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In
March of 1982, PBS aired my first film,
The Marx Brothers in a Nutshell. Soon after
that broadcast, I wrote a letter to author Kurt Vonnegut
in New York, telling him that I made the Marx Brothers
film because I was a big fan of theirs. I told Vonnegut
I was also a big fan of his, and wanted to make a film
about him. I asked if he'd be interested.
He
wrote back saying that he had seen my Marx film and
loved it. He also said that since he was an author,
his work was on the page and he didn't know how one
could make a film about him, but he'd be happy to meet
with me to discuss it. (Much of this is detailed in
the article The
Boys of Mother Night in the June 1997 issue
of Written By magazine. Also touched on in The
Morning after Mother Night, originally published
in the Autumn, 1997 edition of The Realist.)
Soon
after that correspondence we did meet, and it was the
beginning of one of the most rewarding friendships of
my life. It was a full six years before I actually started
filming Kurt. In March of 1988 we traveled to Buffalo,
New York, where a Unitarian church was performing the
world premiere of a Humanist Requiem mass that Kurt
had written. We boarded a train in Grand Central Station
and I interviewed him during the eight hour journey
upstate. Along the way we picked up his brother Bernard
in Albany, so I was able to shoot the two Vonnegut boys
laughing and reminiscing about old times. In Buffalo,
I filmed Kurt's speech to a very large full house (full
church, actually), as well as the performance of the
Requiem by the Unitarian choir.
I've
continued to follow Kurt around with a camera since
that trip. As of this writing (January, 2001), I've
been chronicling him on film for thirteen years. The
documentary has been primarily self-financed, so I tend
to do more filming whenever I have some spare time and
money. Finally, I am cutting together a half-hour reel
which I will then use to take around and raise the needed
finances to complete production.
Over
the years, I've filmed Vonnegut in a number of locations
and venues, including the following:
- His boyhood home in Indianapolis. This home was
built by Kurt, Sr., a famed Indianapolis architect.
It's poignant to see Kurt talking about his beloved
sister Allie in her old bedroom. Kurt also sits on
the bed in his boyhood bedroom to reflect on life
in that same house seventy years earlier.
- His grade school, PS 43 (James Whitcomb Riley School).
Great fun seeing Kurt walk down the corridors and
reminiscing about the trouble he used to get into
there.
- Shortridge High School, where Kurt wrote for the
daily newspaper, The Echo, giving birth to
his interest in writing.
- Lake Maxincuckee in Culver, Indiana where Vonnegut's
extended family (aunts, uncles, cousins) all had summer
cabins. Vonnegut also spent his honeymoon here with
his first wife Jane, soon after his return from the
war. (See the beautiful piece Kurt wrote about Maxincuckee
in Chapter IV in Fates Worse Than Death.)
- The house in Williams Creek, Indiana where Kurt's
mother committed suicide in 1943, when Kurt was home
on a weekend pass from the army. It was Mother's Day.
- Kurt's 60th high school reunion in Indianapolis
-- Shortridge High Class of 1940, filmed in June of
2000.
- Kurt working with artist Joe Petro in Lexington,
Kentuky where Kurt puts the finishing touches on a
number of his unique lithographs.
- Kurt speaking to the Writer's Workshop at the University
of Iowa in May, 1994. Kurt taught at the workshop
in 1965 -'67 while working on a little book that would
become Slaughterhouse-Five. One of his students
at the time was John Irving who will also be interviewed
in the film.
- Kurt's old home and study in Barnstable, MA, where he penned his most famous books. Included are neighborhood locales that figure into his novels and provided inspiration for many of his short stories.
- Kurt on the set of my film Mother
Night (directed by Keith Gordon) filming his
memorable cameo. Kurt also sat for a dual interview
on the set with actor Nick Nolte.
- Tons of other footage as well: Speaking engagements
at several venues including Chapman College in Orange,
CA and a Barnes & Noble in Manhattan on a publicity
tour for his final novel, Timequake.
The
film also contains beautiful black & white 16mm home
movies of Kurt and his family, dating back to 1925 when
Kurt was three years old. The Vonnegut and Adams families
have also been gracious enough to open their family
archives which include home movies from the Cape Cod
house in the 1960's and family scrapbooks, chock full
of vintage photos dating back to Kurt's infancy.

Post Script: I get lots of e-mail asking me about the status of this eagerly anticipated tribute, so I offer this partial explanation ... Other than a few remaining interviews, most of the footage has been shot. Because the film is being financed out of my own pocket, my priorities tend to fall on work that derives an income, which can cause interminable delays in my ''hobby'' projects. In any event, I am currently seeking a qualified editor who will help me put together 18-plus years of material on a partially-deferred salary. I've grown tired of constantly revising my predicted completion date for this film, so all I will say is...
Stay
tuned....
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