It's not a joke headline. Bradbury wrote the screenplay for John Huston's 1956 adaptation of Moby Dick and will be making a rare appearance on November 30 as part of the American Cinematheque's John Huston series.
Sunday, November 30 – 4:00 PMScreenwriter Ray Bradbury In Person!
MOBY DICK, 1956, MGM/UA, 116 min. Gregory Peck stars as Ahab in Huston’s heroic attempt to translate Herman Melville’s masterpiece to the screen (aided by a powerful adaptation by screenwriter Ray Bradbury.) Admittedly uneven, the film manages to capture the epic sweep and near-Biblical tone of the novel, and features an astonishing cameo by Orson Welles as Father Mapple. "MOBY DICK was the most difficult picture I ever made. I lost so many battles during it that I even began to suspect that my assistant director was plotting against me. Then I realized it was only God." – John Huston. Discussion following with screenwriter Ray Bradbury (schedule permitting).
Please be aware of the Hollywood Christmas Parade street closure on Nov. 30. Hollywood Boulevard will be closed, access theatre from the south and walk up Las Palmas.
Bradbury's novel about working with Huston -- sorry, I forget its title -- is a really good one. Bradbury joined Huston in Ireland for the screenwriting, the book has lots of Irish charm as well as a beady-eyed view of that egomaniac Huston.
Posted by: Michael Blowhard | November 25, 2003 at 09:43 PM
The book is called Green Shadows, White Whale. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.
Posted by: Mark Sarvas | November 26, 2003 at 09:06 AM