The Oscar
was Sale’s third Hollywood novel. Or maybe it was number 3½. The mystery novel
Lazarus #7 (HERE) involves a doctor freshly exposed to some eccentric and
exotic Hollywood mania. The sort-of sequel Passing Strange (HERE) accounts for
the ½, because though it takes place m ostly in New York, the Hollywood crazies
from the first book have traveled there. Benefit Performance (HERE) is a
stand-alone mystery where a star impersonates his stand-in while trying to
learn who wants him dead.
Those 2½
books, though, were written while Sale’s Hollywood experience was young, mostly
from some of his works adapted for the screen (including the novel Not Too Narrow . . . Not Too Deep (HERE) as “Strange Cargo”). Following Benefit Performance, he
dived deep into the movie and TV scene, all but abandoning his fiction for the
next 16 years.
His first
screenplay credit came in 1946, with “Rendezvous with Annie,” a WWII comedy
starring Eddie Albert, based on one of his slick stories. He went on to rack up
many more screenwriting credits, including the Frank Sinatra film Suddenly. He also
directed a dozen films. On “A Ticket to Tomahawk” he was both writer and director,
and on the Jane Russel film “Gentlemen Marry Brunettes” he was writer, director
and producer. He even had a couple of acting parts, and wrote lyrics for some
screen songs. In 1956 he and his wife Mary Loos created the TV series “Yancy
Derringer,” which he produced and directed, along with writing many episodes.
Yeah, Fane
is a mighty unpleasant character, but Sale’s prose is as compelling and
entertaining as ever, and you just have to keep reading. Along the way, the
author provides footnotes offering tidbits of Oscar history and his own
interaction with actors and other Hollywood types. I was on the lookout for characters
from his earlier works, but found only one. On a side trip to San Francisco, Fane
encounters a sharp police captain named Hanley. Fans of Sale’s Daffy Dill
series from Detective Fiction Weekly (like me) can’t fail to recognize “Poppa”
Hanley, the cop who aided Daffy in many of his adventures. It would have been nice
to see Daniel Webster, the detective from Lazarus #7 and Passing Strange, but
he likely would have seen through Fane’s machinations a bit too soon and
spoiled the game.
Anyway, The
Oscar is a great read, and a fascinating look behind the scenes of Hollywood in
the ‘ 60s. The novel
was filmed in 1966 with Stephen Boyd as Fane, and starring Elke Sommer and
Milton Berle. Sadly, Sale did not write the screenplay (but Harlan Ellison did, so it can't be too bad). Along with the other folks named on the poster, it also found roles for Walter Brennan, Broderick Crawford, Peter Lawford
and Nancy Sinatra. Hedda Hopper even made an appearance. I'll post the film here tomorrow (via YouTube) so I'll get my chance, and so will you.
Sale wrote two more novels - For the President's Eyes Only (aka The Man Who Raised Hell) and The White Buffalo (this one, about Wild Bill Hickok and Crazy Horse, was filmed in 1977 with Charles Bronson, and Sale wrote the screenplay). Those are the only Sale books I've yet to review. Stay tuned.
4 comments:
Harlan Ellison takes most of the blame for the script, but the producers took writing co-credit for the adaptation, and the script is pretty miserable...matched by the performances, particularly the non-performance of Tony Bennett as "Hymie Kelly"...Italian-Am splitting the difference between Jewish- and Irish-American, apparently...Bennett is, of course, an impressive singer and a rather talented painter, but he cannot act even the littlest bit. At least when something other than bonhomie or peevishness is called for.
Thanks for the review. I seem to know Sale’s name from movies, but never made the connection with the novels. BTW, I caught THE WHITE BUFFALO on cable recently and there are some good scenes in it, like the threat in the saloon.
The ending of The Oscar is legendary even if the movie was only okay, IMHO.
I enjoyed this review and was not aware of the books by Richard Sale. I will try to find one or more of them to read.
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