Kam
09-17-2007, 09:29 AM
hey to all my fellow film forum friends!! i have an interesting story i think you'd all get a kick out of. as ya know, i'm a working the whole struggling actor in nyc bit and got a fun role in a new play John Goldfarb, Please Come Home.
It had a short run in the NY Fringe Festival and it may just sound slightly familiar to some of you old timers or movie nuts. It was a book written by William Peter Blatty which he turned into a movie with Shirley MacClaine back in 1965. the movie, apparently (i never saw it) was a bomb. Blatty had always wanted to brnig his work to the stage, and so flashforward to now where he meets up with some musical guys and voila, JGPCH turns into a musical comedy and i audition for and am cast in it! The play is wrapped now and the producers are waiting to see if they can do another run of it in nyc or maybe take it on tour.
It was a great experience and no part was better than meeting and talking with William Peter Blatty throughout the run of the show and how incredibly, genuinely nice a guy he is. And to think from his mind spring both the Exorcist and this ridiculously over the top political comedy is incredible the diversity he comes up with.
I even got to sit and talk with him about the Exorcist and The Version You Never Saw and how it came to be back in the theaters and about Exorcist III, which he directed as well as wrote. Was very cool talking to someone who's work is, imo, one of the scariest movies ever made. :)
It had a short run in the NY Fringe Festival and it may just sound slightly familiar to some of you old timers or movie nuts. It was a book written by William Peter Blatty which he turned into a movie with Shirley MacClaine back in 1965. the movie, apparently (i never saw it) was a bomb. Blatty had always wanted to brnig his work to the stage, and so flashforward to now where he meets up with some musical guys and voila, JGPCH turns into a musical comedy and i audition for and am cast in it! The play is wrapped now and the producers are waiting to see if they can do another run of it in nyc or maybe take it on tour.
It was a great experience and no part was better than meeting and talking with William Peter Blatty throughout the run of the show and how incredibly, genuinely nice a guy he is. And to think from his mind spring both the Exorcist and this ridiculously over the top political comedy is incredible the diversity he comes up with.
I even got to sit and talk with him about the Exorcist and The Version You Never Saw and how it came to be back in the theaters and about Exorcist III, which he directed as well as wrote. Was very cool talking to someone who's work is, imo, one of the scariest movies ever made. :)