Thursday, October 28, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
Sole Survivor
A recent stop for lunch at the Green Tree Inn in Victorville on the way to Las Vegas brought back a flood of memories about a month I spent living there in my youth. I don't mean to say that I lived in Victorville. I actually lived at the Green Tree Inn for a month while working on a The project was directed by my mentor and family friend Paul Stanley and featured a cast that included William Shattner, Richard Baseheart and Vince Edwards and was a fiction loosely based on the discovery of the B-24 Liberator bomber the "Lady Be Good" that was found in the Libyan desert after the crew got lost and ran out of fuel. I was supposed to be taking final exams but my cinema teachers Peter Gibbons and Elliot Bliss who, as it happened, were heads of the camera and sound departments respectively at
I had a great time on this shoot. In addition to the B-25, we had lots of "Champs"--the British military jeep--to ride around in and there is nothing like a film crew on a remote location for a month to provoke all kinds of mischief and pranks. I say nothing of the carloads of women who drove in from as far as a hundred miles away to see what all the fuss was about. I frequently had my dinner with Alan Caillou, an older actor/writer who had been a desert rat during WWII and was willing to recount his many wartime anecdotes while we ate together. Alan and I had a common interest in
When I wasn't dining with Alan, I would have dinner with Paul Stanley and we would talk about how the production was going. Usually, Richard Baseheart would stop by smoking a Montecruz. At the time, I had only the slightest notion of who he was. Later, I came to enjoy his films--especially the film noir He Walked by Night directed by Anthony Mann and the Italian films in which he appeared during the fifties. On the weekends, Paul would take his fuel-injected '59 Corvette onto the lake bed for some high-speed fun. Though I had the GTO at the time, union regulations precluded my bringing it to the location.
I met some very interesting people on this shoot--producer/writer Steve Shagan, director of photography James Crabe and Alan, of course. John Wayne's son Patrick was also part of the cast. I owe an apology to one crew member whose room I rang at 2:30 in the morning pretending to be the hotel operator giving him his 5:30 wake-up call. He showered, dressed and presented himself to the lobby before realizing that his wake-up call had come a little early.
Sole

Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Chad Glass: Sharpie drawing of sunglasses on woman

This rendering is part of an exhibition by Elysée Wednesday regular Chad Glass. He is a talented artist and gifted story boarder for film. His work always demands a second look. Recently, he rendered a priest I encountered at the Hôtel Georges V in Paris that was dead-on in tone capturing the arrogance and opulence of the situation. Chad later developed it into a triptych commentary that attracted a buyer at its exhibition.
Sharpie drawing of sunglasses on woman.
http://ankagallery.com/
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Elysée Wednesday
For the past two years, my Elysée Wednesday salon has consistently enjoyed the attendance of Ferrari friends, film people, finance gurus and artists of all sorts. We've been visited by a Formula 1 Champion and current contender, an Indy 500 rookie, a blond superstar of the sixties (the
We meet every Wednesday on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles or in France at various locations and you are invited to join us in these very relaxed and informal evenings.
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