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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • Page 36

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
36
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I DO WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1994 LOS ANGELES TIMES METRO NEWS SCRIPT: Pirate's Life May Be Treasure-Trove for Writer ployed of today. They mugged you, stole from you, burgled your house because they had to eat, not because they enjoyed themselves. They had to survive." Meadow continues to survive nicely even though his days of being a hot property are far behind him. "Let's be honest," he says. "If you were an agent and you were told that this 83-year-old guy just sold a screenplay at a very nice price, you wouldn't be interested.

You are interested in me only on the amount of earning years that are left in me." As for his personal life, he says, "I don't live a social life anymore. I don't care about the social life out here today. And second, many of my friends have done me dirty they died. Some are better for it," he says without skipping a beat. "Some I miss." proclaimed brilliant by the executiveonly to see it scuttled within a week because it would have been too costly for the network to produce.

It was around that time that creeping old age conspired to dry him up as a writer. "I ended up breaking the rule I tell all young writers," he says. "You must write every day." Eventually he found his spirit again, channeling it into a children's book and retooling the Anne Bonney story into a movie. His pirate tale is less a costume drama and more a portrait of a society. "Piracy is not what people think Errol Flynn letting out a whoop and climbing up some rigging." (Though Meadow wrote something like that for Errol Flynn once.) "Pirates were very interesting people.

They were the unem worked there for 30 years. Though he is proud of "Have Gun, Will Travel," he eventually came to despise television ensemble writing. "It's degrading, it's disgusting," he says. His last credit was the desultory "Curse of King Tut's Tomb," which aired on television in the late '70s. "What I wrote was not what they did," he contends.

But in fact, his last stab at television was the Anne Bonney script written in the wake of his wife's death 14 years ago to combat his crushing sorrow. He says a television executive asked him to write a script based on a story written by two other people. The subject was Anne Bonney. He threw out the old story, wrote a script in two months and had it to see who was the most nattily dressed. Malibu was truly the beach of postcard dreams.

As for agents, they not only returned your calls, they fed you spaghetti when you were low on money. On balance, Hollywood has given him success, an affluent lifestyle, a resume full of credits. In television he is credited as a co-creator of the famous series "Have Gun, Will Travel." In film, he wrote scripts with titles such as "Redhead From Wyoming" (starring Maureen O'Hara), "Stranger on Horseback" (starring Joel Mc-Crae) and "The Strange Woman," a 1946 film starring Hedy Lamarr. On the bad side, he saw scripts that he loved languish in limbo. He drifted into television (the money was better, he says) and PHASE CUP AND MAA MOTH YOUR GffT TODAY I want to help provide free Thanksgiving em a mjmmsuim I dinners for the hungry and safe shelter for the homeless this Inanksgiving season and throughout the year.

Here is my gift of: I MUM TO A meals meals meals I $157-100 meals Other $. Name Address. I I I I I I CityStateZip. HOMELESS PERSON Please help us provide traditional home-cooked Thanksgiving dinners with all the trimmings for the hungry and safe shelter for the homeless during this Thanksgiving season. $15.70 will feed 10 hungry people $31.40 will feed 20 hungry people $62.80 will feed 40 hungry people" $157 will feed 100 hungry people $1,020 will help feed and shelter 650 people Thank you for you Thanksgiving gift.

You will receive a receipt for lax I purposes. All our services are offered to the poor and needy without regard to race, creed, gender, handicap or national origin. If i 4yiL fought like cats and dogs for six years," he says. "So we got divorced." Now they peacefully cohabit what is actually a duplex connected by an open doorway-he lives on one side, she on the other. The true love of his life is a woman with dark swept-back hair in a framed photograph on a wall.

"That's my late wife," he says, gazing at the picture of his spouse of 43 years. "She was indeed a beautiful person. She died in 1980." He has one son who is now a lawyer and had a mentally handicapped daughter who died four years ago in an institution. "She didn't know how to do anything but open packages," he says. He doesn't drive anymore, and his cocky New York strut is long gone.

Hobbled by constant hip pain and numb feet, he walks only when necessary and then with a cane. He grew up in Brooklyn, and dropped out of the ninth grade but retained a voracious appetite for reading. During Prohibition he was a runner for a bootlegger and gangster. One day, he recounts, he was making a delivery to a tiny radio station in Brooklyn when he discovered the radio announcer passed out from drinking. The manager of the station, hearing Meadow's voice, ordered him onto the air.

"Apparently I have a great radio voice," he says matter-of-factly. Later he worked as a writer of 350 episodes of a radio soap called "Valiant Lady" before he made his way to Hollywood to pursue a career in screenwriting. "That's a wonderful story," he says with a smile over lunch at the Mandarin. School dropout or not, he's given to verbal flourishes and long, vivid tales. "Have you got all day?" he asks.

The short version; An actor friend auditioning for the then-unscripted movie "The Robe" asked Meadow to write him some lines. After the audition, the actor called him and said, "I gave the performance of my life but they want you." Meadow went off to L.A. to write what he says was the first draft script for "The Robe." "There were 11 writers that I know of," he says. "But Philip Dunne is credited with it." It was his first taste of frustration with the credit system of Hollywood but it was also his first taste of the lifestyle and the work. From the moment he arrived in September, 1944, and glimpsed his first palm tree he was intoxicated with Hollywood and the industry.

"I said, 'I ain't going Since then, he has never been forced to do anything for money other than write. In the Hollywood of his heyday, writers of all ages held forth at studio commissary tables and vied Continued from Bl And it's not even some trendy blood-soaked journey through the urban underbelly. It's a fictional account of a real-life 18th-century pirate named Anne Bonney and her struggles to survive in a very male world. "We love period pieces," says Fausto Calegarini, vice president of Cinemagic Pictures North a fledgling independent production company that bought the rights to "Anne of the Southern Main" and hopes to start production next spring. "We decided right away to go and try to buy it." Meadow and Calegarini hammered out the details over dinner a year ago at one of Meadow's favorite haunts, the Mandarin, an unprepossessing Chinese restaurant with windows that look out on the San Vicente Boulevard edge of Beverly Hills.

But it was only this past September that the deal was officially struck. "He's the grandpa I never had," says Calegarini, 34, of Meadow. "I talk to him every day." It's hardly the biggest deal in town. It's a fraction of what uber-screenwriters Joe Eszterhas ($3 million for "Basic and Shane Black (who recently sold "The Long Kiss Goodnight" for $4 million) command for "spec" scripts sold on the open market. And unlike them, Meadow sees none of his money upfront.

Although he got $4,310 for an option, Meadow won't be paid a lump sum of $500,000 until the eve of productionalways a tenuous date until cameras actually roll. "Once you get into this business, you learn to wait," Meadow says wisely. But for a guy who was in his prime in 1945 when Hedy Lamarr would call him in the middle of the night, his deal is a sweet and. surprising triumph. "I am trapped by a constant of nature," Meadow says soberly of the aging process that has crippled his body but not his creativity.

"All I ask is that I be allowed to work productively until it's time for me to go." He lives surrounded by the success that he has made for himself through the years. In his study, on top of his immaculately dusted bookshelves, are scripts of plays and movies he has written, some produced, some not. He has penned 37 feature-length movie scripts 12 of which have been filmed. "I want you to know, young woman, I've had only one bad review in my life," he says in the sonorous voice that got him a job in New York radio when he was a mere tyke in his 20s. He prefers writing in longhand but he's made the obligatory shift to a computer.

"It became a trend," he grumbles. "Like flared pants." In true L.A. style, he shares a lofty Spanish-style house with his second wife now his ex. "We I LOS P.O. Box 21448, Dept.

BTKMX rsJL I Los Angeles, CA 90021 cBf I Location: 303 E. Fifth Street I Hi OUR 43TH YEAR ON SKID ROW WS She forqets things She uses poor judgement i i.it il. iw-- Jne wn i manage laminar taw mBMmmmM wmm She can't remember the right words She is changing in behavior She is changing in mood and personality Ipllllill Usui MM She has problems with abstract thinking She gets lost, even near home She has no initiative She misplaces things mm wmmmm Managing Your Money Special Feature in the Business Section Tuesday, November 22 i i lmmmmmmmm 1 1 i i 8 "llllllliMliill Anger Social Withdrawal Anxiety Depression Exhaustion Sleeplessness Irritability Lack of Concentration Health Problems Learn what the experts have to say about saving for your children's education, planning for retirement and reducing your taxes. Times Business writers will sift through the options and put it all into plain language for you. Co Angeles hues For more information, or to locate the chapter nearest you, call: 1(800) 2723900 In California 1(800) 660-1993 ALZHEIMER'S' ASSOCIATION Someone to Stand by You And remember that Alzheimer's families have urgent needs for information, support and assistance.

Call the Alzheimer's Association today. With more than 218 chapters in all 50 states, we're here to stand by people with Alzheimer's disease and those who care for them. Alzheimer's disease can devastate families emotionally, physically and financially. If you think someone you love may have Alzheimer's disease, you should seek help. Arrange for a complete examination by a physician.

Don't delay, because depending on the cause, some symptoms can be reversed..

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