|
VISCONTI’S
WIDOW
If life can in fact imitate art then the notorious relationship
between director Luchino Visconti and his protégé/actor
Helmut Berger continues a tradition of older man/younger man mentor
relationships. Consider Nijinsky and Diaghilev or, with more tragic
consequences, Oscar Wilde and Alfred Lord Douglas.
In 1984 Helmut arrived in West Hollywood to begin a recurring role
on television in the ABC mega/hit “Dynasty”, which would
have hopefully given him a new fan base and career boost. At that
time I was writing for John Russell Taylor’s revamped ‘Films
and Filming’ based in the UK. Berger had been featured on
its cover a few times in the past, giving John the idea of “bringing
Helmut Berger full circle to where he is today.” At Taylor’s
request I began to actively entice Helmut into an interview for
the next issue. Having heard different versions of what happened
after Visconti’s death and the profound effect it would have
on Helmut Berger’s life and career I wasn’t sure he
would be interested in discussing the present much less the past.
Through contacts like Maggie Abbott, a former agent from Berger’s
salad days in London, I tracked him down and began a very complicated
series of phone calls and missed appointments, yet I remained steadfast
in my determination to have a “Helmut Berger cover’
regardless of the obstacles.
Finally we met at his rented flat on Larrabee St in the heart of
“Boy’s town”’ to audiotape the glory that
was Berger. His legendary charm was very much in evidence that afternoon
as we began discussing his past life. When we reached the subject
of ASH WEDNESDAY, the film with Elizabeth Taylor, he laughed “I
like alcohol and so does Elizabeth. We had a great time except for
her husband, Richard Burton, who became very jealous of me and behaved
badly. The story of what went on off-camera was far more exotic
then what was captured on film.”
The conversation then moved on to his current status as a European
trying the waters of American sitcom TV… Helmut, or “Muti”
to his friends, thought the whole idea of ‘Dynasty’
amusing as it was called “Denver’ in Germany, and being
Helmut had no real concept of its importance to his career. Helmut
felt like an outsider during filming because his first day on set
Joan Collins greeted him with great fanfare in front of the entire
cast and crew proclaiming “Thank God another European,”
isolating him from everyone in his mind’s eye. Later on Helmut
would bond with co-stars Linda Evans and Pamela Bellwood, taking
them to lunch and parties while he remained on the show. We talked
for what seemed like hours in his apartment taping the interview
in between bottles of wine and music. He loved The Rolling Stones
whose single “Undercover of the Night’ had just come
out so he played it over and over for the lyrics “All the
young men they’ve been rounded up”! Helmut Berger at
that time was still a wild child in the city, moving fast and looking
pretty…
Afterwards we stayed in touch I even ran lines with him for ‘Dynasty’
at one point. He would not play the Hollywood game, thus quickly
soured on the idea of television much like Peter O’Toole in
MY FAVORITE YEAR. After all he was a movie star in Europe so why
be anything less in the states!! In spite of any advice to the contrary
Helmut Berger’s recurring role on ‘Dynasty’ came
to a premature end and with it his time in West Hollywood. Helmut
phoned a few times and then he was gone. Once in a while a stranger
would arrive at my door fresh from the continent with a message
from Muti: “Here is someone you should know” and usually
they were… Berger returned to Europe filming a horror film
entitled FACELESS for Jess Franco and, lastly, almost unrecognizable
in his role for THE GODFATHER PART III. 1998 was the year Helmut
penned his memoirs in German entitled “Ich” which candidly
revealed all regarding his life and loves! In it Helmut refers to
himself at 32 years of age, as “Visconti’s widow, having
been seduced by the great director during the filming of VAGHE STELLE
DELL’ORSA in 1964, Helmut would share Visconti’s villa
three months later, embarking on a love affair that would last 12
years. There is a wonderful site dedicated to Berger on the internet
called “The Salon of Helmut Berger” it is in English
and Japanese. I highly recommend it to all Camp David readers for
the wealth of information and images that explain why this personality
is a unique and fascinating icon of that era of excess that gave
the world Warhol and Studio 54.
CLAUDIA
MAKES WAVES!
The beautiful and exciting Claudia Cardinale arrived in Hollywood
for a whirlwind four-day tour. Claudia accepted an invitation to
Los Angeles from the Istituto Italiano Di Cultura and The Hollywood
Foreign Press who were presenting her with a magnificent Deruta
plate based on one of the most famous paintings by Botticelli in
recognition of a life dedicated to the cinema. She presided over
a luncheon her first day in town and Camp David was lucky enough
to be invited to interview her at length. Claudia loves to say “Fantastic”
in response to her opinion of her directors as well as her leading
men. My first question was how she managed to get along with the
out of control Klaus Kinski? Claudia replied, “Well I love
mad crazy people so I made my peace with Klaus on our very first
day of shooting FITZCARRALDO. He had to be the center of attention
always, yet with me he was a generous actor who allowed me to be
part of his reality for the time we were working.” The Italian
actress has worked with the most important Italian directors from
Leone to Fellini and yet it was Luchino Visconti with whom she had
the deepest bond. “Visconti was a nobleman who worshipped
at the altar of beauty” She went on to tell me that Visconti
invited her to travel with him to New York and Rome on many occasions,
sometimes acting as the romantic companion of Alain Delon, even
though they was no romance between the two actors, as Delon was
the object of Visconti’s affection. Visconti was so old world
regarding his sexuality that he preferred to remain closeted most
of his life. The next evening Claudia attended a special screening
of VAGHE STELLE DELL ‘ORSA, a film that evokes another time
and place for Cardinale. Afterwards she observed “Every frame
of this film is Visconti. I feel his breath on my neck! It is for
me beautiful yet sad at the same time.” Cardinale dominates
the film for the first 30 minutes, however the film changes focus
once Jean Sorel’s character is introduced. Sorel is lit and
photographed like the stars in MGM’S
heyday to reveal a male beauty not unlike Delon or Berger in other
Visconti films. Perhaps Visconti had set out to make a film of SANDRA
tailored for Cardinale’s exquisite beauty yet it is Jean Sorel
as her incestuous brother who captivates the screen as well as the
sub-conscious, with Visconti’s own homo erotic subtext which
he invests in most all of his films. Cardinale spoke of the difference
in Fellini’s approach, which was to improvise scenes and be
of the moment whereas Visconti scripted even the smallest detail
and would allow for nothing less than total obedience on his sets.
The second film screened that evening was DON’T MAKE WAVES,
a 60’s look at Muscle beach, of interest only to see just
how beautiful the late Sharon Tate was early in her career. Cardinale
declined to watch it as “It was just too long ago and I want
to see Los Angeles as it is today.” Claudia Cardinale is a
true survivor and remains a vital and captivating star into the
21st century.
IT’S
IN THE TREES!!!
Tomahawk Press has done film buffs a real service in publishing
film books from the National Museum of Photography film & Television.
The first one that has come to my attention “Beating the Devil”
The making of NIGHT OF THE DEMON is quite fantastic because it showcases
one of the masterpieces of the Horror genre, Jacques Tourneur’s
NIGHT OF THE DEMON or CURSE OF THE DEMON as it was known stateside.
Long a favorite with both critics and fans alike this is the first
ever book to make a detailed study of its production with chapters
on all aspects of its reception and the steady climb through the
years to its current status as a classic. Kudos to author Tony Earnshaw
for his research and lifelong admiration for a great film. His scholarship
is most commendable.
I was most interested in reading about the friction between the
director and the producer, Hal B. Chester. The detailed notes and
observations by cast and crew gives one a fly on the wall perspective
of that magic time in 1957 when actor Dana Andrews flew into the
United Kingdom and made one of his greatest films. The book does
not sidestep the actor’s struggle with the bottle or the director’s
unhappiness with the insertion of a monster that has stood the test
of time as one of the most terrifying creatures in fantastic cinema.
 |
Jordan CHRISTOPHER
GETS DOWN WITH
HIS GROUP "the Rabbit habit" |
YOUR BREATH STINKS BUT I DIG IT!!!
One of the great worst films of the seventies has to be a film entitled
ANGEL, ANGEL, DOWN WE GO! with an amazing cast starting with screen
legend Jennifer Jones, Roddy McDowell, Lou Rawls and Jordan Christopher
as a Morrison style rock God who beds most of the cast as the film
uncoils to its mind-numbing conclusion. A very young Holly Near,
now a folk singer who disowns this aspect of her life, plays Jennifer’s
overweight daughter who is deflowered at her coming out party by
Jordan Christopher’s shirtless rocker complete with skintight
leather pants. The one-liners are non-stop; at one point during
Holly’s seduction Jordan French kisses her and then says “Your
breath stinks…but I dig it” One can only wonder How
director/writer Robert Thom convinced AIP to green light such a
project…perhaps the success of WILD IN THE STREETS is to blame.
Robert Thom must have been doing tons of drugs when he penned this
opus and every line seems like it emerged from an Opium frenzy.
One of the characters asks Roddy if he is a homosexual to which
he replies, “Man, sometimes when I look at even a carrot I
get turned on!” Jennifer Jones is not spared anything either;
at one point she reveals that as a young struggling actress she
made ‘Stag films’ “”I made over 30 of them
and never faked an orgasm.” This film has to be seen to be
believed!! After the Manson killings the film was released a second
time in the same year as CULT OF THE DAMNED. The film is best described
as Pasolini’s TEORAMA remade as a beach party flick…Camp
David is prepping a campaign to see this masterpiece on DVD…
TRIPLE
THREAT
In the last few installments of Camp David we try and spotlight
independent filmmakers who with the proper breaks will begin careers
in this city of the angels…. Mark Vasconcellos is on his way
with the DVD release of TRIPLE THREAT, a film made for well under
$20.000 which Mark wrote, directed and produced, not to mention
acts a small part in as well!! Pre-production took him 6 months
working night and day, shooting the entire film over the course
of a year. The result is a superior looking film with talented amateurs
that pays homage to the world of espionage, Charlie’s Angels
and James Bond.
Mark has a very cool website over at www.bigbask.com I suggest
anyone wishing to get involved in Independent filmmaking give Mark
Vasconcellas a chance. Believe me you won’t regret it.
Remember until next time “May all your dreams be in CinemaScope
and 70mm”
|