Color Schemes Like Never Before

Filmed April 1963

The irony of the situation didn’t escape me. I was well aware that a mere two months earlier the thought of turning down a directing assignment would have seemed total insanity. But there I was, doing exactly that. I was walking away from the assignment to direct another ROUTE 66 in Florida and was returning to Los Angeles to join the unemployment line at their building on Santa Monica Boulevard in Hollywood. Did I do the right thing? Absolutely! The producers were obviously pleased with the films I was delivering, so I felt that as exhausted as I was, I would not have been able to maintain that quality. Intuitively I didn’t want to lose the ground I had gained. There is a great legend about the superb Bert Lahr (the cowardly Lion in THE WIZARD OF OZ) that even at the height of his career, at the conclusion of any production he still lamented that he would never work again. And at that point in my career, having spent more days in that line on Santa Monica Boulevard than behind a camera, that was a fate that I had to realize was a real possibility. But the die was cast, so after a couple of days of resting I decided I would fly back to Iowa to spend Passover with my family. I made my air line reservations, packed my bags and off I flew. I wasn’t there two days when I received a telephone call from one of my agents.

“What are you doing there?” he asked.
“I’m going to spend Passover with my family. Why?”
“You’re supposed to be in New York. You’re booked to direct another NAKED CITY. They’re calling asking, ‘Where is he?’”

It seems that when I was released from the commitment to direct the ROUTE 66 in Florida, I had been rebooked to do a NAKED CITY. But nobody had told me. So I repacked my recently unpacked bags and caught the first flight I could to New York which was not that simple. Getting in and out of Mason City, Iowa, by air line was a formidable task. There was an occasional shuttle flight to Minneapolis, and from there I flew to New York.

Guess what? I arrived in New York to find just a very few pages of a screenplay by Alvin Sargent, COLOR SCHEMES LIKE NEVER BEFORE. A little deja vu? I learned the major roles had been cast. Marion Dougherty, casting director for both NAKED CITY and ROUTE 66, had obviously cast from the story synposis they must have sent her and possibly from conversations with Bert Leonard. The principle actors — Johnny Seven, Lou Antonio, Carol Rossen, Eugene Roche — were set so far. She would cast more people as script arrived.

So I, with the location manager, began the search for our locations. Again we were limited to looking for those in the few script pages we had received. Our principal location was going to be a brownstone, and it had to be a building that we would be able to access; characters would be entering and exiting the building. We went scouting in Greenwich Village and found a cul-de-sac street of brownstones that would work perfectly; we would be avoiding the traffic flow of a city throughway street. Although we didn’t have the script yet, we were told we would also need an apartment building across the street from our brownstone.

For the opening sequence we were going to need a cafeteria; that in New York was not a problem.

play-sharp-fill

In Hollywood the woman at the table with Charlie would have been cast with a member of the Screen Extras Guild, who would have earned a salary bump for extra business. In New York members of SAG, the Screen Actors Guild, willingly took ‘extra’ assignments like this. After all it was work, and there was a pay check. The benefit for me was that she was an actress; her eyes never left the bowl of soup when it was set on the table, and she did that without any direction from me.

Bert called me soon after I arrived in New York. He told me that although Carmine and his two buddies were involved in a crime, they were not professional criminals; they were just ordinary blokes, a cabdriver, a baker and a plumber. My impression at the time was that they were the story’s main protagonists, an impression that would eventually be changed.

play-sharp-fill

NAKED CITY was my first foray into police drama, and this was my third NAKED CITY. In the future I would direct another forty cop or detective shows, and I soon discovered the crime side of the story was always more interesting and exciting than the police procedures. But somehow NAKED CITY (Howard Rodman?) managed to write the scenes of the cops at work in a very intriguing way.

play-sharp-fill

There was a scene between the two brothers at a construction site. We arrived at the location at the end of the afternoon when the construction crew was preparing to quit for the day. Johnny Seven, Carmine in our cast, knew some of the men on the crew, and he got them to stay on long enough to operate the equipment thus giving me an impressive shot to open the sequence. However when we shot the scene that followed, I couldn’t shoot in that direction again. The crew had left, and the machinery was dormant.

play-sharp-fill

In the script Charlie’s packing was interrupted by a six page telephone sequence that concerned me. I worried about keeping a phone call that long interesting; and I was concerned that, should they want to shorten the sequence in the editing room, the coverage to do it should be there. I worried unnecessarily. In the final version of this scene nothing was eliminated.

play-sharp-fill

Lou and Carol came to the set more than totally prepared. I think I remember that they had even rehearsed together before reporting for filming. I had seen Lou earlier in the year in a supporting role on Broadway in a lacklustre production of CAMILLE starring Susan Strasberg. Carol was from one of Hollywood’s royal families. Her father was the legendary Robert Rossen, with dozens of classic screenplays which he had written before he also began directing. His ten writer-director credits include screen classics ALL THE KING’S MEN and THE HUSTLER.

One fault I found with the New York crew was SOUND. On one pull back dolly two shot I did take one, which was not satisfactory. Then as we were preparing to repeat the scene for take two, I noticed the sound boom man was seated on the front of the dolly, reading a magazine, but not preparing to extend his microphone boom. When I questioned this, he replied, “Oh I already got it.” He also ended up getting it on take two.

play-sharp-fill

I liked to film with two cameras whenever possible and was comfortable doing it because of my years on PLAYHOUSE 90 watching the use of multiple cameras on live television. The west coast directors of photography preferred, when using two cameras, to aim both cameras in the same direction. Jack Priestley surprised me when we did the restaurant scene by shooting in both directions. We shot both over shoulder shots of Lou and Carol at the same time. And we filmed both their close-ups at the same time. I thought it was great for the later editing process; in a restaurant eating scene it certainly minimized the chances of mismatched activity.

play-sharp-fill

This show, like NARCISSUS ON AN OLD RED FIRE ENGINE, did not have a complete script  when I began filming. New pages were arriving daily. Now one of the advantages of this was that we got to shoot much of the show in sequence. We had to. We shot the pages as they arrived. But there was a major disadvantage. When we originally booked Charlie’s brownstone, there was a time limit on when it would be available. After the first three or four days there was some reason we would no longer be able to go into the building. Well the new pages that were arriving kept including sequences to be filmed at the brownstone. Not only entrances and exits but some shots of Charlie in the upstairs window. Fortunately our production department was able to make the necessary arrangements so that we could continue using the building.

play-sharp-fill
play-sharp-fill

A fine actor, Allen Rich, was cast as the dispatcher. I know NAKED CITY did not have the ban on repeating actors like the one on STAR TREK. But I think they did limit appearances to one a season. Allen however was making his second appearance in this season; he had appeared as the cab driver in the parking space confrontation with Adam in ALIVE AND STILL A SECOND LIEUTENANT. I wonder if Marion cast him in this episode by reasoning that being a taxi dispatcher meant he was really playing the same character; he just had been promoted.

play-sharp-fill
play-sharp-fill

TIME! That was another problem caused by the lack of a complete script. It is the normal practice for a company, when it goes to a location, to film everything at that location before moving on. To load the equipment into the trucks, move to a new location and unload took at least an hour. We returned to the brownstone house street twice as I recall, possibly three times. Time spent moving is time lost filming.

play-sharp-fill
play-sharp-fill

Locations are always scouted before filming begins. But obviously we couldn’t do that since we didn’t have the complete script. I don’t remember how we ended up at the later locations in our story. Obviously the production department took us to the area they had selected, and I planned my staging and camera blocking as they unloaded the equipment.

play-sharp-fill

On locations there always was a honey wagon, a long trailer of small dressing rooms for the actors (a room wasn’t set aside for the director until the late seventies) plus a couple of restrooms for the large crew. It was parked as close as possible to the site of filming, which was usually not very close. I recall this because on the final days of filming on the brownstone street I had a mild case of Montezuma’s revenge, Greenwich Village style. In desperation I had someone get me a bottle of Kaopectate which helped some, but not completely. I mention this to cast a shadow on the illusion of the glamour of filming and to show that filming is not always the magical adventure so many think it.

play-sharp-fill

There wasn’t pressure to speed up as there probably would have been in any other production company, but since the studio knew the show was not being renewed for the next season, they did keep asking when our production office thought they would be wrapping. Our response was we would know better when we saw the rest of the script. Word came the final pages were on the way. They arrived, and I have to admit the last three and an eighth pages made me laugh. To begin with, it was another return to Greenwich Village to the brownstone house street, and the sheer size of the amount of work in those pages did not foresee an optimistic quick finishing. But since a picture is worth a thousand words, take a peek at my director’s script. In my script the page with my camera directions is opposite the script page. Since space here does not allow for that, the script page will come first followed by the camera directions page.

play-sharp-fill

COLOR SCHEMES was scheduled to be filmed in seven days; it took eight days to complete. And so on April 16, 1963, the adventure that had begun on January 23 came to an end. In a period that spanned eighty-three days (forty-one of them in filming) I had directed five shows for Herbert Leonard, and they provided the final catalyst that sent me into a working career. He was a superb producer, and I was eternally grateful. But I never saw him again to tell him.

The journey continues

This entry was posted in Route 66-Naked City. Bookmark the permalink.

16 Responses to Color Schemes Like Never Before

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *