liz
Yes, Liz walked right past me... but did I see those famous violet peepers of hers? Or those fabulous jewels she always wore? Well, with all of those beefy bastards surrounding her... I pretty much saw the top of her head! Not even a sniff of her White Diamonds perfume got to one of my nostrils! (Liz was actually small, and if she wasn't sporting this kinda Marge Simpson hairdo that night, I would have saw nothin') but that was okay, for a moment; I was in the eye of the Hurricane Liz... so long baby.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Paul Dandridge and John Gilmore: Two Conversations in the Valley


Ray & John: Two Noir Guys, Just Sittin' Around Talkin'
Yesterday, I made the trek from Venice out to the lovely, San Fernando Valley… I had a little business out there.  I had a lunch appointment with my pal and iconic L.A. writer John Gilmore. But before that, I had to get take my car to get a smog check at a place that I’ve been going to for that past few years (I’m a creature of habit and they had sent me a $10 off coupon… it worked for me.) This place (Eagle Smog Check @ 14855 Magnolia Blvd) is really fast, and usually there’s never long wait, well today there was one other person there before me, it turned out to be veteran L.A. TV reporter Paul Dandridge. I’m sure if you’re a native of this town, or have been here for any number of years you know his face, he was always the Johnny on the spot, man on the street with the kinda Bob Redford look about him.

Paul Dandridge's is a heck of a reporter and a great guy!
Eagles Smog Check in Van Nuys
Mister Dandridge did stints on all the major news teams in town. But, I remember him especially as part of the great; Eye Witness News Team on ABC channel 7 (or as I remember K-ABC TV.)  I mentioned to him, that I was working as a page on the same lot on Prospect Ave. in Hollywood during that time. That opened it up for a nice entertaining conversation that made the time waiting for our cars go by rather quick ( I always seem to bump into people from my past lives, my old girlfriend always used to say; "Can't you go anywhere without running into someone you know?")
Paul, told me that he too had started out as a page back in N.Y. at CBS. This made me wonder, why I never made it to the Eye Witness News Team? The closest I got to that, was filling in during the holidays, for the page that usually guarded the door, because of a stalker problem one of the anchors had at the time. But seriously, as a native Angeleno talking to someone like Paul Dandridge for a few, was a real kick! I had had to ask him about the weather detail… you know when it’s snowing, and they send a reporter out to someplace like Ridgecrest or the Grapevine, just to stand in the snow for two minutes, to let everyone know that it’s snowing! I always felt for the reporter that had pulled that detail, can you imagine the miserable drive back to L.A.? He actually said, that he didn’t mind that at the time (but he dosen't miss it.) He said what was worse was standing in front of a locked up empty courthouse at 11 PM after a big trials been over for hours. I happened to have my camera with me in my travels; he asked what kinda stuff that I liked to shoot? I said anything but paparazzi stuff. That lead to him telling me of when he was assigned to cover the death of movie star Rock Hudson in the 80’s and what a crazy frenzy he remembered as the paparazzo’s tried to get that last photo of his body being taken out of his house in Beverly Hills. 
Jerry Dumphy
Baxter Ward
We talked about some of the newscasters of L.A.’s past like Jerry Dumphy and George Putnam, and how there was a time when all the news anchors had to be of a certain older age, the opposite of the way TV news is now. He also talked about how TV news has changed since cable and now off course the smart phone phenomena. I remember the days when the opening music for Eye Witness News was Lalo Schifrin's music from the Paul Newman movie, Cool Hand Luke (from the road race taring scene.) I even threw out the name, Baxter Ward, the channel 7 anchor from the 1960's (hey, I've been around a while, baby!) who in the 1970’s became a L.A. County Supervisor; Dandridge remembers that Ward never shook hands, because he was wary of germs (which he thought was kinda hard for a politician?)  Dandridge also mentioned that the NBC studios in beautiful downtown Burbank was great because of it’s centralized location, and its top notch commissary.
The Gilmore Look
The Hero Shot!

I next paid a visit to my friend John Gilmore (often described as the “quintessential L.A. noir writer” and the only person that I know actually met, one Elizabeth Short a.k.a. the Black Dahlia.) As both native Angelinos, John and I are muy simpatico, so I like to check in with him every couple months for lunch and conversation; this afternoon headed to Corky’s, a coffee shop with pretty blond waitresses on Van Nuys Blvd. Like Paul Dandridge, L.A.’s been Gilmore’s beat longer than prop 13 has been on the books!



John's a friendly fella
Over potato leak soup and corned beef on rye, the topics of our visit ranged from John telling me about a current crop of interviews to promote some of his past books: LA Despair, Severed (the best book ever written about the Black Dahlia case), etc. all that are coming out in digital book form. The conversation then steered to Tony Curtis. John had been approached to participate in a French documentary on the late actor. Ten years John’s senior, he had met the 50’s matinee idol a few times, when he used to hang around at Universal.  As a young man, Curtis had made an impression on him. He said that he’d met him in the commissary shortly after Curtis had made the picture Criss Cross, where he had a famous dance scene with Yvonne De Carlo, John’s recalled that the young brash actor exclaimed to him, “I had three lines, and those *!#@$uckers cut them out of the picture!
Yvonne De Carlo & Tony Curtis: Criss Cross
John asked me, if I remember an actress named Faith Domergue? She was mostly remembered as one of Howard Hughes’s starlets. He recalled how she was working on a picture at Universal called, Cult of the Cobra, and he hung by the set to try and met her. I said I know that movie ... David Janssen and Richard Long were in that, right? John laughed, impressed that I would no such an obscure B horror movie (and, so was I actually.) 
Faith Domergue
We also talked about his favorite watering hole, Musso and Frank’s, which Gilmore’s been patronizing since the 50’s. Located on Hollywood Blvd., M & F has been the premier L.A. hangout of such classic writers as Fitzgerald, Hammett, Faulkner, Fante, Cain, Chandler and West (and the list goes on and on.)
I didn’t mention to John that my current "writers hang" when I can swing it, is Costo; with its hotdog and Coke, $1.50 combo. We also touched upon places that are now long gone, such as Oblatt’s  (John spoke of meeting Marilyn Monroe there for lunch while she was doing some looping for her final film The Misfits) and I brought up Nickodell, yet another classic watering hole nnow gone, it sat right next to Paramount (it had telephones in the booths that went directly to the studio operator. I got to enjoy a little time there before its last call in 1993.And ironically it was famous for being Jerry Dumphy's joint when he went to K Cal 9 to do the news, as it was located right next door... rumor has it that "Dumph" was a little more relaxed during the 10 PM news broadcast (FYI, I did not hear that from Paul Dandridge! That was just the town legend... from the desert to the sea...) I also remember some classic paintings of naked women that adorned the walls at Nickodell... they were very famous to the patrons of the place.
And John got to here me bitch over the really uninspired architectural design of the apartment complex that now sits on the site of the old Perino’s restaurant, which was located on the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Norton Avenue. It was were the Hollywood stars would rub elbows with the L.A. gangsters. It was used for years as a popular film location. John looked up and said, "I can see that classic Perino’s sign right now."
Always the writer, John always spoke of the epic novel that he’s doing battle to finish, with two more novels on deck after that. (John used a couple of my photos for the cover and the title page of his last book; Hollywood Blvd.)
http://www.johngilmore.com/
I mentioned to him of the some one noir-ish one acts plays that I’ve just written, and how I hope to put up in some manner soon (hopefully this year.)  He liked that one of the characters in one of the pieces happened to be a carnival clown (in homage to the great silent film star Lon Chaney... and possibly the greatest actor who ever lived?) 
Lon Chaney don't play that!
I also, told him about this very blog (I guess, I had never mentioned it before?) together going on my second year.) After lunch we swung back to his home to wrap up our visit, until it was time for him to get back to his writing and me back on the 405 before rush hour, it was a good day hangin’ with two classic L.A. dudes; "three" if I count myself?
 

Monday, January 31, 2011

Some of My Favorite Photos From 2010: Featuring Norman Corwin, Dennis Hopper, Dr. John & Jackie Bisset, among other people, places & things! Photo copyright Ray Ramos

Classic Writers: 100 year old Norman Corwin makes a point, Ray Bradbury in the background.
Veteran's Day; Westwood Veteran's Cemetary
American Gothic 2010?: Alison & Nin, two people that I miss & adore!
My pal & L.A. writer, John Gilmore at home... with his pet tiger.
A rare photo of my pal writer, David Mamet, laughing! ... so, the blur didn't bother me!
Comic Con, San Diego; Hey, The Green Lantern's gotta eat lunch too!

The Century City Towers

The L.A. Marathon, Hollywood Blvd.
Dennis Hopper, hugs pal Jack Nicholson for the last time.
My Family does an unexpected Abby Road -type shot, in the Capital Records parking lot in Hollywood.
Sunset Blvd.
The View at the Venice Canals

Blonde: Santa Monica Pier

2011 Rock n Roll Hall of Fame Inductee: Dr. John @ SM Pier.
Leonard Knight of Salvation Mountain & The Newlyweds
Magnolia Blvd., North Hollywood
Los Feliz: The Artist & her Clown
JACKIE BISSET @ the 30 Tribute to Steve McQueen
The Last of The Magnificent Seven; Robert Vaughn: @ the 30 Tribute to Steve McQueen
Satisfaction: Artist, Griffin Lauerman
Jessica, the beautiful lady in red & Michael J. Anderson (of HBO's Carnival) confer.
This unplanned three way shot! Featuring famed NATGO photographer, Michael "Nick" Nichols & my dear friend Aloma (a wonderful photographer in her own right!)
L.A. Zoo: I love Gorillas: Thank you Honey, for giving me this shot! I'll comeback and see ya soon!
Yogi & Whitey & Jose & Victor