Richard Prior Live on the Sunset Strip press book
Transcription
Richard Prior Live on the Sunset Strip press book
Columbia Pictures Presents A Rastar Production A Richard Pryor Film "RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" Edited By Sheldon Kahn, A.C.E. Production Designer Michael Baugh Director of Photography Haskell Wexler, A.S.C. Written and Produced By Richard Pryor Directed By Joe Layton THE CREDITS Writer and Producer RICHARD PRYOR Director JOE LAYTON Director of Photography •...................... HASKELL WEXLER, A.S.C. Production Designer MICHAEL BAUGH Fi 1m Edi tor SHELDON KAHN, A. C. E. Creative Consultant PAUL MOONEY Unit Production Manager JERRY BAERWITZ 1st Assistant Director DONALD YORKSHIRE 2nd Assistant Directors L. LEWIS STOUT DAVID GROSSMAN DAN HEFFNER WENDY YORKSHIRE Assistants to Mr. Pryor . DAVID BANKS LAUREN GLASSMAN JAMES ANDERSON RASHON WILSON Assistants to Mr. Layton RHODA DRESKENOFF ALEX DANIELS Main Title Music by HARRY R. BETTS Assistant Film Editors JOHN CURRIN JOE MOSCA SAUL SALADOW Sound Editing JEFF BUSHELMAN PAT SOMERSET BURBANK EDITORIAL SERVICE, INC. Camera Operators DICK COLEAN MARGO MILLER . PAUL POLLARD CHRIS SCHWIEBERT JOE STEUBEN BOB THOMAS JOHN TOLL STEVE YACONELLI 1st Assistant Camera MI KE GENNE' KRISTIN GLOVER LESLIE HILL JOHN LE BLANC LEO NAPOLITANO MIKE NASH BILL HINTER 2nd Assistant Camera BRAD BOATMAN JOSEPH COSKO, JR. GENE EARLE CANDEE FOSTER MAKO KOIWAI MARC MARGULIES BONNIE PARKER SABRINA SIMMONS DON THORIN, JR. SUSAN HALSH Camera Loaders ROBERT MOREY BYRON PEDERSEN JOHN SEAY CECIL R. WILSON Still Photographer PHIL STERN Sound Mixers BIFF DAWES BUD MAFFETT LEE STROSNEIDER Boom Men LEE ARCHER VINCE RENE Video Playback COGSWELL VIDEO SERVICES Re-recording Mixers LES FRESHOLTZ, C.A.S. ARTHUR PIANTADOSI, C.A.S. DICK ALEXANDER, C.A.S. Set Designer VIRGINIA RANDOLPH Property Master SAM MOORE Production Coordinator MICHELE KUHAR Production Secretary JUDY SIEM Production Accountant RUSTY WARREN Costume Designer DANIELLE PEREDEZ Wardrobe Supervisor ELIZABETH PINE LEE STKOSNE1DER Make-Up Consultant GUY ASTIER Make-Up Artists SIRLORD DONL MORSE HARRY THOMAS Script Supervisors MARCIA GIRARD CATHY NEWPORT Gaffer H01\TARD Key Grips JOHN J. MURRAY FRANK KEEVER CLYDE HART Bes t Boy ROBERT DE PERNA Transportation Captain JOE GARY Lenses & Panaflex® Camera by Panavision® Metrocolor ® Opticals by Pacific Title "RESPECT" Performed by Aretha Franklin Courtesy of Atlantic Records T'\ -C .....:J 1.-- __ A ...... 1.-_ ~ ~'_1~_ S. EX COLUMBIA PICTURES COLUMBIA PLAZA BURBANK , CALIFORNIA 91505 "RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" Production Information One critic wrote of him that "his cornie style is akin to that of a thrusting rapier. But this is a deceptive observation, since his point of view is beyond punch lines and shock, examining instead contemporary attitudes and piercing timeless banalities. It is a rare form of humor that is both shocking and shockingly brilliant." The description, of cours e, is of Richard Pryor, a comedian, writer and actor who is the sole star of "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip," a Rastar Film released by Columbia pactures. Pryor is the writer and star of this motion picture, which was shot live at the Hollywood Palladium on two consecutive evenings. Both performances were sold out within hours of the box office opening, with Pryor playing to capacity crowds of over two thousand which included celebrated admirers such as Jim Brown, Robin Williams, Lily Tomlin, Sugar Ray Leonard, Jackson Browne, the Reverend Jesse Jackson and Stevie Wonder. The canvas is larger than life as Pryor paints the world around him, utilizing his own highly subjective blend of pathos and urban realism. With a mixture of wit, warmth and a delivery (more) A DIVISION OF COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES, INC. "RICHARD PRYOR 2. LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" that colors a remarkable array of characterizations, he takes his audience through hilarious accounts of his trip to Africa "looking for his roots," his early days playing one-nighters in Mafia clubs and strip-joints, and finally, "Pryor on fire," a re-telling of what led to the accident which nearly cost him his life. With Pryor as the producer, the team behind the camera was guided by director Joe Layton and cinematographer Haskell Wexler. Layton is an award winner on Broadway and television, receiving Tony Awards for "George M," "No Strings," and "Greenwillow," and an E~my award along with three additional nominations for his Barbra Streisand TV specials. He recently served as executive producer of the motion picture, "Annie." Wexler is a three-time Oscar winner for "Coming Home," "Bound For Glory," and "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?" Layton's approach to filming Pryor in action went far beyond positioning a static camera to record the activities onstage. In order to cope with Pryor's rapid-fire delivery, Layton had two satellite stages constructed off of the main stage at the Palladium. "This gave Richard considerable mobility, which is the hallmark of his act," Layton said. "I can't think of another performer as animated and unpredictable as Richard. He works to make a joke payoff, and he'll do it with extraordinary body nuances and facial takes. (more) nroduC'pr of rhp mor;on n;,.rllrp "Annip" lJpvlp,...;c ~ t-h,...pp-r;mp "RICHARD PRYOR 3. LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP " To handle what Layton calls "Richard's marvelous craziness," he ordered six cameras to cover Pryor. Four were on crab do11ys, with two manned by mobile operators ready for the unexpected. "And as added protection," says Layton, "we equipped each motion picture camera with a video camera so that I was able to monitor, instantaneously, everything he was doing on stage." Not all the filming took place on the stages of the Palladium. "We took our cameras up and down the Sunset Strip to pick up the reactions from the crowds waiting to see Richard in concert," Layton explained. "Richard has a following of loyal fans. They gave us some sensational comments, giving us a kind of prologue for the film. It serves to introduce the movie-going audien~e to the wonderful kind of madness only Richard Pryor can deliver." About the Star ... RICHARD PRYOR got an early start in show business at the age of seven. Born in Peoria, Illinois in 1940, Pryor grew up in his grandfather's billiard parlor. By the time he was seven he was wise enough in the ways of entertainment to sit in with the house band at a Peoria nightclub, the Famous Door, where he met such visiting guests as Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Louis Armstrong and Pearl Bailey. Following a career that stretched from his stage debut at 12 in "Rumpe1sti1tskin" to cutting a brilliant swath through the nightclub circuit, Pryor made his screen debut in 1972 opposite (more) the wonderful kind of madness only Richard Pryor can deliver." "RICHARD PRYOR 4. LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" Diana Ross in "Lady Sings the Blues," launching what was to become the Pryor "new era." Roles in "Hit," "Wattstax," "Bingo Long and the Traveling All-Stars," "Car Wash," "Greased Lightning," "Uptown Saturday Night," "The Wiz," "Wholly Moses," "Richard Pryor Live In Concert" "Silver Streak," a smash hit co-starring Gene and "Bustin' Loose" followed. ~Vi lder, His reteaming with Gene Wilder in "Stir Crazy" emerged as a box office blockbuster, Columbia's top grossing film of 1981. Ahead for Pryor in motion pictures are two starring projects for Rastar Films for Columbia release, "The Toy," which starts filming in the Spring of 1982, to be followed by a movie based on the life of the legendary jazz musician, Charlie Parker. Pryor has written scripts for television's "Sanford and Son" and "The Flip Wilson Show," and his work on the Lily Tomlin television specials in 1973 won him an Emmy Award as participating writer. He won the American Writers Guild Award for "Blazing Saddles," which he co-wrote with Mel Brooks, and received Grammy awards for three of his albums, "That Nigger's Crazy," "Was It Something I Said," and "Bicentennial Nigger." If there are any lingering doubts about Pryor's special hold on American audiences, the public's reactions to his recent, near-fatal accident would dispel them. Hospitalized, he was be- sieged with phone calls, flowers, and prayers from well-wishers of every social strata - from presidents to paupers to plain folks from . Peoria. (more) "RICHARD PRYOR 5. LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" Pryor burst onto the national scene in the mid-1960's, dubbed as the black Lenny Bruce as much for his brilliance as for the shock value of his point of view. That move into night- clubs followed a number of jobs that not only gave him an unvarnished look at humanity, but also provided a rich source of inspiration for his future cast of characters. Working with such after-school jobs as packaging beef at a meat plant, racking billiard balls at his grandfather's pool parlor, and driving trucks for his father's construction firm, Pryor bounced through adolescence. At 18, he enlisted in the Army and spent three years with an airborne division. Discharged in 1960, he traveled around the country ending up in Canada, where he made his debut as a comedian-emcee in small nightclubs. Pryor kept devising, testing, and polishing his acerbic style and his incisive observations. When the nightclubs beckoned in the mid-1960's, so did top television shows and opportunities for exposure on record albums. But by the time he hit 30, he'd come so far so fast that he decided to stop to re-examine Pryor. He hibernated for two years deciding exactly what he wanted to do, and then agreed to take the first step into motion pictures with "Lady Sings the Blues," launching a film career which propelled him to superstardom. (more) CTTl" 11 .,.,; n-ht-,.. 1 nh C "RICHARD PRYOR LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" 6. About the Director ... JOE LAYTON began his show business career at the aEe of 16 in the chorus of t10klahoma~" graph such shows as "George and went on to direct and/or choreo- M~," "Platinum," "Two By Two," and "Dear World," winning Tony Awards for the first three. His most recent project was "Bring Back Birdie" and he is currently preparing "Chaplin" for Broadway. Along the way he has created some memorable show business events by guiding evenings devoted to the solo performer, both on television, where he won an Emmy and three additional nominations for his Barbra Streisand specials, and in Las Vegas, creating shows for Diana Ross, Olivia Newton-John, Raquel Welch, Cher, Mary Martin, Carol Burnett, Diahann Carroll, Bette Midler, Dolly Parton and Mac Davis, among others. While shooting "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip," Layton kept a watchful eye on his "Barnum," which is presently on Broadway, with a road company of the production currently playing in Los Angeles. He is also supervising the final details of "Annie," the Rastar Film for Columbia release on which he is serving as executive producer. About the Cinematographer ... HASKELL WEXLER, the three-time Academy Award-winning cinematographer ("Coming Home," "Bound For Glory," and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"), was the man responsible for getting Pryor "Richard Live On The Sunset Strip" on film. (more) wm.i,e snoo t i.ng --Kl c n a r a r r yo r i.a.ve un .rne sunse t s t r i.p ;>' "RICHARD PRYOR 7. LIVE ON THE SUNSET STRIP" Deeply rooted in the documentary genre, Wexler has successfully crossed the bridge to commercial motion pictures. His trademark has always been a freshness and vitality that put him in constant demand for making commercials, industrial films, and memorable features. His films include "The Savage Eye," "Angel Baby," "The Hoodlum Priest," "A Face In The Rain," "America, America," "The Best Man,"I1The Loved One," "In The Heat Of The Night," "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?" "The Thomas Crown Affair," "Medium Cool," "The Conversation," "One Flew Over The Cuckoo 's Nest," and "Bound For Glory," "Coming Home," and "Days Of Heaven ." About the Location ... The Palladium, the grand old monolithic ballroom on Sunset Strip, is a Hollywood landmark, and therefore, it was a fitting site for filming "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip." Opening in 1940 at a cost of a million dollars, the Hollywood Palladium was the first ballroom in the United States to be built on such a grand scale. Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra were the featured attraction for the premiere, which starred Frank Sinatra, Connie Haines, and the Pied Pipers. Over the years, such big band favorites as Harry James, Stan Kenton, Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Tex Beneke, and Lawrence Welk have played for the dancing feet of thousands. Recently, the ballroom has been the locale of the Emmy Awards, the Grammy Awards, the Golden Globes, the Entertainment Hall of Fame Awards, and other entertainment industry events. rr"h,... u",,_,.:t';1 ..""" ..... 1- .-1 _ '1 ...1 ., ~ "__1· ! COLUM BIA PICTURES COLUMB IA PLAZA BURBANK , CALIFORN IA 91505 HASKELL WEXLER Biography Haskell Wexler, the Academy Award-winning cinematographer of "Coming Home," "Bound For Glory," and "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is a poli t ical activist deeply rooted in the documentary genre who has successful ly crossed the bridge to commercial mo t i on pictures. For "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip," a Rastar Film released by Columbia Pictures, Wexler took on a new challenge, overseeing six cameras to document the comedy concert film. When Haskell Wexler began his career in the late 1940s, his political activities kept him out of the California unions. Determined to work behind the camera, he began film work in his hometown of Chicago, There, and later in New York, Wexler's trademark was a freshness and vitality that put him on constant demand making commercials and industrial films, which is why he was chosen to film "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip." In the late fifties, Wexler was admitted to the California Cinematographers' Guild. His early films include Joseph Strick's "The Savage Eye" (1959), "Angel Baby" (1960), "The Hoodlum Priest" (1961), "A Face In The Rain" (1962), Elia Kazan's "America, (more) A DIV ISION OF COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES, INC. uvt:::l. ::;t:::t:::J.U~ ::;J.X c aure r a s t.o uoc umen r t ne comeoy concer t r a rm , HASKELL WEXLER BIOGRAPHY 2. America" (1963), and "The Best Man" (1964). In 1965 he worked with director Tony Richardson on "The Loved One," followed by "In The Heat Of The Night." In between those two features, Wexler photographed Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in "Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?" for which he won his first Academy Award. Wexler's 1968 assignment was "The Thomas Crown Affair." Wexler very quickly rose to the ranks of the highest paid cinematographers in Hollywood. His newly elevated income finally gave him the freed9me to make socially oriented documentaries. In 1965 Wexler and his crew boarded a transcontinental bus and spent four grueling, sleepness nights filming the ride to the historic Freedom March on Washington. Wexler's next major independent project was a penetrating look at the crisis of the ·American media. "Medium Cool" was one of the most unusual and imaginative feature films of the late 1960s. Wexler wrote, produced, directed and photographed the film on location in Chicago during the 1968 Democratic Convention. Blending a documentary technique with fiction, he captured the essence of fear and unrest in late 1960s America. He had fore- seen that Chicago and the Democratic Convention could be the backdrop for an outbreak of political protest and rage. His crew and cast felt the sting and nausea of tear-gas and the blows of nightsticks during the filming. Despite, or perhaps because of, the battering, the complete work represented the cornerstone of a new ·s t y l e of filming. (more) wexLer ·s next major lnaepenaent project was a penetrating 3. HASKELL WEXLER BIOGRAPHY In the years since "Medium Cool," Wexler has continued to photograph major features. In 1973 Wexler filmed Francis Coppola's "The Conversation," and in 1975 he won particular acclaim for his cinematography of Milos Forman's "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Next." Wexler's second Academy Award was for his luminous cinematography on "Bound For Glory." A documentary style is the stamp of Wexler's feature photography, lending honesty and sensitivity to his compositions. His lighting is remarkably natural and his camera positions are equally unaffected. Wexler has always been outspoken politically. In 1975 he was subpoenaed by a federal grand jury to turn over films and tapes from his documentary, "Underground," which dealt with the Weather Underground movement. Director Hal Ashby, Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, and a host of motion picture leaders held a press conference and harshly criticized the government's action. Wexler's first love is his camera, but close behind is his devotion to cars and basketball. An avid Los Angeles Lakers fan, the cinematographer can be seen rolling up to The Forum in one of his 12 cars, which vary from a 1963 Ford limo and a 1937 Rolls-Royce to a Maserati and Lamborginis. "Richard Pryor Live On The Sunset Strip" was directed by Joe Layton and produced by Richard Pryor. tanes from his documentary, " un a e r gr uun u , Wll.U";U UI::C1.Ll- W.Ll-H ,-ue; r" • Columbia Pictures ---------Pictures