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FEATURED TALENT - KURT CARLEY

We are fascinated by the work of Kurt Carley.  This multi-talented actor has an occupation in the motion picture business that we had never heard of before hearing Kurt Carley’s story.  Kurt Carley is a “Suit Performer” and whether you know it or not, you have seen him  in many of your favorite blockbuster films and in exciting televisions shows.  Kurt Carley may have even played one of your favorite characters . . . read more to discover the Kurt Carley you do not know.



You were born in Pennsylvania, so we assume you were not born into an acting family.
 

When did you decide that you wanted to be an actor / performer? I decided to really 'give it a try' when I was 18 although it would be several years before I got to the 'ballpark'.

What steps did you take to get to Los Angeles?  

I started my escape to LA during my junior year of college. I knew what car I was going to buy to drive there and use in LA, I knew exactly how much money I would need to get started here.  

Did you work in New York first, or even in Pennsylvania at all?  

I really started in New York doing “Little Shop of Horror's.” I was fortunate enough to be handed an  audition to be a temporary understudy for the plant and I was very  lucky and got the job and that started my time in New York, although I  still had my LA plans in my hip pocket. But as life goes, I didn't get to my LA plans until about 10 years later.

You are an extremely tall man for an actor (Kurt is 6’3).  Has your height been an obstacle in casting or has it been to your benefit?

Strictly in terms of doing 'suit work' my height has been an asset. Most of the men that do my line of work are all near my height.

We are interested in learning what a Suit Performer is and how you came about the designation?

In the simplest terms, a Suit Performer is someone who works in a rubber suit with zipper that runs down the back of the costume. There is a lot more to what we do in terms of making a  sometimes bulky suit 'perform' to the directors satisfaction. And of course, the golden rule for my line of work is this: Don't make it look like a guy in a suit.

Did you always want to be a Suit Performer?

No, if you would have asked me what a suit perfomer was 12 years ago I wouldn't have known what you were talking about. Acting was what I wanted to do, but I had the ability to perform in the various costumes and doing this work sure beats working for a living.

Are there many Suit Performers?

That is an excellent question. In my experience there is a fairly small fraternity of guys who do this on my level.

Do you have to be a Stunt Man to be Suit Performer or do you simply need to be large in stature or unusual in some way?

You don't have to be a Stunt Man to do this job although it sure does make you more attractive to producers if you can do your own stunts.

What are the requirements to be a Suit Performer?

A Suit Performer needs to make that rubber suit move in such a way that you exceed the director's expectations. In addition to that, you need to be able to live in that suit for hours at a time. Spending 15 hours a day in a suit for weeks at a time is not all unusual.

How do you prepare for a role?

Usually by the time you get to set the director and I have had a discussion either during the audition process or sometime before shooting as to what we both think the 'creature' will move/behave like. And without trying to sound too much like an actor, "What does the creature want?"

Must you have a certain level of physical fitness to be a Suit Performer?

Yes you do. I'm certainly not saying that you need to be an Olympic athlete, but you need to in shape.

Have you ever been injured in a performance?

If so, how and what happened? Thank goodness I've never been hurt.

Do you get to keep the suits?

No, they are the property of Production or the shop that created them and I wouldn't have enough room to store those things they're heavy and they take up a lot of space. 

Do you wear them on Halloween?

I wish I could get back my 'Predator' costume back from "Batman: Dead End." That would make a good Halloween costume.

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Kurt Carley


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Kurt Carley

TALENT SPOTLIGHT


Kurt Carley

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What were your favorite film roles and why?

"Batman: Dead End" has thus far been my favorite project to work on just because it was shot on a shoestring and everyone was doing favors to get that thing made and the final result exceeded my expectations.

Who have you enjoyed working with the most?

Sandy Collora, the director of "Batman: Dead End" was great to work with because Sandy knew EXACTLY what he wanted, much like the director of "Land of the Lost" which I'm currently working on.

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What challenges you?

That's easy, when people tell me I can't do something.

Do you have a preference in the kind of work that you do; suit performing, leading man, films, television, comedy, etc?

I am most happy when I'm on a set working, in or out of a suit.

You have been working in New Zealand—what are you working on?  Can you give us any details? 

I was in New Zealand working on “Underworld 3: The rise of the Lycans.” The movie stars Michael Sheen, Rhona Mitra, and Bill Nighy and I was one of the hero werewolves in the film. I can't divulge the plot line at this time and I regret that I don't know when the movie will be released. If I were to guess the movie will come out early next year?

Your “Quadrant You Tube Clip” is very funny! What made you think to put that clip together?  (click one of Kurt's photos to see the clip).

I was shooting a project with some friends and I told them about my "new acting technique" and we shot it right there and posted it on YouTube. I just like how ridiculous it is that I think I can do four emotions on my face at once!

Do you also write and if so, what genres do you write under?

Yes, I do write, and I write comedies.

As a working actor, what advice do you have for struggling actors / artists trying to get a break?

Two things; make your own breaks don't wait for your breaks and a good agent will find you if you're doing your job correctly.

What is next—what will you be working on next?  What do you want to do more of?  

I am actually waiting to hear about an upcoming project that I am not at liberty to talk about at the present time.


Well, whatever he appears in next will be that much more interesting for us since we will know the man in the suit.  To watch Kurt Carley in action, visit our sister site at: 
www.Danitelo.net and click on the YouTube link for “Batman: Dead End.”  You will see Kurt Carley in all his creepy glory in the very cool movie clip.  Click any of Kurt’s photos for more information on this talented performer at: www.KurtCarley.com.   --Danitelo



TALENT SPOTLIGHT


The Asphalt


The Asphalt


The Asphalt


The Asphalt




Emmy Award Winner - John Klawitter


John Klawitter - Writer / Director

Why did you move on to Disney?

KN was bought out by Univas, a French Company, and the joy went out of it as it has done in so much of the advertising business.  When big business takes over in advertising, the first thing that can get choked off is the creative process.

What exactly does the Creative Director of Walt Disney Studios do?

Now they must have a dozen creative directors, but back then they only had one, and that was me.  My basic job was the responsibility to create the broadcast advertising --the radio and TV spots, and the cinema trailers-- that promoted the Disney movies and the television shows Disney was producing.  It was a big job, and I never had less than 150 projects moving through my office at any one time.  In addition to being 'The Trailer Guy', I was the low-budget hit man, the go-to guy and the fall guy.   In short, any production project that was too dicey or too small to get anybody's attention was dumped on me.  That meant, in addition to the teams of writer/producers and editors I built, I had two guys who did 'plug shows', network specials promoting our new movies, like "Disney's Famous Villains" when we came out with 101 Dalmatians.  It was a great opportunity.  I built a low-budget department that was unique in the industry.  Instead of farming work out to the creative boutiques for big bucks, we did most of it in-house.  My people were all excellent writers who understood film production and motion picture advertising.  And it was a fantastic job for me.  I got to direct promos featuring movie stars and personalities like Bill Cosby, Marie Osmond, Ray Bradbury, George Plimpton...I got to write some campaigns that I'm proud of to this day...and I wrote lots of jingles and show openings...who wouldn't love a job like that?!

Did you actually work with Mr. Walt Disney?

No, Walt, always a heavy smoker, had died from the Big C over 10 years before I got there.  But in those days his spirit was everywhere on the lot.  Almost everybody had 'Walt Stories', trying to keep the magic alive.   Walt would have done it this way, Walt would have said, Walt would have bust a gut, Walt would never have allowed that.  And, partly because nobody moved in to fill those giant shoes, the studio was in a bit of a quagmire while I was there.  And much to my discredit, I didn't do much to pull it out of the mud.  You can do brilliant ad campaigns for movies, but all they do is pull in a big 1st weekend.  After that, attendance on a dog movie will drop like a stone.   

You may have heard the path to success in the movie business is hard and rocky--you'll not be happy to hear that once you get there, things aren't all glory and roses, either.  When you go to Writer's Bootcamp, the first thing they drill at you is 'Don't fight the system.  There is a system, and it WORKS!"  Well, no lie, it works if it works for you...but don't be surprised to find out how much dysfunction and outright ignorance you'll find at every level in the business.  I tell some few of these stories in TINSEL WILDERNESS...I'm tempted to write them as fiction, because they are often quite absurd and nearly unbelievable.  And yet, shining like crystals in a dark mine shaft, you find bright people going about their jobs, producing absolutely brilliant work.  I saw Eastern Promises again the other day.  Disgustingly violent, absolutely brilliant.  SOMETHING'S still working in the system. 

What did you learn from your experiences as Creative Director to motivate you to write, produce and direct?

It's a good question, but with me it was actually the opposite.  I was taught that you couldn't 'Creative Direct' anybody unless you were a master of that craft or discipline yourself.  I had as my mentors some of the greatest people not only in advertising - Nelson B. Winkless (creator of the Snap Crackle Pop song) and the great Leo Burnett himself (a wonderful writer as well as one who inspired creatives), but in show business (Joe Barbera, Bill Hanna, Phil Mendez, Marty Katz, Sid Ganis, Mike Jittlov, Betsy Baytos, Mike Spenser, Ron Howard, Rod Serling, Eddie Ropolo, legendary London filmmaker Harold Orton, Charles Eames who invented the Eames Chair and is a great storytelling filmmaker in his own right, artist/reporter Franklin McMahon, Sr., Jim Ramsey, Head Writer at Grey Detroit who was shot in the stomach, lived under a tank for a week and then half crawled down the Korean peninsula holding his guts in with one hand...what does that tell you about tenacity?).  But the point was always the same...know how to do it yourself or how the hell can you direct anybody else?
What did you write, produce and direct?

Over the years, dozens of documentaries, dozens of marketing films, hundreds of commercials, thousands of ads and pieces of junk mail, a dozen or so  screenplays, a handful of books adapted to screenplay format.  I'm an equal opportunity creative.  Some people call that whoring around.  I call it paying the mortgage and keeping the kids in school.  As a creative person you have to survive to tell the next story, and the one after that...

We see that you won an Emmy. What did you earn an Emmy for and in what year?

The American Great Artist, artist/reporter/filmmaker Franklin McMahon, Sr. and I won an Emmy in 1969 for a 90 minute documentary that ran nationally the night before the 1968 Presidential Elections.  Those were momentous years with the death of Martin Luther King, the assassination of Robert Kennedy, the shooting of Governor George Wallace and the huge disruption at and around the Democratic Convention in Chicago when the Anti-Vietnam War people were in full howl and the machine squeezed McGovern's idealists out of the nomination.  Naturally, that film, which followed the candidates and recorded what they said on the campaign trail, would win many awards, including a CINE Golden Eagle, a Chicago EMMY, and dozens of other film festival awards from around the country and around the world.  Lesser known was a half hour film I did with McMahon, World Cities, which recorded the exploding population and the disruption in countries around the world as people everywhere were moving from rural areas to urban.  There's a film with as much relevance today as it had back then. 

What category?

Outstanding Program Achievement.  I'm listed as director, though I wasn't in the DGA at the time. 

Where do you keep your EMMY?

McMahon has the statuette.  We could have had more but we were low budget and Mac didn't want to pay for them.  I have a plaque on my wall, between the Silver we won at the Atlanta Film Festival and an honorable mention I won in the Hemingway Short Story Contest for a story I wrote about my dad. 

Did the Emmy benefit your career in any substantial way; did it make a difference in the type of work you did or the jobs you were offered?

Because of the EMMY, I was recognized as a filmmaker in Hollywood.  It helped me get a new show development slot at Hanna Barbera, and definitely was instrumental in getting me the gig with Steve McQueen in France. 

You have received many awards. What were the individual awards for and have they helped your career?

Please don't ask me to remember them one by one.  Certainly the ones that are most meaningful to me won't mean anything to anybody else.  I won an AAAAA award for Ford Corporate commercials nobody remembers and Pioneer and Caples awards for writing print, and something for producing the computer animated opening to The Black Hole and something for  some educationals I did for HB, and ... Awards are nice, but they can be a monumental pain in the ass.  That was yesterday, past history.  The constant problem facing any creative person is, "What have you done for the muse today?"  What have you written, produced, directed--what story have you told--that is significant, true to the bone, and appealing (seductive) to your audience?  That said, I think one of my most favorite awards is the plaque The Old Spooks & Spies gave me for editing TANS, true stories from military spies and their covert operations around the world. 

John Klawitter - Writer / Director


John Klawitter - Writer / Director

What advice would you offer to:

 -- writers trying to get published?

You can try the secret as revealed to me by Eric Van Lowe and outlined in TINSEL WILDERNESS.  But you don't have to do that.  This is a terrific age of opportunity for young, struggling, or mid-level writers.  When the big publishers consolidated a few decades ago, it killed off many opportunities for really good writers who simply hadn't made it for any number of reasons.  They will deny this today, for obvious reasons, trucking out disclaimers and statistics...but I lived through it, and I don't buy the stories.  And you don't have to, either.  Today, it doesn't matter.  I'm a big believer in e-books, audio books, podcasts, print-on-demand, small press.  It's not there yet, but believe me, it's getting there. 
--to writers trying to break into film and television with pilots and screenplays?
I cannot say 'do as I do' because I haven't been enormously successful pitching my own stuff.  The joke around my home recording studio/office is that the next big earthquake will bury me in my own unpublished novel manuscripts, show pilots and screenplays.  BUT, THAT SAID, how else are you going to do it?  You have to write the novel, the screenplay.  Or you have to write the show and produce the pilot.  You can't simply present your idea--that's not storytelling, that's telling a story about a story.   And worse, ideas are cheap as dirt and easy to steal.
--to actors and actresses trying to get cast in films?
Be relentless, be inexorable, miss no chance to practice your craft, get better and better until either they have to cast you or you die of old age.  If you love a story idea, be willing to give your services away...do a great job and you'll not have to worry about more work.
--to composers / musicians?
It's a great time for music, though lots of the old talent is lamenting the 'death of the music business.'  Bad for them, maybe, but if they have real genius, they'll survive.  And terrific for young people coming up. 
--to talented people trying to get noticed?
Some are naturally better at attracting interest than others.  Self-promotion is a skill, and it is not the same as creative talent.  I know an enormously popular eBook writer who has promoted himself into his first publishing deal with the East-Of-The-Hudson Literary Mob...and he's going to fail miserably because he can't write worth a damn.  You've got to find the healthy balance between practicing your creative craft and promoting your work. 
Do you suggest getting agents and business managers?
Agents can be helpful after you get established.  Business managers take your money, and if you're that busy, you give them 15%.  Just don't let them manage ALL your money.  That means checks come in to your bank account, and then YOU pay your manager, not the other way around. 
Are union affiliations important? What affiliations do you have?
I've been a member of the DGA (Director's Guild of America) since the early 1970's, and a member of ASCAP (Song writers & Composers Union) for nearly as long.  They don't get you work, but they can protect your rights. 
What mistakes have you made and what did you learn as a result?
Too many really big and really important mistakes to mention in a paragraph, or even in a book.  TINSEL WILDERNESS is all about lessons I've learned, and I've got enough material for two or three more.  But, okay, you want to know a few of the biggies.  1) Failure to hear opportunity knocking.  In 1984, The Disney Channel was looking for programming, but I was writing a screenplay and couldn't be bothered.  That was a huge mistake.  2) Failure to take good shortcuts.  If I'd spent two or three years in Iowa, I could have avoided two decades of learning how to write long form. 
What are you working on now?
I'm recording the audio book version of my new novel, The Heart of Desire, 'as read by the author'.    http://double-dragon-ebooks.com/single.php?ISBN=1-55404-549-5   My due date is 1 April, and I'd like to beat that by a couple of weeks, so I've got work to be done.  Then, I'm retro-ing a screenplay I wrote, Purple Hearts, into a novel.  I'm adapting a short story to short film format with Marilyn Peake, the author.  I've promised my publisher a time travel romance novel by this fall.  I've got the 1st draft finished, still have to do a polish, and then record the audio book version.  I'm also developing a pilot (with Marilyn Peake, J. Richard Jacobs, Deron Douglas and my own son Matt Klawitter) based on J. Richard Jacobs' prize winning collections of sci fi/fantasy/horror stories TWISTED TAILS, Vol I, II, III and soon to be out IV.  Steve Zuckerman and I have come up with a song and we've cut together a pilot show we can shop around town
What are you interested in promoting?
I am most interested in promoting what I see as the great new wave in storytelling.  Internet, electronic printing, iPod and video driven, what an electrifying time to get out there and tell a story!

Whether it's YouTube, eBooks, podcasts, whatever--if you're a storyteller, now's the time to be spinning your webs and cutting your videos.

Finally, tell us a little about your family, children and where you enjoy working.

I live in Woodland Hills, California.  I've worked at most of the major studios, recording studios and post production houses around town, as well as many Indy production houses.  My wife and I have three sons, and they all vowed they would never go into the creative business.  The oldest may have escaped--he's a lawyer in Northern California--though he talks about the novel he might write some day.  My 2nd son is a top marketing executive at Bright Design, working for the Legendary Keith Bright.  And my youngest son is a rising young executive over at the Fox Studios.  --Danitelo.com with John Klawitter







TALENT SPOTLIGHT


Christian Malmin

Film, Television and Theater Star - Christian Malmin
(Click photos for more!)


Christian Malmin

See Christian in PIZZA WITH BULLETS - coming soon to a theater near you.
(Click photos for more!)








Talent Spotlight


Kimberly Russell

Film and Television Star - Kimberly Russell

Currently filming PUSH in New York
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(Click photos for more!)




FEATURED TALENT – THE ASPHALT

Who is "The Asphalt" - what kind of music?


We are a rock band, nothing more, nothing less.  We dont have gimmicks, we just go out and do what we love.


Where did you get the name?


We felt that most bands put too much time and effort into the band name, and most of them are completely lame, so we just picked the name, first thing that came to mind, and stuck with it.


When was the band founded?


2001


Who are the members and what instruments do they play?


Randy Mazick - Lead Vox/Guitar

Jason Marino - Guitar/Backing Vox

Nick Turner - Drums

Jon Stutler - Bass/Backing Vox


What albums do you have out?


Regarding the Recent Unpleasantries

Long Story Short (EP)


Where can we hear your music and buy it?


You can contact us through our website to order them.  www.theasphalt.net.


Where do you play?  Do you tour or stay local?


Generally, we play west of Texas, but mostly Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles, Austin, etc.


You have been in the news lately, why?


Oh, some no-name band has a song that sounds like our no-name bands song, so it sort of got picked up by national media and they ran with it!


We hear that it was the band Daughtry . . . how did you first come to know that your song may have been copied by Dr. Luke, the credited writer for the song Daughtry performs “Feels Like Tonight?”


Friends started calling saying they heard us on the radio, and then someone pointed the song out to us once and we were like "What?"  So yeah, it took us by surprise.


What was your initial reaction when you heard the Daughtry song?


Man, we sure wrote a great hook!


What are your fans saying about the current controversy with Dr. Luke who was involved in a similar controversy over an Avril Lavigne song?


Our fans support us of course, but Daughtry's fans have mixed feelings.  Some think we're jerks, some support us.


Have you been contacted by Dr. Luke or Daughtry to remedy the situation?


Not at this point, but we think it is just a matter of time.


Have you been getting any attention in the media as a result of this controversy?


It pretty much became an overnight media sensation.  The story has been on Fox news, aol.com, and every other internet blog or celebrity site you can name.  We have also heard that dozens of radio stations throughout the US have reported this story--even reports from overseas.


Where can we get more information on your band and upcoming concert dates?


Myspace baby! www.myspace.com/theasphalt


Tell us about each member of The Asphalt.


Randy is married and has kids, Jason is in a relationship and both have kids from previous marriages, Jon has a girlfriend, and Nick he is the single stud of the band.


Is it tough on your families when you tour?


Yeah, even if we're gone for a few days the gals miss us, and we miss them, and of course the kids!


Lastly, what are you looking for now?  New management, a publicist, record deal, what?


Yeah, we feel we've pretty much done as much as an independent band can do without management, record label support, etc.  So we're shopping around for all of those.  The attention we have received from the situation with Daughtry has brought a lot of interest and we are looking through offers now.


The Asphalt










Featured Talent - John Klawitter

John Klawitter - Writer / Director

We know that you began your career behind as a copywriter. What made you want to move get into films after working as a copywriter?

With me, it's always been about storytelling.  I come from a great line of storytellers, from my Slovinian Great Grandmother with her fantasy tales of "Old Man Wichernich" who sliced cats which then multiplied and came after him, to my Uncle Robert, who would thunder verses of Byron and Tennyson at me when I was just a towheaded kid.  I hear him affectionately in my mind yet today, "The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold/ And his cohorts were gleaming in crimson and gold!"  So, from my first days as a copywriter, I always looked for the story in the product.  And, when I first started, all the young people were filmmakers, running around with their hand-held Bolex 16 mm cameras and sticking films together.  Incidentally, an age quite like today, with the modern video cameras and popular editing systems, everybody full of hope and joy (though maybe less peace & love).

Were you previously educated to write and direct for film or did you learn on the job?

I didn't learn much of it in schools.  I did earn an English Degree and studied for a year under a graduate fellowship in English at UCLA before I left that and joined the US Army to fight John F. Kennedy's 'brushfire wars against Communism'.   But I've never studied in a creative writing course, and I was already in my 50's when I took my first film course, Teddy Post's famous Master Directorial Class at the Director's Guild.   So, as a writer, producer, lyric writer, director, and author, I'm basically self-taught.  There are probably some advantages to this, but I think the drawbacks far outweigh the benefits, and I don't recommend my kamikaze approach to creativity to anybody. 

How were you able to get film making experience without training?

When I came back from Vietnam and was (honorably) discharged from the army, I went back to Chicago, where I knew I didn't want to sell insurance or aluminum siding.  I built a portfolio of home-made ads and hit the streets, looking for writing jobs.  Chicago had lots of big agencies, and they all told me to go away, kid, and do catalog writing and then come back and see us.  The catalog people all said 'I had no experience', the old Catch 22 everybody faces when starting out in the business.  I tell the details in my book TINSEL WILDERNESS, How To Survive as a Creative Person In Hollywood & Other Extreme Climates.   http://double-dragon-ebooks.com/single.php?ISBN=1-55404-487-1 

I got turned down a lot but I kept at it, and finally got in under the most unlikely of circumstances.  I started at the bottom of the heap at Leo Burnett Ad Agency, then the top ad agency in town.  I started in the copywriting trainee program, which consisted of mainly cutting together demo reels of commercials already shot, and recording demo tracks for new spots to present to clients.  Burnett also had an 'experimental film' program, and I took advantage of that. 

How did you get your foot in the door?

Specifically, I was rejected by Burnett, but an employment agency guy who looked like a complete loser buttonholed me while I was headed dejectedly for the train out of town.  This guy called Burnett and browbeat them into giving me a chance.  It showed me not to be too quick to snap-judge anybody.  Appearances, after all, are just the surface. 

You were the Creative Director for Kelly Nason / Univas. What sort of company is that and what did your job entail? 

Again, I tell some amusing stories about KN in TINSEL WILDERNESS.  The agency started in NY, had become famous for their techniques of refining creative work through 'focus groups'  On the West Coast, under the charismatic and erratic leadership of Richard Harris, one of the world's true and legendary scamps, we had offices in SF and LA and a handful of regional clients including Bushnell Optical, United Vintners, Arena Swimwear, XLNT Tortilla Chips, Bianchi International, Paramount, Universal Studios, Almanson Theater and the like.  King Richard liked me because I could write like lightning, and I could produce, direct, write jingles...a lot of different ways he could bill clients for my services. 


John Klawitter - Writer Director


John Klawitter - Writer / Director

What series did you work on, television shows, productions?

Early on in Hollywood, I introduced Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera to the Smurfs, Max The Explorer and Lucky Luke, cartoons I'd read as comics when I was in Saigon, and I pitched to Bill and Joe as shows we should do in the States.  Later, I wrote synopsis & story for Ninja Turtles,  and Star Street (European).  I pitched a story through HB that actually became what they call "Movie of the Week".  At the time, I called it Shaunessy's Garage.  The network called it something else and changed it so much I didn't recognize it, one of the people at HB had to tell me 'hey did you see your movie ran last night'?  I produced The Queen Mary Special for BBC through Eyeline Films, a London-based production company.  I wrote, produced & directed the 1 hour TV special, The Adventures of Sport Goofy for Disney & NBC.  I wrote the song and produced the opening for "Disney's Wonderful World"   I did the same for The Bugs Bunny Road Runner Show.  You can hear these songs and many others in the Audio Book version of TINSEL WILDERNESS.  I wrote, produced and directed several specials for the Disney Channel (The Great American Dreamobile, Sam The Olympic Eagle).  And I've done other television specials, including The Launch of the Disney Channel, and Superclass Sass.  But nothing's automatic in Hollywood--I've developed story ideas and shows that never made it--both television ideas and movies.  I even bought screenplay rights to a worldwide bestselling novel -- Styx, by Canadian writer Chris Hyde.  I adapted the book to screenplay, shopped it around, got close a couple of times, but ended up badly in the red.  In Hollywood they say Never spend your own money, but I've found that sometimes I had to, just to get anybodies attention. 

Did your screen writing success motivate you to write novels?

I started writing short stories and novels.  Even while working at Burnett, Kelly Nason and later Grey (in Detroit) I always burned the midnight oil, filling old army footlockers with novel manuscripts and screenplays.  I love short story writing and recommend it to anybody who wants a good place to begin developing their storytelling skills. 

What motivated you to write novels?

I've never gone too deep in exploring my motivation.  With me, it's always been automatic, a part of who and what I am (whatever that is).  Depending on your point of view, it's a glorious madness or a sickness.  Or maybe just a bad habit. 

How did you get your first book published?

In my opinion, most of the things I've had published have been for the wrong reasons--until lately.  I think there's a fresh new wind blowing and it's great for both readers and writers.  But specifically, to answer your question: When I got back from Nam, I spent two decades writing about it.  I burned through dozens of agents and publishers, and nobody wanted my stuff.  It wasn't political enough, not anti-war enough, was the most common complaint.  In truth, IT ALSO WASN'T GOOD ENOUGH.  You see, here's where that self-taught business came back to bite me in the butt.  I had to learn the form and structure of the novel the hard way, by trial and error.  If I'd had a brain in my head, when I came back from Southeast Asia, I'd have gone to the state of Iowa and hunkered down for a few years.  They have a great creative writing program there, and I could have used the GI Bill.   

Oh, but I still haven't answered your question.  I was in a parking lot at a Denny's on Sunset, complaining bitterly to Eric Van Lowe about how I couldn't get my Vietnam novels published.  He said, "Take the most shocking, most horrible thing you know about the war and build a novel around that."  And then he told me the secret of how, once I did that, to physically get it published by a big New York house.  I don't know if his secret works today, but it did back then.  I took his advice and got published by the giant conglomerate Random House/Ballantine/Del Rey/Ivy Books. 

Was your first novel a success or did it take many novels to get success?

My first novel, CRAZYHEAD, is today a cult classic of the Vietnam War.  It was out of print almost immediately and over the years I had so many requests that once the rights reverted to me I used The Author's Guilds "Back In Print" program to have it reprinted as a print-on-demand book.  Now I just tell people to go over there and buy a copy.  Back then, the original paperback cost $4.99.  Today you can get one for about five or ten times that on eBay, if you can find one.  (You'll know it's the original if you get the one with the blow-dry rat climbing the army helmet. 
Are you primarily a writer now; novels or television / screenplays?
I'm still just a storyteller.  Screenplays, novels, short stories--they're all just formats.  Writing, producing, directing--they're all just tools, crafts, disciplines to help you spin your yarns. 
Where do you find inspiration for your books and writings?
There are so many GREAT writers...I get jealous a lot.  Hemingway, Flannery O'Conner, Stephen King, Dennis LeHane, Dick Francis, Tony Hillerman, Raymond Chandler, Thomas Perry...for me, the list goes on and on...

Do you continue to direct and, if so, what are you working on now?

I wrote a short story in 2006 that I adapted into a script and directed as the short film EXTINCTION, a story about a misinformed ecology minded schoolteacher who gets in trouble when she tries to save a species 'less fortunate than we.  My son Matt, who works at Fox, took a little time off and produced.  We went out onto the Mojave Desert and had a great time.  Then I worked that into a feature length screenplay, SAINT KATE, that I'm currently shopping around town.  We're negotiating to film it in India.  I don't think it's going to happen, but you never know, it might. 

Where do you find talent when looking to cast your films?
It's interesting.  You need big names to attract money, but if you've got a big star, you need big money to pay him or her.  That's another little glitch in the system that you may or may not be able to circumvent. 
You wrote a lot of music over the years for Disney, do you continue to do so for other projects?

I write lyrics--songs, show openings and jingles.  Like Rogers had Hammerstein, I generally work with the great musical mind of Steve Zuckerman, though I've also worked with John Debney and a few other guys.  When you go out for hire, they sometimes give you some talent, say "Here, you gotta use this guy..." 

Where did you get your musical training and was that a part of your job at Disney and Kelly Nason?  

I got my musical training reading librettos of Broadway plays in the public library, and listening to radio.  Of course, when I was a kid, I had guitar lessons (after Elvis, didn't everybody?)

It was never an official part of my job, although it was often part of the reason I was hired.  At Disney I could have hired anybody, and often did.  But sometimes I'd get bored, or I'd have an idea I wanted to try.  It pissed off my first boss at Disney (I had 5 bosses in 5 years), and he would often run talent against me, which was a good idea as it pissed me off in turn and made me work harder. 

Were you interested in the musical end of things, as well?