Indecent Exposure (41 page)

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Authors: David McClintick

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        • Hirschfield
          , therefore, had been forced to assume a very uncomfortable negotiating posture. On the one hand, Matty and Herbert had ordered that David be "made whole" financially. On the other hand, they were taking no responsibility for the actual terms of the deal, but were insisting that Hirschfield do the negotiating, thereby forcing him not only to obey their orders but also to shoulder the potentially contradictory problem of having the deal scrutinized by the SEC, the press, and other outsiders. The deal had to be rich, but not too rich. It had to be lucrative enough to satisfy the board but not so lucrative that it would appear that Columbia Pictures was rewarding
          Begelman
          for criminal behavior.
        • Begelman
          looked wan and discouraged when he arrived at the bungalow, and Hirschfield tried to couch the conversation in positive terms. He was terribly sorry, he said, that he had had to decide against reinstating David. Nothing personal, of course. But he knew that David would be pleased with the "terrific" production deal he was going to get. To
          Hirschfield
          's chagrin, David's fatigue and depression had not dulled his negotiating skills. David had been negotiating motion-picture and television production deals for more than two decades and was among the best negotiators in the business.
        • While
          Hirschfield
          and Fischer were not strangers to the process, they had never negotiated deals as a primary occupation and were not in Begelman's class. David was far from pleased with the general terms
          Hirschfield
          outlined. Alan kept saying that the deal had to be "reasonable and fair." David kept saying that he had to be "made whole." The terms that Hirschfield proposed were vague and were too low for
          Begelman
          . The terms with which Begelman countered were specific and were too high for Hirschfield. They weren't even close.
        • Then
          Hirschfield
          surprised Begelman. Recalling that Columbia was considering acquiring the motion-picture rights to
          Annie,
          Alan asked if David would be interested in producing the film version?
        • It was another display of carelessness by Hirschfield. Just a month earlier, at dinner with Leonard and Wendy Goldberg at La Scala, he had asked Leonard Goldberg if
          he
          would be interested in producing
          Annie.
          Leonard had said yes. Hirschfield had not considered the overture formal, but Goldberg had taken it at the very least to be an informal offer. Naturally, in the intervening weeks, Leonard had told David, one of his closest friends, that Alan had offered
          Annie
          to him. Now, sitting in the living room of Bungalow
          8
          with his bandaged left foot propped on an ottoman, Hirschfield seemed to be making the same pitch to
          Begelman
          . Obviously Alan had not forgotten that he had discussed
          Annie
          with Goldberg. Was he naive enough to think that Leonard would not have relayed this major piece of news to his friend David?
        • "Well, Alan," David said, "it's going to be a little crowded on the set of
          Annie
          when I arrive to produce it and Len Goldberg is standing there."
        • "I didn't
          offer it to Le
          n."
          "He says you did."
        • "Well, it came up in conversation. I certainly didn't offer it to him."
        • "Leonard is under the distinct impression that you made at least an informal offer of the
          Annie
          project to him."
        • "Well, he's mistaken."
          Hirschfield
          replied. "But maybe you and Len could produce it together."
        • Begelman looked skeptical. "Well, that's a different issue. That's possible. That might work."
        • The conversation withered. Instead of attracting
          Begelman
          ,
          Hirschfield
          's raising of the
          Annie
          issue had heightened the awkwardness that they had felt at the beginning of the meeting. Obviously they remained far apart. Begelman agreed to meet again in a few days, and obtained
          Hirschfield
          's assurance that no press release about his leaving the Columbia studio presidency would be issued until the terms of his future were settled.
        • Joe Fischer had never seen
          Hirschfield
          so upset as he was during the hours after Begelman left the bungalow.
        • Not on September 14 when Detective
          Silvey
          called. Not on September 26 when they discovered the third embezzlement. Not on November 16 when the board of directors made clear it wanted Begelman reinstated. Not on November 23 when the board renewed its threat to investigate
          Berte
          .
        • As unnerving as those episodes and others had been
          , they seemed to have fused by t
          he Thanksgiving weekend into something more sinister and more difficult to control than any of the events had appeared in isolation. The dispute over David Begelman had grown into a broad crisis of corporate governance at Columbia Pictures Industries. Though the schism had a philosophical core, it had been inflamed by strong egos and emotions into something much more ominous and volatile than a philosophical confrontation. The high command of the corporation seemed to be on the verge of a very ugly war, with the combatants' specific goals unclear and the result uncertain.
        • Hirschfield
          was thoroughly discombobulate
          d. He did not understand how the problem had grown into a crisis. He did not know what to do next. Puffing nervously on a cigar and sipping a glass of wine, he ranted about Herbert, Matty, Irwin, and Ray. He had always thought he understood them, but now, individually and together, they bewildered and infuriated him. And it was Herbert, whom Alan had thought he knew best, who baffled him the most. In the past, he and Herbert had usually found themselves in agreement on most major issues. In this instance, Herbert seemed inexplicably to have taken the wrong side of the
          Begelman
          issue at the beginning, and then somehow become strongly committed to it emotionally. It was unprecedented in the nearly two decades they had known each other for Herbert to invest the amount of ego and emotion in an
          ything that he had invested in the
          Begelman
          problem.
        • Fischer sat smoking, listening and commiserating as
          Hirschfield
          alternately slumped in his chair wi
          th his injured foot propped up,
          hobbled slowly about the living room, and stared out at the hotel's east lawn, which was strewn on this warm night with palm fronds torn loose by the Santa Anas.
        • They ordered dinner from room service. Fischer, his body still on Eastern time, excused himself at 10:30.
        • Hirschfield
          was awake for hours.
        • He was beside himself.
          • THIRTY
          • The last time the studio executives had gathered in Bungalow 8 was the first Sunday in October, when Hirschfield had broken the news that David
            Begelman
            was to be suspended pending an investigation of financial irregularities. On Monday morning, November 28, they assembled there again for the regular quarterly review of motion-picture projects.
          • Hirschfield
            preferred to hold the quarterly meetings in his hotel bungalow; it was less formal than the studio offices across the hills in Burbank and there were fewer interruptions. Even though the meetings were long—typically 9:30 until about 7:00 with lunch brought in—the studio people generally did not mind them. They were a break in routine. And many of the motion-picture executives rather enjoyed watching
            Hirschfield
            and Fischer conduct a meeting. It was faintly reminiscent of a good cop-bad cop routine. Hirschfield, the droll, playful chief executive, often would appear to be paying only minimal attention to the proceedings. Though he missed nothing important, he would flip through
            Playboy,
            or doodle on his agenda sheet, or crack jokes, while Fischer, his tough, solemn deputy, would actually conduct much of the meeting, asking pointed questions, insisting on specific answers, and challenging deviations from film
            budgets. It required an agile se
            nsiblity to banter with
            Hirschfield and fence with Fischer at the same time, and seeing who could do it best had become almost a game.
          • November 28 was different, however. The lingering Begelman problem infected everyone in the room. Only Hirschfield and Fischer knew the gravity of the crisis, but it was obvious to the studio people that the issue remained contentious and that Alan and Joe were preoccupied.
          • As Fischer listlessly ran down the agenda of film projects in various stages of production or development, Hirschfield's concentration wavered and he was interrupted frequently by telephone calls from New York.
            "Hardcore."
          • "On schedule, on budget."
            "California Suite."
            "Ray has it well in hand."
            "Nightwing."
          • "Those fuckin' bats look so real you wouldn't believe they're special-effects bats."
            "Altered States."
          • "Paddy's heart attack has slowed us up a bit," Dan Melnick said, "but we have effective control of the release of both the hardcover and paperback."
          • "All That Jazz."
          • "Delayed to allow Fosse to do his Broadway thing, which is tentatively entitled
            Dancin'.
            We'll have a piece of the show."
          • The telephone rang and the secretary came in from the next room and put a note in front of Hirschfield: Todd Lang, NY. He took the call in the master bedroom. "They're really gearing up to go after Berte. We'll have to sit down with her and go over the Ed Wolf thing from scratch."
          • "Kramer vs. Kramer."
          • "The script's been revised again. It's terrific."
            "Ice Castles."
          • "We're considering three people. Tatum, Jodie Foster, and Marie Osmond."
          • "Marie Osmond?"
          • "Yes, and there are two potential problems with Marie. First, can she act? Second, she's a very, very serious Mormon. There's a sexual encounter in the film, and we don't know how she'll take to it.
          • If she turns out to be our choice, considering everything else, we'll have to play with that scene to see how important it is to the picture."
          • The telephone again, and the secretary with a note: Leo Jaffe, NY.
            Hirschfield
            took the call in the bedroom. "It's chaos back here. Herbie and Matty
            are
            still livid. They're on the warpath. How was your talk with David yesterday?"
          • "Not good. He wants more than we can possibly give him."
          • "It's got to be wrapped up soon and a press release issued, or we may be back to square one."
          • "The board has me coming and going, and I refuse to be placed in this position," Hirschfield said. "I'm handling this in the best way I know how. What about all the support I was promised?"
          • "It just isn't there."
          • "Keep me posted."
          • "1941."
          • "Christmas, 1979."
          • "Justice for All."
          • "We've got Pacino."
          • "
            The
            Ravagers."
          • "It's a junk-food picture."
            "What about the Joan Rivers deal?"
          • "We feel that Joan Rivers can be for us what Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder
            are
            for Fox,"
            Melnick
            said. -"She's mad, she's gifted, and she knows where the jokes
            are
            . The problem is money. She makes incredible money in Vegas, and looks to us to replace those earnings."
          • The secretary with a note; Herbert Allen Jr., NY. Hirschfield hobbled into the bedroom again. "You still have a chance to change your mind, Alan."
          • "My mind is made up. I have no intention of changing it."
          • The talk in the living room turned to the subject of contractual clauses under which filmmakers can be penalized financially for permitting costs to exceed a film's budget. Melnick urged everyone to be "realistic."
          • "It's difficult to control certain people, and there are certain directors 1 won't work with for that reason. But I'm enough of a whore that if it's a sensational project, I'll take a deep breath and jump in anyway. You can't penalize a filmmaker for getting a new idea. It increases his appetite. And you've got to be pragmatic about other problems. We've got an overage on
            Eyes.
            You have to be realistic when you hire certain artists. Faye's entourage costs a hundred thousand dollars. The hair-dresser and makeup people we wanted to give her, she didn't want. But we wanted her, so we had to go along."*
          • "There will be two singles from the
            Close Encounters
            music," Hirschfield reported. "Clive is reworking it. The basic symphonic, and then a disco."
            "That poker game with
            Newsweek
            over the cover story was ridiculous," Melnick asserted. "They had to bluff us into giving up the photos. Jack Kroll had to ask! Our press manipulation isn't up to snuff
            .
            We don't have people sufficiently schooled in that sleazy world."
          • The secretary with a note: Allen Adler, NY. "You better watch your ass," he said. "They're really hammering away back here." "So I hear," Hirschfield replied.
            "What about delaying the foreign opening of
            Close Encounters
            till the fall?" somebody asked. "Doing a really proper job of dubbing is going to take a lot of time. We'll really have to rush to get it out in the spring."
          • "It'll lose its momentum by the fall. It won't be the event that it will be in the spring."
          • "It has to be dubbed in French, Italian, Japanese, German, and Spanish, with subtitles for Scandinavia."
          • "Let's forge ahead for the spring," Hirschfield finally interjected. "I don't care if they have to work around the clock, seven days a week. The longer we wait, the greater the chance that we'll lose the sense of a cosmic event that we've built up now." He ordered that Columbia's top dozen foreign executives be flown to New York to sec the film the following weekend. "Show it to them at the Ziegfeld and then bring them up to my house and I'll give them a pep talk."
          • The phone calls from New York tapered off toward evening and the meeting in the bungalow broke up around seven.
            Hirschfield
            , Fischer,
          • *The film's final title was
            The Eyes of Laura
            Mars.
          • and Melnick had dinner at the Mandarin and talked about various ways of replacing
            Begelman
            . Was Melnick a realistic candidate for permanent president of the studio? No, he did not want the administrative burdens. He only wanted to "make pictures." Could Fis
            cher move to California as co-he
            ad of the studio, handling the business and administrative functions while Melnick confined himself to the substance of pictures? No, Fischer did not want to move to California.
          • "Let's face it," Hirschfield said. "The board would consider that a jerry-built solution anyway. The only way to get the board off my back is to come up with somebody from outside, somebody demonstrably sensational, a known quantity. It's going to be tough."
          • "Good morning, Rona."
          • "Good morning, David, and good morning, America. Industry speculation as to the fate of Columbia Pictures' president David
            Begelman
            , who took a temporary leave of absence from the studio several weeks ago due to reported financial irregularities,
            has now been settled. After a se
            ries of highly charged, closed-door meetings, the board of directors of Columbia Pictures Industries is expected to announce that they will offer
            Begelman
            the opportunity to serve out the remaining two years of his Columbia contract as both an independent producer with the studio as well as a studio adviser.
            ...
            It is expected that
            Begelman
            will accept
            the Columbia offer, although we
            understand that he has been approached by three top studios to be an independent producer for them. The decision to remove
            Begelman
            from the presidency reportedly came at the insistence of Alan Hirschfield and was allegedly contested by other board members. The board is also expected to publicly exonerate Begelman from any financial wrongdoing, noting that the former president returned to Columbia some thirty-seven thousand dollars which was in dispute. . . . This removal of
            Begelman
            leaves the studio without any strong hand at the helm, and industry insiders say confidence in Columbia is low. Therefore, while winning the battle, the forces opposing
            Begelman
            may have lost the war."
          • Hirschfield
            found t
            he press coverage exasperating, but he supposed his reaction was another reflection of his naivete. The only voices being heard consistently were those of Rona Barrett and Art Murphy, whose coverage seemed to Hirschfield to be unduly harsh on him and unduly sympathetic to
            Begelman
            . It was the standard Hollywood line—David's misdeeds were matters of "judgment"; Hirschfield stood alone against the board in ousting him; it was David who was mainly responsible for Columbia's financial recovery; removing
            him would leave the studio leade
            rless and shake confidence in the company. Rona had said the board was expected to "exonerate Begelman from any financial wrongdoing"—an extraordinary concept in view of what he had done. Alan wondered if Rona knew that David had forged checks and embezzled thousands of dollars. He found it difficult to believe that Rona, as the best-informed reporter in town, didn't have at least some of the facts. Why wasn't she putting them on the air? Alan assumed that Rona was getting many of her "insights" from Ray Stark and, secondarily, from Sue Mengers. (Rona and Sue were called the "Starkettes" in some quarters.)
          • And where was the national press? A sensational story was unfolding and nobody seemed to be covering it. Hirschfield, for one, had kept the vow of secrecy toward the press taken by everyone inside Columbia who was privy to the details. Still, one would have anticipated leaks by now. It had been more than two months since the company had known of Begelman's embezzlements. Hirschfield's task would be so much easier if the world knew the nature of David's crimes. The board couldn't possibly take the stand it had if the public knew Begelman was an admitted forger.
          • Unbekn
            ownst to Hirschfield, a few non-e
            ntertainment reporters were beginning to work on the Begelman story.
            The Wall Street Journal
            was interested. And Andrew Tobias, who had been briefed by a friend a month earlier, had finally found the time to investigate. In only a few hours of telephoning from his New York apartment in late November, Tobias had confirmed the salient facts of the Cliff Robertso
            n, Martin Ritt, and Pierre Grole
            au embezzlements. Unfortunately for Tobias, he had promised the story to
            Esquire
            which could not publish it until February.
          • Jeanic Kasindorf of
            New West,
            meanwhile, had nearly completed her examination of Sid Luft's files on David
            Begelman
            's handling of Judy Garland's funds in the early 1960s. Indeed, while the studio executives were conferring at Hirschfield's bungalow on Monday, Kasindorf had spent nearly all day at Luft's Wilshire Boulevard apartment, sifting through old manila folders spread across his dining-room table. But Kasindorf still had not had time to investigate Begelman's more recent difficulties at Columbia. And she could not expose what he was alleged to have done in 1962 without placing it in the current context.

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