'Waterfront' Screenwriter, a Real Contender, Dies
By PopEater / Wire Services Posted Aug 6th 2009 06:26AM
Budd Schulberg, who defined the Hollywood hustle with his novel 'What Makes Sammy Run?' and later proved himself a player with his screenplay for 'On the Waterfront,' died Wednesday at age 95. 'Waterfront,' directed by Elia Kazan and filmed in Hoboken, N.J., was released in 1954 to great acclaim and won eight Academy Awards. It included one of cinema's most famous lines, uttered by Marlon Brando as the failed boxer Terry Malloy: "I coulda been a contender." Clips:
His wife, Betsy Schulberg, said he died of natural causes at his home in Westhampton Beach, on Long Island. She said he was taken to a nearby medical center, where doctors unsuccessfully tried to revive him. "He was very loved and cherished," she said.
Schulberg never again approached the success of "On the Waterfront," but he continued to write books, teleplays and screenplays - including the Kazan-directed "A Face in the Crowd" - and scores of articles. Spike Lee was an admirer, dedicating the entertainment satire "Bamboozled" to Schulberg and working with him on a film about boxer Joe Louis.
"What Makes Sammy Run?" was published in 1941 and follows the shameless adventures of Sammy Glick (born Shmelka Glickstein) as he steals, schmoozes and backstabs his way from office boy at a New York newspaper to production chief at a major Hollywood studio.
Unlike Nathaniel West's "The Day of the Locust," which immortalized the desperation of show business outsiders, Schulberg's book was an insider's account. Hollywood was fascinated, and betrayed. Everybody from movie executives to Walter Winchell were convinced they knew the real-life model for Glick. Schulberg later said he based the character on numerous hustlers he had encountered.
"What I had, when I read through my notebook, was not a single person but a pattern of behavior," he later wrote.
The model for countless Hollywood satires to come, Schulberg's novel was adapted for television, Broadway (a flop musical starring Steve Lawrence), but, ironically, has waited decades to be made into a film. A planned DreamWorks production featuring Ben Stiller was "in development" in recent years.
"I have a feeling they're not going to do it," Schulberg told The Associated Press in 2006. "It's still a little tough for them."
Like Glick, Schulberg had working knowledge of the movie business; he was the son of Paramount studio head B.P. Schulberg. And like the "On the Waterfront" hero Malloy, who testifies about corruption on the docks, Schulberg informed on his peers. In 1951, he named names as he acknowledged a Communist past before the House Un-American Activities Committee.
In 2003, Schulberg was voted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame as an "observer," a category established the previous year for journalists and historians. In his later years, he worked on a memoir, drawing upon correspondence with Robert Kennedy, F. Scott Fitzgerald and others.
He was a supporter of Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign and was among the last to speak with the Democratic candidate before he was assassinated in Los Angeles.
Schulberg remained active in his 90s, collaborating in 2008 on a stage version of "On the Waterfront" presented at the famous Fringe arts festival in Edinburgh, Scotland. He told The New York Times that he always felt Brando's character should realistically have been killed in the end for testifying against organized crime. But the director of the festival play stuck with a happy ending, just as Kazan had done a half-century earlier, Schulberg said.
Schulberg's prose was scrappy and streetwise, but the streets of his childhood were well paved. Born in New York City, he grew up in Hollywood and remembered riding in a fancy Lincoln town car, complete with gold wicker and carriage lights.
"I hated that car so much that when I had to be driven to school in it I would lie on the floor and crawl out a block away so my school mates wouldn't see my shame," he recalled years later.
He went East to be educated at Deerfield Academy and Dartmouth but returned to Hollywood to work in movies, describing himself as an underworked $25-a-week "reader, junior writer and utility outfielder."
"I passed the time writing short stories," he said, and his first six efforts, including a tale titled "What Makes Sammy Run," were bought by leading national magazines.
He then isolated himself in Vermont and expanded the story into a novel. Despite a modest first printing, the book was a huge success and was widely praised.
"A biting but nonvicious appraisal of Hollywood," wrote the New York World-Telegram. Dorothy Parker and Damon Runyon were also admirers.
But, inevitably, Schulberg made enemies. Samuel Goldwyn fired him, and Louis B. Mayer, head of MGM, said Schulberg should be "deported." John Wayne feuded with him for decades.
Some Jews were concerned that Glick would reinforce negative stereotypes. But Schulberg responded that many of Glick's victims were Jewish and noted a supportive quote from Parker: "Those who hail us Jews as brothers must allow us to have our villains, the same, alas, as any other race."
In later years, Schulberg was dismayed when young people cited Glick as a role model.
"I grew up hating him," he said. "Now I'm being made to feel as if I'd written a how-to book: 'How to Succeed in Business While Really Trying.'"
During World War II, Schulberg spent 3 1/2 years in Washington and Europe on duty with the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the CIA. All the while, he wrote short stories.
In 1947, he published "The Harder They Fall," a fictionalized expose of boxing, a sport he remained close to all his life; he wrote newspaper columns on it in later years. The 1955 screen version of "The Harder They Fall," which Schulberg also wrote, was Humphrey Bogart's last movie.
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Schulberg's flicks hold up very well--especially "Face in the Crowd", which shoed the dark side of America's obsession with "aw, shucks" cornepone demagogues and how they misuse TV and radio.
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i didnt know eho he was but R.I.P
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Ok folks...lets get it right.
The media is making a God out of MJ in spit of the fact...he was a druggie and a pedo.
Let's not do the dame thing here.
This man was a great talent...AND he helped distroy a lot of people by helping the "witch hunt" whores.
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Schulberg also helped destroy a lot of Nazi war criminals while investigating for the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials. Good work. And good work that he helped run Stalin's apologists out of Hollywood. Like Ben Hecht and Harry Truman and some other people, he may have despised Hitler and Stalin about equally. Good choice. Murder is always murder.
"Stalin killed three times as many people as Hitler did."
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I believe all the "communists" in Hollywood left the Party once Stalin was exposed as anything-but-a-communist. Many in Hollywood--and in the rest of America--joined the Party out of idealism and a belief in socialist principles.
When it became obvious that the CPUSA was simply a vehicle for Stalin's megalomania rather than Marx's socialist principles, most everybody bolted the Party...but remained loyal to socialist ideals.
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Check out "Mission to Moscow" or "The North Star" if you think everybody in Hollywood "bolted the Party" after the Hitler-Stalin Pact. Hitler supported Stalin's war on Finland -- so did "Mission to Moscow." Stalin starved 7 million people in the Ukraine. In "The North Star" the Ukrainians are all shown as loyal supporters. In fact, they supplied enough volunteers for three Waffen-SS divisions and were still fighting Stalin after the Germans pulled out. The Khabardians, an ethnic Jewish tribe of the Caucasus uncontaminated by Marxism were such committed anti-Stalinists that the Germans actually armed them as partisans. Meanwhile, Hollywood kept pumping out films about how much everybody in Russia loved Stalin. FDR loved him too, and when the FBI correctly identified people close to FDR as Stalinist agents -- FDR shrugged it off. Somebody needs to read more factual books by modern Russian authors or repentant former communists like Romerstein -- or maybe just watch more late-night television. Anybody want to reflect on what a Soviet victory meant to Poland of Hungary? Watch "Behind Closed Doors." Laurence Rees has also made films about the Holocaust, but he's an honest man and not a leftist apologist.
AT 95, HE LIVED A FULL LIFE, WAS HAPPY, MAY HE REST IN PEACE. I WISH I COULD LIVE THAT LONG. MY CONDOLENCES TO HIS FAMILY. ACTIVE AT 95 THAT IS SO GREAT! HAVE RESPECT FOR THE ONES WHO DID GOOD ON EARTH AND ARE GONE. SOME OF YOU DON'T EVEN RESPECT YOURSELVES MUCH LESS OTHERS.
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WOW! Spike Lee thot he was great. Gosh! That's really cool. Spike Lee! Ain't that sumpin?
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"Laurence Rees has also made films about the Holocaust, but he's an honest man and not a leftist apologist."
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Somebody is conflating Stalin's crimes with Marxism. It's a common mistake...one that has been encouraged by many on the right who feel threatened by the idea of public ownership of the means of production.
We see a similar mindset among those who are currently screaming about a "government take-over" of the dysfunctional American healthcare system--a consequence of the unbridled greed of for-profit private insurers.
Anyone who is interested in understanding socialist economic systems might want to read some of Herbert Marcuse's writings...or those of Theodore Adorno...or the writings of any number of other modern day Marxist scholars. You will find that, not only is socialism perfectly compatible with democracy, it is more conducive to personal and economic liberation than that sacred cow we call 'capitalism' could ever be.
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