Thursday, November 15, 2012
AS PROMISED, AT LONG LAST HERE IT IS
Assurances and disclaimers:
I have been led to believe that somewhere adjacent to this blog will be a banner, or some such thing, that will give you all the pertinent details you could possibly require allowing you to order the 30th anniversary Limited Edition of the complete oeuvre of Cagney & Lacey.
This last month has been frustrating. Our distributor operates out of Toronto, Carole R. Smith operates out of Miami, Jacqueline Danson operates out of London and I have been operated on in New York and Seattle while most of this has transpired.
There is something about anesthetics (and the drugs that go with them) that has a person giving less of a damn about such mundane things as their life’s work or their pride of authorship. Fortunately… much of that for which I am responsible, was completed before I went under either ether or blade.
Credit where it is due: The box… the thing that contains all the elements: the Loretta Swit movie, the episodes with Meg Foster, every episode with Sharon and Tyne (including The Menopause Years), my book in its audio version, the anniversary tribute at the British Film Institute, plus a pamphlet and a personally-autographed-by-the-women classic C&L photo… it is all there and beautifully presented by Jeff Sprigg and his staff in Toronto. It will not be sold in stores and is only guaranteed to be delivered through the official Cagney & Lacey web site.
The negative side: It has taken far too long for the Toronto branch of this thing to get its act together and mostly because of lack of attention to detail… how to get a web site working on a monetary basis, how to spell the name Gless, how much will shipping cost and when can the entire thing get sent out before the amount of dust on the box weighs too much to mail?
Did I say I was frustrated? See above…. Then imagine all that fed back to you with appropriate expletives from the even more frustrated Carole R. Smith while flat on your back in a hospital room. Perhaps then you will forgive the delay.
This is my swan song. I am content about that. The Limited Edition is beautiful (thanks, again, Mr. Sprigg) and I know all of you will be happy with it. The pressure to get the warehouse cleaned out and sell these boxes elsewhere (I dunno: QVC, Amazon, the black market?) is mounting. Please make your order right away. Sharon and I are buying a bunch as Christmas gifts to children and grandchildren and friends too young to have seen us at our best. Hey… it’s Christmas. We, and Tyne if she wants, are first. What’s left is going out on a first come/first served basis. The Cagney & Lacey website is not Facebook. We are a tiny band and we should be able to serve you all… but better sooner than later. Do make your order as soon as you can.
If you miss out… or you want something smaller or whatever…. There are mini versions, one with all 119 episodes of Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly and that’s it, even smaller packages with Sharon’s favorite episodes and another with Tyne’s. These should all be something you can acquire through Amazon or Sam’s Club. Details to follow.
Retailers in general are not so interested. Their management is an average age of 19 or something and they don’t want “old TV.” We tell them it is not “old”… not “vintage”…. But “iconic” and they talk to us about real estate (shelf space). You want to do battle? Go to your local Target, Best Buy, Costco, and BJ’S and ask for the manager, and then yell at him/her. I take back that last piece of political correctness. I bet it’s just a him.
It would be lovely if this were all a success, but whatever, thank you for your interest and support and your caring so much about this work of ours.
For those still reading…. I am finished with the three surgeries I have had this year and I am fine. I feel a bit like I have been in a knife fight, but then I realize… I have been in a knife fight. The prognosis for me to be around long after all these boxes of DVDs have sold is good…. Unless (and this should be construed as a warning against further sloppy spelling and misinformation from the North) I am convicted of murdering our distributor.
Barney Rosenzweig
November 15, 2012
Sunday, October 14, 2012
WE'RE ALMOST THERE....from Barney via Carole
Dear All
Barney is currently in Seattle, recuperating from his second shoulder replacement, and attending the USC Washington football game (USC won). It's difficult to type with one's arm in a sling so he has asked me to let you know the distributor has published the "official" press release for the Cagney & Lacey DVDs -- both the LIMITED EDITION and the boxed set of 119 episodes.
The LIMITED EDITION can only be purchased through the Cagney & Lacey official website and the order form will be posted on the site no later than Tuesday, October 16th (we believe). It will give you all the information you need re purchase price and shipping, but the boxed set is available for pre-order on-line through Amazon USA and Amazon Canada.
Both women will be doing radio, television and print interviews and we will keep you up to date on www.cagneyandlacey.com.
It has been a long struggle, but well worth it! Best wishes to family and friends with special thanks from me to Jackie Danson, Gail Reese, Ann Wilson, John V. Fahey and the fan clubs.
Enjoy with all good wishes from us all.
Carole R Smith
Assistant to Barney Rosenzweig
October 14, 2012
Barney is currently in Seattle, recuperating from his second shoulder replacement, and attending the USC Washington football game (USC won). It's difficult to type with one's arm in a sling so he has asked me to let you know the distributor has published the "official" press release for the Cagney & Lacey DVDs -- both the LIMITED EDITION and the boxed set of 119 episodes.
The LIMITED EDITION can only be purchased through the Cagney & Lacey official website and the order form will be posted on the site no later than Tuesday, October 16th (we believe). It will give you all the information you need re purchase price and shipping, but the boxed set is available for pre-order on-line through Amazon USA and Amazon Canada.
Both women will be doing radio, television and print interviews and we will keep you up to date on www.cagneyandlacey.com.
It has been a long struggle, but well worth it! Best wishes to family and friends with special thanks from me to Jackie Danson, Gail Reese, Ann Wilson, John V. Fahey and the fan clubs.
Enjoy with all good wishes from us all.
Carole R Smith
Assistant to Barney Rosenzweig
October 14, 2012
Monday, September 10, 2012
FIRST COME/FIRST SERVED
Now begins a potential flurry of blogs
as the waters begin to part and things are revealed to us all. We ….. That is
not the royal we… that is you, Carole R. Smith, Jackie Danson, Gail Reese, Ann
Wilson and a plethora of other folks… a real WEEEEE have done it. 30 years of
work will now appear in a Limited Edition Collection for the
truly faithful. The rest of the world can pick up individual seasons of Cagney & Lacey and even all 119
episodes featuring Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly as the Dynamic Duo from Amazon in the USA and Canada and other retail outlets, but for those who want it all…. The original movie
with Loretta Swit and Tyne Daly, the six episodes where Tyne Daly partnered
with Meg Foster as Cagney, the aforementioned 119 with Tyne and Sharon, as well
as the four reunion movies, known collectively as The Menopause Years, they are about to be available and ready for
your purchase via this website or directly through the distributor only. All the information on how to purchase will
be on www.cagneyandlacey.com this week. It is truly a limited first come/first served
proposition so do let us have your orders right away.
Barney
Rosenzweig
September 10,
2012Wednesday, July 25, 2012
THE WEEK THAT WAS
I
have held off composing yet another blog, waiting for even more updated
information on the forthcoming (honest, folks, it is coming) Limited Edition of the entire Cagney & Lacey series. I don’t, as
yet, have enough of those facts, but am expecting same in the very near future.
Time keeps passing and I am more and more remiss about keeping in touch. What
this amounts to then is … well… two things: a head’s up to watch this space on
a more regular basis in the coming days/weeks as “stuff” should be happening
pretty quickly now, and two… just a blog because some stuff has happened that I
wanted to share.
One thing about the new Limited Edition is that I have just completed recording an audio version of the entire book, Cagney & Lacey… and Me. This recording by the author will be included as part of the package that we, even as I write, are finalizing. So far the beautifully designed Limited Edition box will have the Loretta Swit Movie for Television, all the Meg Foster episodes, all 119 episodes with Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly as Cagney and Lacey, a tape of the entire 30th anniversary tribute evening put on by the British Film Institute and the aforementioned audio book. More to be added and announced very soon but, as promised earlier, the Limited Edition will also be personally autographed by Sharon, Tyne and yours truly.
As to the “sharing” thing: Sharon lost a long time friend with the death of Andy Griffith. She had talked to him by phone shortly before his unexpected passing. They exchanged birthday greetings and he was talking about also moving down to Florida from his home in North Carolina. Andy was a terrific talent and a wonderful… and very funny… gentle man. His passing is a major loss to this world. Whoever said these things run in threes doesn’t know much about my address book. In the last week or so Celeste Holm, who starred for me in This Girl for Hire, a movie of the week/back door pilot I had made years ago with a great cast of character actors now mostly passed on that included Jose Ferrer, Howard Duff, Ray Walston, and Elisha Cook, Jr. That tongue-in-cheek homage to film noir is only note worthy because of the cast I assembled and Ms Holm led that group wonderfully well. As a boy I had worshipped her talent as Adoo Annie in Oklahoma and in some pretty wonderful motion pictures including All About Eve. It was a thrill for me to actually get to know her and to work with her. This week she joined former studio head Richard Zanuck, William “Billy” Asher and then Frank Pierson to complete the loss of five very solid citizens in one week.
I had seen “Billy” Asher only once since he retired to Palm Springs, California. He was a fun pal to have during my early days in the Malibu Movie Colony out at that California beach community in the 1960’s and 70’s. In those days he was the celebrated creator/director of the television series Bewitched and was married to that show’s star, Elizabeth Montgomery. One would have to travel a very long way to find a better drinking companion or a funnier, more generous and talented man than he. I will never forget the time spent with him and one of his greatest pals, the late, great award winning actor Jack Warden who was also a Colony resident in those days.
I was probably more
stunned by the death of Zanuck than any one of the others this week, not only
because at 77 he was the youngest of this ensemble, but because of his place in
my life and the life of the Hollywood community. Unless you had pretty much
grown up in Hollywood as I sort of had, it is hard to imagine the class
distinctions of Hollywood royalty and the rest of us. Dick Zanuck was way up
there in that firmament and his death is/was like that of the loss of a sovereign
in any number of national monarchies. When I first made my move into the class
of associate producers in the mid 1960’s, Richard “Dick” Zanuck was the “King”
of 20th Century Fox. Lily, his spouse, was his Queen and my then
boss, Aaron Rosenberg served as a favored knight. Me? I was the equivalent of a
Knight’s squire. It was all amplified for me by the fact that young Zanuck and
I were close in age, but our social rank did not really allow us to be friends
even though we liked each other. In those days, Zanuck’s pals were all closer
to his father’s age than his own. He was a health nut and a good athlete. I
don’t know why his heart failed so abruptly, but it hit me hard. On learning
the news I Instinctively reached for the phone to call my former 20th
Century Fox associate Joe Silver. Joe had worked for me on Daniel Boone and, as someone older than I, and truly a child of Hollywood,
was even more integrated into the studio system. Both his father and brother
(now long deceased) had been established figures at 20th Century Fox
and as someone who had spent his entire working life at that studio, Joe knew
more of that class system than most. I hadn’t talked with Joe or his wife
Simone in a couple of years but I wanted to reach out to someone with whom I
could commiserate regarding this end of an epoch. Joe’s phone number was “no
longer in service.” It only took me a moment to do the math… The year 2012
would be Joe Silver’s 95th on the planet… that is assuming he was
still here which, in all probability I realized, he was not. Ouch. Once again I
faced one of the disadvantages of having moved across the continent from my
home town. You lose touch with the home base.
Then yesterday … an “alert” popped up on my Internet connection. Frank Pierson had died. Frank and I once competed for the affections of the same young woman (a then very bright and talented actress by the name of Gail Kobe), before that… and after… when we had moved on in life to our individual marriages, we would occasionally see each other socially. We came close to working together once on a TV series Pierson had created for James Garner, but of course Frank was best known for the feature films he wrote including Cat Ballou, Cool Hand Luke and Dog Day Afternoon. He was so smart, so articulate that it was probably a blessing I didn’t hang around him more often. I am not at all sure my ego could have withstood the constant onslaught of his brilliance.
That then was the week that was. I am looking forward to a better one with thanks to you all for allowing this indulgence and for being patient with the soon to be announcements on our Cagney & Lacey 30th anniversary events.
Barney Rosenzweig
July 25, 2012
One thing about the new Limited Edition is that I have just completed recording an audio version of the entire book, Cagney & Lacey… and Me. This recording by the author will be included as part of the package that we, even as I write, are finalizing. So far the beautifully designed Limited Edition box will have the Loretta Swit Movie for Television, all the Meg Foster episodes, all 119 episodes with Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly as Cagney and Lacey, a tape of the entire 30th anniversary tribute evening put on by the British Film Institute and the aforementioned audio book. More to be added and announced very soon but, as promised earlier, the Limited Edition will also be personally autographed by Sharon, Tyne and yours truly.
As to the “sharing” thing: Sharon lost a long time friend with the death of Andy Griffith. She had talked to him by phone shortly before his unexpected passing. They exchanged birthday greetings and he was talking about also moving down to Florida from his home in North Carolina. Andy was a terrific talent and a wonderful… and very funny… gentle man. His passing is a major loss to this world. Whoever said these things run in threes doesn’t know much about my address book. In the last week or so Celeste Holm, who starred for me in This Girl for Hire, a movie of the week/back door pilot I had made years ago with a great cast of character actors now mostly passed on that included Jose Ferrer, Howard Duff, Ray Walston, and Elisha Cook, Jr. That tongue-in-cheek homage to film noir is only note worthy because of the cast I assembled and Ms Holm led that group wonderfully well. As a boy I had worshipped her talent as Adoo Annie in Oklahoma and in some pretty wonderful motion pictures including All About Eve. It was a thrill for me to actually get to know her and to work with her. This week she joined former studio head Richard Zanuck, William “Billy” Asher and then Frank Pierson to complete the loss of five very solid citizens in one week.
I had seen “Billy” Asher only once since he retired to Palm Springs, California. He was a fun pal to have during my early days in the Malibu Movie Colony out at that California beach community in the 1960’s and 70’s. In those days he was the celebrated creator/director of the television series Bewitched and was married to that show’s star, Elizabeth Montgomery. One would have to travel a very long way to find a better drinking companion or a funnier, more generous and talented man than he. I will never forget the time spent with him and one of his greatest pals, the late, great award winning actor Jack Warden who was also a Colony resident in those days.
Then yesterday … an “alert” popped up on my Internet connection. Frank Pierson had died. Frank and I once competed for the affections of the same young woman (a then very bright and talented actress by the name of Gail Kobe), before that… and after… when we had moved on in life to our individual marriages, we would occasionally see each other socially. We came close to working together once on a TV series Pierson had created for James Garner, but of course Frank was best known for the feature films he wrote including Cat Ballou, Cool Hand Luke and Dog Day Afternoon. He was so smart, so articulate that it was probably a blessing I didn’t hang around him more often. I am not at all sure my ego could have withstood the constant onslaught of his brilliance.
That then was the week that was. I am looking forward to a better one with thanks to you all for allowing this indulgence and for being patient with the soon to be announcements on our Cagney & Lacey 30th anniversary events.
July 25, 2012
Sunday, June 10, 2012
CATCHING UP
No need to jump up and down or to even
jump at all. There is little news here, I have simply decided that while
waiting (I know, I know, it seems forever), I would update you with what little
news I have of our upcoming Limited
Edition to be followed by a smaller retail version come late fall. Right
now, we are researching ways to make this easier for our UK fans. They have
been so loyal and so vocal and so much a part of the true success of Cagney & Lacey I want to make sure
that everything that can be done to serve them will be done. It is a work in
progress… you are not being forgotten (quite the contrary) but it is a bit more
complicated than it appears on the surface.
And we are still gathering material for the Limited Edition box that will contain the original movie with Loretta Swit, the Meg Foster-as-Cagney episodes, and all 119 with Sharon and Tyne. Photos, add-on materials… some archival, some new, are being gone through and selected. I can now reveal that the British Film Institute evening which launched our 30th anniversary (taped at the BFI in London last November) will be part of the package. We have your questions and (hopefully) will get a taping done with the women to include some if not all of them. So far scheduling a taping has been difficult for reasons of personal and work conflicts. We are on the case and will soon (again, hopefully) reveal a guest host for that add-on feature. I have been doing some writing for the Limited Edition and a Hollywood publicist has been given the task of working out some appearances for the women this fall to promote the retail version of the series. (Frankly, I have predicted to all that the Limited Edition with its special autographed and numbered box will sell out through this website and direct contact with the fans so pass the word on to your friends and be conscious of watching this space for when and how to order.)
Something else I would like our US fans to do. As interested as I am personally in the Limited Edition, this is really being passed on to the fans at pretty close to cost. The only opportunity for any monetary success is if the retail version does well and the ONLY way that is going to happen is if we win some of those territorial wars for shelf space. Resistance to us is high. As important as Cagney & Lacey may be to me, and to many of you, it is vintage television to the managers of those retail outlets such as Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Target, Costco and others. Vintage TV is out of fashion so my mission is to convince the sales force working for our distributor (not always an easy thing to do with these jaded folks) that Cagney & Lacey is NOT vintage television… it is ICONIC television; that this retail package (very reasonably priced) will make great gifts, not only for Mom and Grandma, but for their customers to promote as something to donate to local Women’s shelters, the YWCA, libraries, you name it. I am not sure I can get through to them, but history has shown me I sometimes have success getting through to you. Long before I ask you to buy as many of these retail units as you can possibly use/afford/ or want, what I would like you to do is drop in at your local retail outlet sometime this summer. While you are there at Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Target, Costco or wherever you sometimes shop… ask to see the manager and tell him or her that you understand that for the first time in over 25 years of waiting there is going to be a release of the entire Cagney & Lacey series and that you hope that this favorite store of yours will be sure to carry it so that you can buy multiple copies for your holiday gift list. If enough of you do that, I can assure you we will get on shelves where we have never been before and once on those shelves, in plain sight, we will have every opportunity to succeed. Again, this is for our US and Canadian audience… those of you abroad will be able to purchase this package through the Amazon outlet in your own country. And…. I repeat… this is NOT about the Limited Edition. That does not go into retail stores. That is a first come/first serve deal for you, our most loyal fans and we are working on ways to make that work internationally as well as domestically. What I am asking for now is help with giving this retail edition a chance to succeed. If we can show there is still an audience in anything like the numbers we once had, there is no telling what could happen, from more materials out there about the original show, to remakes or other reincarnations. No harm can come from our actions and we might be able to do some real good here. Thanks, in advance, for your help.
And we are still gathering material for the Limited Edition box that will contain the original movie with Loretta Swit, the Meg Foster-as-Cagney episodes, and all 119 with Sharon and Tyne. Photos, add-on materials… some archival, some new, are being gone through and selected. I can now reveal that the British Film Institute evening which launched our 30th anniversary (taped at the BFI in London last November) will be part of the package. We have your questions and (hopefully) will get a taping done with the women to include some if not all of them. So far scheduling a taping has been difficult for reasons of personal and work conflicts. We are on the case and will soon (again, hopefully) reveal a guest host for that add-on feature. I have been doing some writing for the Limited Edition and a Hollywood publicist has been given the task of working out some appearances for the women this fall to promote the retail version of the series. (Frankly, I have predicted to all that the Limited Edition with its special autographed and numbered box will sell out through this website and direct contact with the fans so pass the word on to your friends and be conscious of watching this space for when and how to order.)
Something else I would like our US fans to do. As interested as I am personally in the Limited Edition, this is really being passed on to the fans at pretty close to cost. The only opportunity for any monetary success is if the retail version does well and the ONLY way that is going to happen is if we win some of those territorial wars for shelf space. Resistance to us is high. As important as Cagney & Lacey may be to me, and to many of you, it is vintage television to the managers of those retail outlets such as Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Target, Costco and others. Vintage TV is out of fashion so my mission is to convince the sales force working for our distributor (not always an easy thing to do with these jaded folks) that Cagney & Lacey is NOT vintage television… it is ICONIC television; that this retail package (very reasonably priced) will make great gifts, not only for Mom and Grandma, but for their customers to promote as something to donate to local Women’s shelters, the YWCA, libraries, you name it. I am not sure I can get through to them, but history has shown me I sometimes have success getting through to you. Long before I ask you to buy as many of these retail units as you can possibly use/afford/ or want, what I would like you to do is drop in at your local retail outlet sometime this summer. While you are there at Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Target, Costco or wherever you sometimes shop… ask to see the manager and tell him or her that you understand that for the first time in over 25 years of waiting there is going to be a release of the entire Cagney & Lacey series and that you hope that this favorite store of yours will be sure to carry it so that you can buy multiple copies for your holiday gift list. If enough of you do that, I can assure you we will get on shelves where we have never been before and once on those shelves, in plain sight, we will have every opportunity to succeed. Again, this is for our US and Canadian audience… those of you abroad will be able to purchase this package through the Amazon outlet in your own country. And…. I repeat… this is NOT about the Limited Edition. That does not go into retail stores. That is a first come/first serve deal for you, our most loyal fans and we are working on ways to make that work internationally as well as domestically. What I am asking for now is help with giving this retail edition a chance to succeed. If we can show there is still an audience in anything like the numbers we once had, there is no telling what could happen, from more materials out there about the original show, to remakes or other reincarnations. No harm can come from our actions and we might be able to do some real good here. Thanks, in advance, for your help.
Barney Rosenzweig
June 10, 2012 Friday, May 11, 2012
AT LAST...almost
Here is an update on just what is
going on with the DVD presentation of the entire Cagney & Lacey series.
There will be two releases. The first will be a Limited Edition presentation in
what I have been told will be an attractive box, containing the 119 episodes
starring Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly PLUS the original TV movie, starring
Loretta Swit and the very first episodes where Meg Foster portrayed Christine
Cagney. There will be additional add-on material… some of it seen before from
various archival sources… and a new feature of Sharon and Tyne being
interviewed together specifically for this 30th anniversary celebration. This Limited
Edition will be signed by Sharon and Tyne and will be made available this
summer, long before the retail version goes on sale in USA stores.
We have already heard from over two thousand of you expressing interest. Based on that, plus my own instincts, I am betting the entire limited run of 3,000 will be sold only to the most stalwart of fans… those of you reading this announcement. In the next few weeks, I will let you know how to order directly from the distributor. I am sorry to report this will not be made available in the UK or anywhere outside of North America, but you very wonderful fans abroad can still make your purchase direct from the North American distributor… and at a low enough price that will allow you to be able to afford to purchase separately your own NTSC player. There will be no PAL release of this package in the foreseeable future.
Understand, please, this is my last hurrah. It has taken me over 25 years to get Orion, MGM, and now their licensee to release this package. By year’s end I am done. Sharon, Tyne and I will participate in the retail promotion nationally in conjunction with the arrival of the package at stores in the US this fall, but this special summer Limited Edition will be pretty much a one-time offer to the tried and true who have been with us for so long.
Okay… how will the retail package differ from the Limited Edition? It will be cheaper by as much as 50% but will not contain most (if any) of the added material and will not have the Swit or Meg Foster work included. It will not be boxed and it will not be signed. It will be a very Spartan presentation of what we call the “true series”… the 119 episodes with Sharon and Tyne. I am going to work on the distributor to spruce it up a bit because I am (naturally) eager that this release be a success, but in no way… no matter what I do… will it be a true collector’s edition. For that you will have to act quickly via the Internet as soon as I give out that information. Watch this space. I will be disseminating all the details in the not too distant future.
Why am I writing this now, when there is nothing I am (as yet) asking you to do? How many times have you noted my paraphrase of the Gloria Steinem admonition to never let a group disperse without telling them what you want them to do? Well, while it is true that the time for action (that is, “purchase”) of the Limited Edition is still weeks away, Tyne Daly, Sharon Gless and I are getting together next week in New York to tape our comments about the 30th anniversary and this special release. Here, at last, is what I want you to do: Send us the questions you would like answered. We will try to answer as many as we can in the hour of tape we will cut together for the Limited Edition. Here’s your chance to play Charlie Rose or Barbara Walters or whomever (albeit off camera), but please understand, in order to participate we need to hear from you right away with your question(s). Please email your questions to me at contactus@cagneyandlacey.com.
We have already heard from over two thousand of you expressing interest. Based on that, plus my own instincts, I am betting the entire limited run of 3,000 will be sold only to the most stalwart of fans… those of you reading this announcement. In the next few weeks, I will let you know how to order directly from the distributor. I am sorry to report this will not be made available in the UK or anywhere outside of North America, but you very wonderful fans abroad can still make your purchase direct from the North American distributor… and at a low enough price that will allow you to be able to afford to purchase separately your own NTSC player. There will be no PAL release of this package in the foreseeable future.
Understand, please, this is my last hurrah. It has taken me over 25 years to get Orion, MGM, and now their licensee to release this package. By year’s end I am done. Sharon, Tyne and I will participate in the retail promotion nationally in conjunction with the arrival of the package at stores in the US this fall, but this special summer Limited Edition will be pretty much a one-time offer to the tried and true who have been with us for so long.
Okay… how will the retail package differ from the Limited Edition? It will be cheaper by as much as 50% but will not contain most (if any) of the added material and will not have the Swit or Meg Foster work included. It will not be boxed and it will not be signed. It will be a very Spartan presentation of what we call the “true series”… the 119 episodes with Sharon and Tyne. I am going to work on the distributor to spruce it up a bit because I am (naturally) eager that this release be a success, but in no way… no matter what I do… will it be a true collector’s edition. For that you will have to act quickly via the Internet as soon as I give out that information. Watch this space. I will be disseminating all the details in the not too distant future.
Why am I writing this now, when there is nothing I am (as yet) asking you to do? How many times have you noted my paraphrase of the Gloria Steinem admonition to never let a group disperse without telling them what you want them to do? Well, while it is true that the time for action (that is, “purchase”) of the Limited Edition is still weeks away, Tyne Daly, Sharon Gless and I are getting together next week in New York to tape our comments about the 30th anniversary and this special release. Here, at last, is what I want you to do: Send us the questions you would like answered. We will try to answer as many as we can in the hour of tape we will cut together for the Limited Edition. Here’s your chance to play Charlie Rose or Barbara Walters or whomever (albeit off camera), but please understand, in order to participate we need to hear from you right away with your question(s). Please email your questions to me at contactus@cagneyandlacey.com.
More from me to you very soon...And Happy Mother's Day!
Barney Rosenzweig
May 11, 2012
Thursday, May 3, 2012
DANCING WITH AARON SPELLING (with thanks to Neil Travis)
A while back I made note of the
passing of Neil Travis, award winning film editor (Oscar for Dances with Wolves,
Emmy for Roots). It was through Neil that I met his assistant, the then very
young Geoff Roland who went on to win an Emmy
for his film editing of Cagney &
Lacey as well as a gaggle of other awards as well. Travis was a very nice
man and a terrific film maker and I regret our professional paths only crossed
but once (and as if to add insult to injury it was on a pot-boiler of a TV
movie we did for David Wolper called Men
of the Dragon). Nearly everyone who struggled behind the scenes of that
awful film has now passed on and is undoubtedly grateful (as am I) that hell
has been all filled up for some time now. There are some wonderful production
and post production stories about that terrible film, but I will save them for
another time… and perhaps another book which I will definitely commence when
every copy, everywhere of Cagney &
Lacey… and Me has been sold. Still I did promise at least one Neil Travis
yarn so here it is… excised from the aforementioned tome just hours before
publication… it referred to an incident that took place during the waning hours
of my tenure on Charlie’s Angels:
Aaron Spelling and I didn’t read
the same books, but he was a picture maker with whom I could usually
communicate.
I even learned something about
him and his style of storytelling. It is different from my own, and perhaps it
is a tiny explanation as to why Mr. Spelling became so much richer than I.
I had finished supervising the editing
on the episode of Angels that had
gotten me “fired” by Leonard Goldberg during the previous week and so was screening
it for Aaron alone prior to turning it over to the network as my final obligation
to Spelling/Goldberg Productions. The story was one I had lifted from a classic
Hitchcock thriller, Foreign Correspondent.
It was an atypical episode, in that in the story the Angels were on a holiday
given them by Charlie for an earlier job well done. The picture opened with the
Angels en route by car to a luxury resort of Charlie’s choosing; Jaclyn Smith
was driving and speculating on the possibilities of purchasing a bathing suit
once they arrived. Farrah Fawcett was in the front passenger seat voicing
concern about the condition of the strings on her tennis racquet. Kate Jackson,
“the smart one,” was alone in the rear seat reading a news magazine which
featured, as its “Man of the Year,” an internationally prestigious UN diplomat.
This world famous statesman was scheduled to speak at the very resort they were
going to, and Kate rhapsodized about the possibility of meeting this
Kissinger-like persona (expertly portrayed in our story by Theodore Bikel).
The Angels arrived at the resort
and Jaclyn went off to buy a bathing suit, while Farrah disappeared to get her
racquet restrung, leaving Kate alone in the suite to unpack and to moon over
her thoughts of the very worldly “Man of the Year” on the magazine cover. In a
melancholy moment she wandered onto her balcony and there, across the way, was
that self-same diplomat, surrounded by a coterie of FBI and secret service
types. Dismissing them he turned around to see the very beautiful Kate Jackson
who reacted with surprise when he saluted her with a friendly wave, but
remembered to wave back. With hardly a rearward glance, the aging would be
lothario began climbing from his balcony to hers.
They engaged in an interesting and slightly flirtatious conversation; Kate was nervous, but it was Bikel who smoked one cigarette after another. Finally he had to return before his security people discovered he was gone. The two agreed to meet again later that evening and he departed by the same multiple balcony route used earlier.
Kate rushed out to the pool area to tell her pals of this incredible adventure, only to find that they didn’t believe her. Jaclyn and Farrah couldn’t imagine what the gag was, but they were convinced Kate was putting them on. Then -- just at that moment -- Bikel, surrounded by his security force, passed by the pool are en route to the Hall where he was to give one of his seminars.
Here was Kate’s opportunity to prove the truth of her story, but to Kate’s chagrin, Bikel didn’t recognize or acknowledge her in any way. Frustrated, she got a bit aggressive, only to find herself restrained by one of the security guys as Bikel moved on, oblivious to her. Kate, pissed as Jaclyn and Farrah teased her unmercifully, stormed off to the suite, barged through the door, and plopped down on the couch. And then she saw it: Bikel’s distinctive cigarette lighter. Proof she wasn’t lying. He was there.
At this moment a banner appeared
on screen: INSERT MISSING, it
read.
I leaned over to Spelling in the
darkened projection room:
"Oh, Aaron...at this point we’re going
to pick up a close shot of the lighter on the table. Kate’s hand will come into
the frame and grab it. The camera will tilt up to her face as she ignites the
lighter and says ‘He was here’…or something like that.”
“Good idea,” said Spelling. The
picture continued and so did he: “While you’re at it, get another insert shot
of the lighter being left on the table...y’know, in the earlier scene...with
Bikel when he is talking to Kate.”
The screening went on. Aaron
would make an occasional comment and periodically give a note. The episode was
a good one, and at the end he said so. He was pleased.
“Aaron,” I said, “we’ll
accomplish all your notes right away, of course, but there’s one I’d like to
talk to you about.”
“Yes,” Aaron said, looking at me,
his all but erstwhile employee, as if the flunky he was staring at might never
learn his place.
As meekly as I could, I took
issue with “tipping” the entire moment in the “discovery” scene by calling the
audience’s attention to---and making a point of---Bikel’s leaving of the
lighter. It was a “red-flag,” I said, calling attention to itself. It would
damage the scene between Bikel and Jackson and destroy the suspense of the
following two scenes with Jaclyn and Farrah since the audience would no longer
wonder how Kate could vindicate herself…They would know. I pleaded for a moment
of audience revelation through the actions of a principal. I used several
examples of classic motion picture editing techniques to back my theory. I
talked of good picture making, “motivated” camera moves and cutting concepts.
It was all for naught. Spelling wanted the insert and I would have to give it
to him.That night I was at a party and was mid-way through my second martini as I related this story to a friend of mine, award-winning film editor, Neil Travis.
“Can you believe that (expletive) is making me put in that (expletive) insert?" I all but screeched.
“Can you imagine how he’d cut the scene of Scarlett’s return to Twelve Oaks?!” (This last Gone With The Wind reference being a classic example of revelation through the eyes of a principal---The audience does not see the devastation of this beautiful plantation until after Scarlett O’Hara. The viewer therefore emphatically shares her horror instead of seeing it first and waiting to see how she will react. One way involves the audience directly; the other keeps them outside of the emotional plane of the characters.)
“Barney, don’t you get it?” My
film editor-pal said very calmly. “Haven’t you ever taken your kids to a
children’s theatrical production?”
I asked what he meant. Neil
Travis began, speaking slowly, pedagogically.
“The villain comes on the stage. He approaches
the apron and talks to the audience:
‘Heh, heh, heh, I have the magic lighter and I'm going to hide it where innocent little Kate will never find it. Heh, heh, heh...I think i'll put it in this tree branch...she'll never look there'"
Neil had done a pretty fair
imitation of a caped and mustachioed Alan Mowbray in The Villain Still Pursued Her. His voice then changed to a
falsetto, indicating the entrance on stage of the heroine:
“‘Oh where, oh where will I ever…
ever… find the magic lighter? It is the only way I can possibly save my family
honor...’
‘It’s in the tree! It’s in the
tree!’ shouts every kid in the audience. They jump up and down in their seats,
the leading lady acts as if she can’t hear. ‘It’s in the tree!’ they scream
again.”
Neil Travis smiled, paused for
effect, then: “That’s what Aaron likes. That’s what he does---children’s theatre.”
I got it. I don’t like it as much as theatre for grownups,
but it certainly is a legitimate form, and who is to argue with Aaron Spelling’s
obvious grasp of just what it was America wanted for its television
entertainment? And, lest it be forgotten, there is no question that more people
saw the eleven episodes of Charlie’s
Angels I made for Spelling and Goldberg than would view an entire two
season’s work of mine on Cagney &
Lacey.
Neil was right. I thank him for that lesson, for Geoff Roland and for so much
more.
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