I usually hate receiving emails from students on weekends.
But I loved this one: “Just finished watching Boys on the Side,” it said.
“I didn’t know you edited that!
I’m crying big gay tears.”
Big gay tears for
a big gay film, released twenty-four years ago, starring Whoopi Goldberg, Mary Louise Parker and Drew
Barrymore, directed by Herbert Ross! The
picture merely broke even commercially yet critics liked it and, with the same
small handful of reservations I had in 1995, so do I. All three leads are extremely affecting; Boys on the Side is a powerful tearjerker.
But the email reminded me more of making the movie than it did of the finished
product. AIDS was a fresh wound in the
arts world and the entire cast and crew had personal connections to the film’s
main theme. I may not have realized then that it was unusual to work on a studio-financed Hollywood film from a place of deep emotional engagement. I feel lucky, now, to have done so.
I also feel a
little old, because thinking about the picture brings to mind how difficult it was
to “come out of the closet” a quarter of a century ago. The mid-1990’s zeitgeist was very different from today's. In many straight circles, even progressive ones, homosexuality simply
wasn’t viewed as commonplace. Herbert never officially
came out. And initially Robin, Mary Louise’s
character (who we’re meant to like), reacts to the very idea of
lesbian relationships with the word, “Ewww!”
Yet the director and I
shared many moments of levity about sexual identity. As he reeled off names of Broadway musicals
on which he’d been “choreography doctor,” I responded (without resort to my
phone, which, at that time, was rotary) by naming the theatres in which they’d
run. Funny Girl? The Winter Garden. Golden
Boy? The Majestic. Fiddler? The Imperial.
So he chided me, saying that I knew more about musical theatre than any
straight man had a right to. And damn if
he didn’t teach me how to dance triplets during breaks in the editing!
In fact, a lot of what I recall about making Boys on the Side is related to song and
dance. Constructing the film’s
soundtrack is as memorable as any aspect of the work. Herbert, with Warner Bros music executive
Mitchell Leib, had a great idea about songs to which characters in the movie
listen: they would all be performed by women.
Our music editor, Tom Kramer, selected “Dreams” by The Cranberries for a
driving sequence. Numbers by The
Pretenders, Sarah McLaughlin and Stevie Nicks came from Mitchell, who impressed
the hell out of me with the fact that his mother had been Phil Spector’s piano
teacher.
A set by The
Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black (google them at your own risk) was deleted
from the movie, Indigo Girls appeared both as characters and performers in it, and I selected a few songs by male
groups that would be re-interpreted in the finished film by women, among them Bonnie Raitt and Cheryl Crowe. Which is how I got
to meet the extraordinary record producer and musician Don Was, who arranged and supervised Ms. Raitt’s delightful cover of The Traveling Willburys’ “You Got It” for the
picture.
Indeed I have many vivid memories of Boys on the Side behind the scenes. Lunches
with production designer Ken Adam, who let me pick his brain about creating the
war room for Dr. Strangelove. Whoopi regaling me with stories of her stint
as a ticket-taker at The Fillmore East.
Drew Barrymore sending me flowers after a rough ADR session when she was
trying to quit smoking two packs of Marlboro reds a day by going cold turkey.
But the event
that stands out as most unusual -- perhaps in my entire career -- is screening Boys on the Side’s first assembly for
Herbert Ross.
When we wrapped
principal photography I told the director I’d need two weeks to finish putting
together everything he’d shot, smooth out scene-to-scene transitions and do a
rough temporary sound mix so he could watch the cut with music. He returned to New York, I stayed in Los
Angeles.
There, as I
watched the last day’s footage, my heart sank.
All of it was murky and dim. But thankfully, when I called DuArt Film Lab in New York and cinematographer Don Thorin, they assured me that the negative was fine -- that only the print was
frighteningly dark. The lab would
correct the dailies, screen them for Herbert and ship them to me.
Relieved, I phoned the director to tell him about the misprint and the change in his schedule. Grumbling, he agreed there was no point
in viewing bad material, and we arranged a
screening for the next day.
So I was
surprised not to hear from him twenty-four hours later, and even more so when I
called DuArt and learned he hadn’t been there.
But I was glad, too. “He must
have cheered up,” I thought, "and headed off for a well-deserved and
much-needed vacation."
I proceeded to
edit. Small adjustments were made as I
put scenes that had been shot out of sequence in order. I dressed my work up for presentation with
temporary sound effects and music, and began to get a sense of how things would
play when Herbert and I watched the cut on the big screen.
My trip to New
York was approaching fast. The film’s
travel coordinator booked flights and reserved a hotel room. My assistant editors lined up our temp mix
and prepared the work print for shipping and screening. Then the phone rang. “It’s Lee Radziwill for you,” I was told.
Now that was
weird. Of course, I’d met Lee, Herbert’s
wife (and Jackie Onassis’s sister), before.
But she wasn't involved in film production at all, so it didn’t make sense that I would hear about the screening from her. Mr.
Ross, she said, wanted me to bring a VHS copy of the film instead of the
35mm. work print. I was confused; viewing a clean print off the original negative in a state-of-the-art screening
room was infinitely preferable to looking at VHS tape on a monitor. Why hadn’t Herbert called?
A few hours
later, the mystery was solved. Beth, the director’s personal
assistant, phoned and quipped, “I’ll bet you want to know where the screening will take
place.” I said I did. “OK,” she responded. “On Friday at 2pm, you’ll bring the
videocassette to Lenox Hill Hospital’s Coronary Care Unit.”
That’s
right. Shortly after I told him about
the misprinted dailies, Herbert Ross had a heart attack. Years of smoking and drinking, and a hair-trigger
temper had taken their toll. But it was
all hush-hush. If word got out that the
director was “incapacitated,” Warner Bros. could legally take the picture away
from him. And with a film as personal as
Boys on the Side, the results might
have been disastrous. Which is why
outside of a small group of people close to Herbert, no one’s known about the
infarction until now.
I recalled it
when I got my student’s email. And looking back after all these years, as I
said, screening my first cut of Boys on
the Side in a coronary care unit might be the strangest experience I’ve had
in post-production. Herbert in bed,
pale, wearing a hospital gown, hooked up to an IV, tubes in his nose, monitors
beeping away. What if he doesn’t like
the cut?
That really did
cross my mind. I mean, watching the
first assembly of any movie is unpleasant.
That’s just a given. In scene after
scene, text, performances, set design, costumes and lighting all convey the
same thing, transforming moments that were powerful in the script or dailies
into exercises in redundancy. It’s invariable and unavoidable, as sound maestro Randy Thom points out in “Designing Film for Sound;” screenwriters,
actors and filmmakers all give 100% and you don’t want less. But the upshot is that you have to carve away
at what’s been made expendable by the hard work of one artist or another. This sculpting is essential to editing. Unbearable first assemblies are so common, in fact, that Billy Wilder famously advised, “Never fall in love with your rushes and never
slash your wrists when you see the first cut.”
So, yes, I was
nervous. Hair-trigger temper. Heart attack.
First cut. VHS.
But Herbert was a
seasoned director, to say the least.
Having helmed nearly thirty pictures -- including Funny Lady; Play it Again, Sam; The Sunshine Boys; The Turning Point;
Pennies from Heaven; The Goodbye Girl; Footloose and Steel Magnolias -- and having worked with by such master cutters
as Paul Hirsch and the late Richie Marks, he knew what to expect and what not
to expect from a first assembly.
So we watched my initial pass at Boys on the
Side with reasonable expectations. As it unfolded, its hospital
scenes and its story about love and mortality made us feel as though we were
“method viewing.” And when the film
ended, with Whoopi singing a heart-rending version of “You Got It,” I looked
over and the director was crying. So was
I. Good
tears. Cathartic tears.
Herbert Ross
recovered and we went to work in an editing suite in Los Angeles, crafting a
film that remains moving and meaningful.
We mixed our sound in the Bay Area and, while he indulged in the
occasional after-work martini, Herbert stayed away from steak dinners and
cigarettes. When we finished, the
director took some time off, then began to develop Out to Sea, a vehicle for Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau.
I was hoping to
edit that for him right away. But
Herbert was meticulous about working with writers to get the screenplay ready
to shoot, and many months passed. We’d
meet occasionally and once, over lunch, he told me he’d run into an anxious Mr.
Matthau. The actor, his deadpan
expression tuned perfectly, growled at the director: “Herbie, hurry up with the
script already! I’m getting too old to
play old.”
Sadly, Herbert
David Ross passed away before he could make Out
to Sea, almost eighteen years ago.
He’d have turned 92 this coming May.
I miss him. But I think he’d have been happy to know that Boys
on the Side is enjoying a second life on Netflix. And that it will be shown one of these weeks
soon at University of North Carolina School of the Arts as part of an ongoing
program called “Out at the Movies.”
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