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Curtain Going Up!

Film and theater books are finding their biggest audience in the professional and academic market

by Robert Dahlin -- Publishers Weekly, 9/29/2003

Books on theater and film these days must crowd onto a very small stage. As Applause Books publisher Glenn Young puts it, "A performing arts publisher has to be sensitive to how much the market can absorb at one time."

An ominous symptom of today's challenges is the recent demise (reportedly for lack of membership growth) of Stage & Screen Book Club, the vehicle publishers have used to get the word out and sell books since it was founded in 1950 as the Fireside Theatre club. "I've heard publishers say with some sense of gloom that they won't publish as many trade plays," says Young, whose Glenn Young imprint at Applause features two titles by Al Hirschfeld, the late caricaturist of Broadway plays and performers: Hirschfeld: The Speakeasies of 1932 (Oct.) and Hirschfeld's Harlem (Nov.). "It used to be," Young tells PW, "that Stage & Screen might take 2,000 copies of a new play, but it was nevertheless hard for a publisher to make a profit on that. Even so, the fallout from what happened to Stage & Screen will play a significant part in our industry."

Dismal signs loom elsewhere as well. "We've all been watching library sales decline in the last couple of years," says James Peltz, editor-in-chief at State University of New York Press, which published Remaking the Frankenstein Myth on Film: Between Laughter and Horror by Caroline Joan S. Picart in July and will release Bad: Infamy, Darkness, Evil and Slime on Screen, edited by Murray Pomerance, in January. "But at the same time, film and media books have become a big area of study. I think academic circles provide a growth area." Also due in January are two additional film studies—Peter Biskind explores the new Hollywood in Down and Dirty Pictures: Robert Redford, Miramax and the Improbable Rise of Independent Film (S&S), while Joshua Hirsch shows how films attempt to embody and reproduce the unthinkable in Afterimage: Film, Trauma and the Holocaust (Temple Univ. Press, Jan.).

Booksellers agree that academics and professionals comprise the lion's share of the audience for serious theater and film books. Rozanne Seelen, owner of New York City's Drama Book Shop, remarks cheerfully, "We sell tools of the trade. Actors need plays for auditions or for class. Since we moved [in December 2001], we've expanded in some areas. We're in the garment area, so we've increased our stock of costume books. I'd say that 95% of our sales are to professionals. We have over 50,000 titles in our computer covering the current inventory of what's in print."

Treading the Boards

According to Mel Zerman, president of Limelight Editions, "Movie books sell better than stage books, but what sells best for us, without question, are instructional books. Those are the mainstay of our backlist." Zerman cites Accents: A Manual for Actors by Robert Blumenfeld, which was issued two years ago in a revised and expanded edition with two CDs for performers seeking to perfect ethnic intonations.

"Much to our surprise there is an endless need for monologues," says Marisa Smith Kraus, publisher of Smith and Kraus, which publishes up to 40 titles a year specializing in scenes, monologues and professional instruction. "We also found a bit of a hole for books designed for younger actors." For the older set, Smith and Kraus this month publishes Provoking Theater: Kama Ginkas Directs by Russian director Ginkas and John Freeman and Acts of Courage: Vaclav Havel's Life in the Theater by Carol Rocamora. About the former Smith says, "It gets down to the very roots of directing, which really comes down to an exploration of life." Of the latter she notes, "This is one of my favorite books we've ever published. No one else has looked at Havel's life in the theater to understand why he is the only playwright ever to become president of a country." Aspiring directors can also pick up Notes on Directing (RCR Creative Press, Sept.) by Frank Hauser and Russell Reich.

"Plays fall into two basic categories," says Applause's Young. "There is the memento market, which is what our book on the musical Hairspray falls into. The other is a book that deepens the theatrical experience. You might not fully understand a play by Tom Stoppard or David Mamet with one sitting, so you might want to read it. Golda's Balcony by Bill Gibson is a new one-person play about Golda Meir, but the protagonist isn't such a simple person. Reading the play underscores her personal and political dilemmas."

"We've had great success with plays," says Linda Rosenthal, Faber and Faber associate publisher. "Wit [by Margaret Edson], Proof [by David Auburn], which both won Pulitzers, and [last year's Tony-winner] Take Me Out [by Richard Greenberg] all did well for us." The FSG affiliate will publish a number of upcoming plays, including off-Broadway's extremely successful Our Lady of 121st Street by Stephen Adly Guirgis.

Back Stage Books, the Watson-Guptill imprint newly revitalized after three and a half moribund years, is led by senior editor Mark Glubke. "We'll be doing seven to 10 books a season," he says. "Since we're tied to the Back Stage newspaper, it makes sense that books for actors remain a core of our list. Acting books always work. The U.S. today has 100,000 union-member actors, and 50% of them get out after three years because they can't make a living. With a 50% turnover every three years, large numbers of people are always coming into the profession looking for new books. Individual plays are a risky business, though. We'll be doing anthologies, like next spring's Selected Plays of Arthur Laurents. His plays have never been published in an anthology before." Elsewhere, Overlook Press is both gathering plays, in The Collected Plays of Edward Albee: Volume 1: 1958–1965 (Feb.), and releasing single works such as Albee's The Play About the Baby(Jan.).

At Theatre Communications Group, publications v-p Terry Nemeth reports, "We're putting both plays of Angels in America by Tony Kushner into one volume for the first time to tie in with Mike Nichols's HBO presentation." (TCG has already sold more than 350,000 copies of Kushner's acclaimed plays in paper since 1993.) This month TCG released The New American Musical: An Anthology from the End of the Century, edited by Wiley Hausam. "There's been nothing like this in quite a while," says Nemeth. "It celebrates a whole group of artists who are known but who haven't yet found big Broadway success." The assembled musicals—known chiefly to music theater devotees—include Floyd Collins, Rent, Parade and Michael John LaChiusa's The Wild Party.

Faber and Faber's lead title this fall is also musical-oriented—Colored Lights: Forty Years of Words and Music, Show Biz, Collaboration and All That Jazz (Nov.) by John Kander and Fred Ebb, as told to Greg Lawrence, is presented as a dialogue between the creators of Chicago, Cabaret and other Broadway and Hollywood hits. "They talk about how they came to music as kids," says F&F's Linda Rosenberg. "The chapters focus on different shows and what was happening around them, making it a history of the American musical theater." Past musicals are also remembered in The Impossible Musical: The "Man of La Mancha" Story (Applause, Nov.) by the show's book writer Dale Wasserman; Jerry Herman: The Lyrics (Routledge, Oct.) by Hello Dolly!'s Herman and Ken Bloom; and Everything Was Possible: The Birth of the Musical "Follies" (Knopf, Oct.) by Ted Chapin.

Speaking of Kander and Ebb, Chicago: The Movie and Lyrics was a big book this year for Newmarket, which continues to tighten its grip on film companion books and movie scripts. Upcoming in its Shooting Script line are Pieces of April by Peter Hedges, Sylvia by John Brownlow and In America by Jim Sheridan. Publisher Esther Margolis points out that books such as these—as well as pictorial books like Cold Mountain: The Journey from Book to Film (Dec.) by Dan Aulier and The Alamo: The Illustrated Story of the Epic Film (Dec.) by Frank Thompson—have several lives. Published when the film comes out, they receive another sales boost when the DVD appears. "Retailers would benefit if they'd market film books with DVDs," Margolis remarks. "DVD sales can outgross theater box office." The promotion-minded executive reports that this month Newmarket is offering some of its scripts in value-priced boxed sets. "A lot of people want to write screenplays, and our scripts are being used in schools more and more," she says.

Insiders' views of this art enlighten Schmucks with Underwoods: Conversations with America's Classic Screenwriters (Applause, Dec.) by Max Wilk, while more concrete instruction is offered by Hot Property: Screenwriting in the New Hollywood (Berkley, Aug.) by Christopher Keane and Lew Hunter's Screenwriting 434: The Industry's Premier Teacher Reveals the Secrets of the Successful Screenplay (Perigee, May 2004) by Lew Hunter. Jeffrey Scott takes a more specialized tack in How to Write for Animation (Overlook, June).

On the Silver Screen

Where there are movies, of course, there are fans—lots of them. At Andrews McMeel, a 200,000-copy first printing is planned for Now Showing: Unforgettable Moments from the Movies (Nov.) by Joe Garner. "He selects 25 particular moments that we remember," says editorial director Chris Schillig, "and the book is accompanied by a DVD that doesn't just parrot what's in the book. It's a mini-chapter all by itself." Performing arts books, if not a major part of AM's list, are always a staple, says Schillig. "It's a category we're very comfortable with because it has a dedicated audience."

Romance has played a pivotal role in films since the days of Vilma Banky and Ramon Novarro. Two early 2004 titles are just the, er, ticket for cinephiles of an amorous bent: A Kiss Is a Kiss Is a Kiss... A Celebration of Romance—Hollywood Style (Hylas, Jan.) by Lauretta Dives and Reel Romance: The Lover's Guide to the 100 Best Date Movies (Taylor, Feb.) by Leslie Halpern. Movie love that could only recently begin to speak its name is covered in Fabulous!: A Loving, Luscious and Lighthearted Look at Film from the Gay Perspective (Broadway, Jan.) by Donald F. Reuter.

Those who like blood with their popcorn can get Fangoria's 101 Best Horror Movies You've Never Seen: A Celebration of the World's Most Unheralded Fright Flicks (Three Rivers, Sept.) by Adam Lukeman; Fangoria Magazine; Beyond Horror Holocaust: A Deeper Shade of Red (Fantasma, Oct., Biblio dist.) by Chas Balun; and Edge of Your Seat: The 100 Greatest Movie Thrillers (Citadel, Oct.) by Douglas Brode.

Puzzled about what DVD to rent? Check out the additional critiques found in such comprehensive tomes as ReelViews: The Ultimate Guide to the Best 1000 Modern Movies on DVD and Video (Justin, Charles & Co., Aug.) by James Berardinelli; the 12th edition of the Time Out Film Guide (Nov.), containing more than 15,000 film reviews written over the course of 35 years; and Leonard Maltin's 2004 Movie and Video Guide (Plume), by the film critic who's become something of a household name and media personality.

Movie books are frequently promoted as holiday gift items, a market that Bulfinch hopes to tap into with this month's release of a lavishly illustrated profile. Judy Garland: A Portrait in Art & Anecdote by John Fricke "isn't a biography of Judy. It's a biography of her career," says editor Karyn Gerhard. "All that's been written about her life has eclipsed why she became the legend she is." Of the book's more than 400 photos, fully 85% have not been seen before, says Gerhard. "The other unique element to this book is that John Fricke fleshed out her career with remembrances from people who knew and worked with her, from Munchkins to hairstylists, directors, actors, musicians and other singers."

Conceding that bookselling has witnessed a rough patch lately, Gerhard remains optimistic. "One of the great things about films is that they are constantly being introduced to new audiences. That's why there will always be a market for this kind of book, as long as it is tempered with the right material." Other photo-rich books pitched for gift-giving are 75 Years of the Oscar: The Official History of the Academy Awards (Abbeville, Sept.) by Robert Osborne; Audrey Hepburn: An Elegant Spirit (Atria, Oct.) by Sean Hepburn Ferrer; Chaplin: Genius of the Cinema (Abrams, Nov.) by Jeffrey Vance; and Bond Girls Are Forever (Abrams, Nov.) by John Cork and Maryam d'Abo (herself an actress and Bond girl).

Houghton Mifflin has developed a burgeoning franchise with its Lord of the Ring tie-ins, which continues apace with the December release of the trilogy's final film, The Return of the King. Two of the newest Hobbit-forming titles (with 150,000-copy first printings in paper) are The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Visual Companion (Nov.) by Jude Fisher and The Lord of the Rings: Weapons and Warfare (Nov.) by Chris Smith with John Howe. Norton is seizing a similar opportunity presented by the Russell Crowe film directed by Peter Weir with November tie-in editions of Patrick O'Brian's Master and Commander and The Far Side of the World and The Making of Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World by Tom McGregor.

If these books are helpful as reference resources, even more vital statistics are collected in The Science Fiction Film Reader (Limelight, Nov.), edited by Gregg Rickmann; The Encyclopedia of Westerns (Aug.) by Herb Fagen; and The Encyclopedia of War Movies: The Complete Guide to Movies About Wars of the 20th Century (Jan.) by Robert Davenport, the last two from Facts on File's Checkmark Books. "Film fans who are interested in a specific genre like to know everything about it," says James Chambers, Checkmark's editor-in-chief, arts and humanities. "They can refamiliarize themselves with movies they've seen and may have forgotten, and they can learn about films they haven't seen."

"I want to do more reference books at Back Stage because they backlist very, very well," says Mark Glubke. "Next spring's The City & the Theatre: The History of New York Playhouses—A 250-Year Journey from Bowling Green to Times Square by historian Mary Henderson was first published in 1973, and this updated edition should sell for a long time to come." The variety of stage and screen interests is reflected in these upcoming titles: Lorca: Living in the Theatre (Peter Owen, Oct., Dufour dist.) by Gwynne Edwards; The Girls in the Big Picture: New Voices from Ulster Theatre (Blackstaff, Oct., Dufour dist.); Once upon a Time in China: A Guide to Hong Kong, Chinese and Taiwanese Cinema (Atria, Nov.) by Jeff Yang; and, for tyros in pursuit of next year's box office sleepers, Filmmaking for Dummies (Wiley, July) by Bryan Michael Stoller.

With such a broad spectrum of vibrant theater and film titles to choose from, a comment from Young at Applause seems particularly apt. "Our books," he says, "perform on a stage just as alive as the one on Broadway. What film or stage designer's budget can match the resources of our imaginations with a book in our hands? And our productions don't post closing notices. The only catastrophe for us is the blackout, and then we need only wait for our lighting designer to show up again. There's no business like the show book business."

 

It's a Wonderful Life

History is the essence of innumerable biographies," observed Thomas Carlyle, and a truly broad swath of the past comes alive in dozens of new entertainment-themed biographies and memoirs.

The tales are as varied as Ask Me Again Tomorrow: A Life in Progress (HarperCollins, July) by Olympia Dukakis and Cowboy Princess: Life with My Parents Roy Rogers and Dale Evans (Taylor, Oct.) by Cheryl Rogers-Barnett and Frank Thompson. Dukakis told PW last spring, "I think by the end of the book I finally figured out I'll never define myself fully. It's a constantly changing process." Rogers-Barnett is more direct. "I practically grew up on the Republic Studios lot where Mom and Dad made their great movies," she says, calling her book "the story of my beloved parents from a point of view that is uniquely mine." Taylor also has Tina Turner: Break Every Rule (Dec.) by Mark Bego, which associate editor Ross Plotkin describes as one of the house's lead titles; he adds that the book "focuses on Tina's sense of triumph."

Noted redhead Maureen O'Hara reflects on her acting career in 'Tis Herself: A Memoir (S&S, Mar.) and Joe Eszterhas exposes filmdom's machinations with Hollywood Animal: A Memoir (Knopf, Jan.). The screenwriter whose credits include Basic Instinct and Showgirls surprises, promises Peter Gethers, v-p, editor-at-large, Random House. "Joe writes about the real Hollywood with stories that won't make people happy," he says. "And on top of everything else, the family background he reveals is very moving." Gethers also edited two other Knopf titles, Ball of Fire: The Tumultuous Life and Comic Art of Lucille Ball (Aug.) by Stefan Kanfer and In Black and White: The Life of Sammy Davis Jr. (Oct.) by Wil Haygood. "I'm not interested in normal celebrity biographies," says Gethers. "What both Stefan and Wil achieve is real depth. Ball of Fire brings business into the biography. You see how Lucy created her television show. Wil's book is a cultural history of black entertainment—centered around Sammy Davis—that looks back into black vaudeville and early stage work like Uncle Tom's Cabin." Another notable TV personality—one of the early giants of the business—has penned his own story, Caesar's Hours: My Life in Comedy, with Love and Laughter (Public Affairs, Nov.). Written with Eddy Friedfeld, the book chronicles the backstage stories of the groundbreaking TV series Your Show of Shows and Caesar's Hour.

Amanda Vaill had access to private papers and diaries as she wrote Somewhere: A Life of Jerome Robbins (Broadway, Mar.), about the choreographer who made The King and I and West Side Story dance. A dancer on stage and screen from the '30s through the '50s is recalled in The Girl Who Fell Down: A Biography of Joan McCracken (Northeastern Univ., Oct.) by Lisa Jo Sagolla. "We've always had a pretty big list in music," says the press's associate director, Jill Bahcall. "Now we're expanding into performing arts, particularly from a women's studies angle. Joan McCracken's is such an interesting story in part from her association with her second husband, Bob Fosse. There are so many good back stories, such as her tremendous influence on Shirley MacLaine's career." The title is the nickname McCracken earned from her comic dance in Oklahoma! Out earlier this month from Da Capo Press is Arthur Miller: His Life and Work by noted drama critic Martin Gottfried, who has also authored biographies of such theater luminaries as Stephen Sondheim, Bob Fosse and George Burns. PW called the work "an illuminating and profound picture of playwright Miller [who turns 88 next month]. Personal stories are refreshingly secondary in one of the rare books that makes the playwriting process comprehensible and consistently involving."

Coming in April 2004 is Godfather: The Intimate Francis Ford Coppola by Gene D. Phillips, from University Press of Kentucky, which also has scheduled Hal Wallis: Producer to the Stars (June 2004) by Bernard Dick. "This is the first full-length biography of Wallis, who produced movies from Casablanca to True Grit," reports marketing manager Leila Salisbury, who edited both books. "We look for accessibly written biographies with impeccable scholarship. It's a combination hard to find."

Canada Lee, the black actor who won fame in Orson Welles's stage production of Native Son and appeared in the Hitchcock film Lifeboat, died penniless in 1952 after having been branded a Communist by HUAC in 1943. His life is retold by Mona Z. Smith in Becoming Something: The Story of Canada Lee (Faber & Faber, June 2004). F&F has a string of other biographies including Orson Welles: The Stories of His Life (Oct.) by Peter Conrad and Keystone: The Life and Clowns of Mack Sennett (Feb.) by Simon Louvish. "Faber and Faber has changed a lot since Farrar, Straus acquired a controlling interest in 1998," says associate publisher Linda Rosenberg. "In the last two or three years, we've been putting much more of an American stamp on what we publish, doing more books by American writers on theater and film and popular culture." Another actor adversely affected by HUAC and blacklisting is the subject of He Ran All the Way: A Biography of John Garfield (Limelight, Sept.) by Robert Nott. In October, ReganBooks will release Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light by Patrick McGilligan.

Popular culture wouldn't be called that if it didn't reflect the shiniest names. Citadel Press boasts a full roster with Nicole Kidman (July) by James L. Dickerson, Wannabe (Aug.) by Jamie Kennedy and Paul Simon: The Definitive Biography of the Legendary Singer/Songwriter (June) by Laura Jackson, who also penned Jon Bon Jovi (Mar.). "The timing has to be right to publish a star's biography," says assistant editor Miles Lott. "Nicole Kidman, for example, is at the peak of her career. We don't want just a puff fan magazine approach to these books, but an overly scholarly approach wouldn't do either. The market is really unpredictable. It's actually easier to sell books on rock stars, since movie stars get so much magazine and TV coverage."

Trafalgar Square numbers eight biographies on its latest list, including Gwyneth Paltrow (Reynolds & Hearn, Sept.) by Daniel O'Brien, Liz Hurley Uncovered (Andre Deutsch, Sept.) by Alison Bowyer and Cruise Control (John Blake, Oct.), a profile of Tom Cruise by Wensley Clarkson. "There's no doubt that celebrity biographies are tricky," says managing director Paul Feldstein. "You can do very, very well, but it depends where you hit the curve of someone's popularity. Some of the books have good library sales, and we sometimes sell directly to fan clubs that tell online members about new products. Still, it's not the safest kind of publishing." —R.D.

No Callow Fellow, He

Simon Callow, long familiar for his roles in Amadeus and A Room with a View, recently wrote notable biographies of Charles Laughton and Orson Welles, and now he brings his own experiences into focus with Being an Actor and Shooting the Actor (Picador, July). "St. Martin's had published Being an Actor a long time ago, and it was basically out of print," says Picador publisher Frances Coady. "I asked Simon to write a preface for a new edition, and it kept growing and growing and growing—47,000 new words! Being an Actor was his story up to his 30s. He now covers the next 20 years, so an old book is suddenly a new book." Shooting the Actor has never been published in the U.S. before, says Coady, who issued it under the Vintage UK imprint, which she established in England before immigrating to these shores three years ago. "This is a hilarious account of his relationship with a film director [Dusan Makavejev] while shooting Manifesto, a film that has virtually disappeared. They started out on good terms—until the movie turned into a total nightmare." Coady asked Callow to update Shooting the Actor with autobiographical sections on filming such later projects as those he did with Merchant Ivory and, of course, Four Weddings and a Funeral. For Picador, it's a Callow overflow.—R.D.

Poster Profusion

In the Polish movie poster for Midnight Cowboy, an enormous cowboy hat looms over a pair of luscious red lips. The U.K. poster for The Silence of the Lambs depicts Anthony Hopkins with the death's head moth masking his lips, not Jodie Foster's as in the U.S. These are two of the hundreds of illustrations in A Century of Movie Posters: From Silent to Art House (Barron's, Oct.) by Emily King. "The book ranges from the Buster Keaton era up to The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers," says editor Bob O'Sullivan. "It's sure to appeal to both cinephiles and design fanatics, and even people who know this stuff will find things they have rarely or never seen before. I can guarantee that." "Classic ephemera," is what Chronicle editor Alan Rapp calls Picture Show: Classic Movie Posters from the TCM Archives (Nov.) by Dianna Edwards. "There's a section on femmes fatales, for example, another on dance musicals," says Rapp. "The trend in motion picture posters is that they have become paper collectibles." Also due in November is Film Posters of the 50s: The Essential Movies of the Decade from the Reel Poster Gallery Collection (Overlook), edited by Tony Nourmand and Graham Marsh. That same twosome supply the byline to next March's Film Posters of the 30s: The Essential Movies of the Decade and Science Fiction Poster Art (both Aurum Press, dist. by Trafalgar Square).—R.D.

More Than Popcorn

New titles from two publishers are exploiting the appetite whetted by movie-watching. Out this month from Andrews McMeel is Claud Mann's Dinner & a Movie Cookbook by Claud Mann, a tie-in with the weekly TBS program. "These are serious recipes served up in a light-hearted manner," says managing editor Julie Roberts. "Claud Mann is a chef and he develops recipes around each movie. The primary audience may well be fans of the program, but the recipes should appeal to anyone. The instructions are easy, and movie trivia bits are included." The book itself will be promoted on the cable channel's show Dinner & a Movie.

Coming from Villard in February is Movie Menus: Recipes for Perfect Meals with Your Favorite Films by Francine Segan. "Francine's recipes don't relate just to single movies, but to whole genres," reports the book's editor, Mary Bahr. "She's a food historian, so if the film is something like Ben Hur, she'll find recipes printed at that time in history and update them for today's cooks." Among Segan's 10 chapters are "Kings and Knights," "The Wild West" and "Romantic Dinners for Two." Bahr says, "The recipes were all tested twice—they really let you experience the full physical sensations of the films."—R.D.

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