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Robert "Bo" Goldman (born September 10, 1932) is an American screenwriter and playwright. He has received two Academy Awards for his screenplays of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) and Melvin and Howard (1980).

Bo Goldman
Goldman in 1975
Born
Robert Goldman

(1932-09-10) September 10, 1932 (age 90)
EducationPrinceton University
Occupation
  • Screenwriter
  • playwright
Years active1958–present
Spouse
Mab Ashforth
(m. 1954; died 2017)
Children6

Early life and education


Goldman was born into a Jewish family[1] in New York City, the son of Lillian (Levy), a hat model, and Julian Goldman.[2] Goldman's father was a Broadway producer, and owned a chain of well known eastern department stores called The Goldman Stores, and as an early pioneer of "time payments", his business thrived. Franklin Delano Roosevelt was a close friend and also his attorney. Goldman Store ads typically featured men in business suits and fashionably dressed women in furs. While this was an old strategy for appealing to those with dreams of upper-class status, the ad copy explicitly addressed middle-income customers. "He makes only $3,000 a year," blazoned one Goldman ad, "But is worth $112,290!" Julian loved the theatre, and was an "angel" or backer, to many Broadway Shows and reviews. His young son, Robert "Bo," accompanied Julian to an average of two shows a week. This influenced what the boy would choose to do later in life, convinced from an early age that he was meant to work in the theatre. In 1939 Julian was looking for a school where he could send his son. Eleanor Roosevelt admired the work of Helen Parkhurst and was in the midst of expanding the population and resources of the Dalton School by promoting a merger between the Todhunter School for girls (founded by Winifred Todhunter). Julian Goldman became an early backer, and it was this school where Bo would begin his education. He followed this by skipping his last year at Dalton in favor of fast tracking through Phillips Exeter Academy, an experience that informed a script he would write years later, Scent of a Woman.[3]

Goldman is not related to William Goldman, another two-time-Oscar-winning screenwriter who won the Academy Award for All the President's Men the year after Bo won for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.

He attended Princeton University where he wrote, produced, composed lyrics and was president of the famed Princeton Triangle Club, a proving ground for F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Stewart and director Joshua Logan. His 1953 production, Ham 'n Legs, was presented on The Ed Sullivan Show – the first Triangle production ever to appear on National Television.


Military service


Upon graduation from Princeton, Goldman had a three-year stint in the U.S. Army stationed on Enewetak as personnel sergeant,[4] an atoll in the Marshall Islands of the central Pacific Ocean used for nuclear bomb testing.


Early career



Broadway


After leaving the service Goldman found work on Broadway as the lyricist for First Impressions, a musical based on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Produced by composer Jule Styne, directed by Abe Burrows, and starring Hermione Gingold, Polly Bergen and Farley Granger, the play received decent reviews but had a very short run. He would spend the next few years unsuccessfully trying to get his second show, Hurrah Boys Hurrah, produced.


Television


Now married, and with 4 small children at home, he soon found a steady income working in the new world of live television at CBS.[5] Goldman was mentored by Fred Coe (the "D.W. Griffith of dramatic television") and became part of the twilight of The Golden Age, associate producing and script editing Coe's prestigious Playhouse 90's, Days of Wine and Roses directed by a young John Frankenheimer, The Plot To Kill Stalin starring Eli Wallach, and Horton Foote's Old Man. Goldman went on to himself produce and write for public television on the award-winning NET Playhouse. After working together at NET Burt Lancaster encouraged Goldman to try his hand at screenwriting, which resulted in an early version of Shoot the Moon. The script became Goldman's calling card, and he would soon be "known for some of the best screenplays of the 1970s and 80s".[6]


Personal life


One of his daughters was Amy Reed Goldman, who got a PhD. in Comparative Literature in the University of California Davis and is currently a Senior Lecturer at NYU Shanghai.[7]


Film work



One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest


After reading Shoot the Moon, Miloš Forman asked Goldman to write the screenplay for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The film won all five top Academy Awards including an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for Goldman. This was the first film to win the top five awards since Frank Capra's It Happened One Night in 1934. For his work on the film Goldman also received the Writers Guild Award and the Golden Globe Award.


The Rose and Melvin and Howard


He next wrote The Rose (1979), which was nominated for four Academy Awards. This was followed by his original screenplay Melvin and Howard (1980) which garnered Goldman his second Oscar, second Writers Guild Award, and the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Screenplay of the Year.


Shoot the Moon


Goldman's calling card, Shoot the Moon, was then filmed by Alan Parker and starred Diane Keaton and Albert Finney. The film received international acclaim and was embraced by some of America's most respected film critics:

However, due to a previous agreement Warren Beatty had negotiated with MGM the studio was bound that no film could be released with Diane Keaton in the same year as Beatty's Reds. Consequently, Shoot the Moon was effectively dumped – and subsequently released with little or no fanfare the following February – long after the fourth quarter "awards season." Nonetheless, Goldman's peers remembered and the following year he earned his third Writers Guild Award nomination. Shoot the Moon received international acclaim and was embraced by America's most respected film critics:

Pauline Kael – The New Yorker:

"Shoot the Moon is perhaps the most revealing American movie of the era."[8]

David Denby – New York Magazine:

"The picture seems like a miracle. A beautiful achievement."[9]

David Edelstein – The New York Post:

"One of the best films of the decade."[10]

However, due to the poor domestic release in the years before video, the film was all but forgotten until Warner Bros. acquired MGM's home video library and released the DVD in the summer of 2007. To this day Shoot the Moon has a perfect 100% score on the critic site Rotten Tomatoes.

"The great Bo Goldman. He's the pre-eminent screenwriter – in my mind as good as it gets."[11]

Eric Roth, The New York Times, 1998.

Los Angeles -- The Screen Writers Guild strike brings motion picture and television production very nearly to a halt. Several famous writers are shown here picketing at the 20th Century-Fox Studios; including Richard Brooks, Bo Goldman, Gore Vidal and Billy Wilder (1981)
Los Angeles -- The Screen Writers Guild strike brings motion picture and television production very nearly to a halt. Several famous writers are shown here picketing at the 20th Century-Fox Studios; including Richard Brooks, Bo Goldman, Gore Vidal and Billy Wilder (1981)

For the next few years, Goldman contributed uncredited work to many scripts including Miloš Forman's Ragtime (1981) starring James Cagney and Donald O'Connor, The Flamingo Kid (1984) starring Matt Dillon, and Warren Beatty's Dick Tracy (1990).


Scent of a Woman


He followed this with Scent of a Woman (1992) receiving his second Golden Globe Award and third Academy Award nomination. In the film Al Pacino plays Frank Slade, a blind, retired army colonel—a character Goldman said he based on someone he "knew from his days in the army."[5] After being nominated seven times for roles as varied as Michael Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather and Frank Serpico in Sidney Lumet's Serpico, his portrayal of Frank Slade finally earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor. The film was beloved by critics who along with Pacino's performance singled out Goldman's screenplay:

Janet Maslin – The New York Times:

"Mr. Pacino roars through this story with show-stopping intensity. Bo Goldman's screenplay provides him with a string of indelible wisecracks. Mr. Pacino's contribution, in the sort of role for which Oscar nominations were made, is to remind viewers that a great American actor is too seldom on the screen."[12]

Roger Ebert – Chicago Sun-Times:

"The screenplay is by Bo Goldman (Melvin and Howard), who is more interested in the people than the plot. By the end of "Scent of a Woman," we have arrived at the usual conclusion of the coming-of-age movie, and the usual conclusion of the prep school movie. But rarely have we been taken there with so much intelligence and skill."[13]

The film has an 88% score on the critic site Rotten Tomatoes.


City Hall


Next up was Harold Becker's City Hall (1996) again starring Al Pacino and also John Cusack. Pacino played the corrupt Mayor of New York City. The film is peppered with musical theatre references – a clear homage to Goldman's father and his own Broadway days.


Meet Joe Black


After this was Meet Joe Black (1998) starring Brad Pitt and Anthony Hopkins. Critics gave the film mixed reviews. Pitt and the director, Martin Brest, took the biggest thumping. The main complaint centered not on content, but pace. Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Where Meet Joe Black runs into most of its trouble is that everything happens so terribly slowly. Martin Brest has felt the need to inflate the tale until it floats around like one of those ungainly balloons in Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. Not helping the time go faster is the way star Brad Pitt has ended up playing Death. Ordinarily the most charismatic of actors, with an eye-candy smile and a winning ease, Pitt approaches this role largely on a leash, hanging around more like the protagonist of I Walked With a Zombie than a flesh-and-blood leading man."[14]


The Perfect Storm


In 2000, Goldman did a page one uncredited rewrite of The Perfect Storm. It was his script that green lit the movie at Warner Bros. and convinced George Clooney to star. The film went on to earn $329,000,000.

In recent years, Goldman was rumored to be working on an adaptation of Jules Dassin's Du rififi chez les hommes for Al Pacino.


Influence


In a 1998 interview with The New York Times screenwriter Eric Roth said, "The great Bo Goldman. He's the pre-eminent screenwriter -- in my mind as good as it gets. He has the most varied and intelligent credits, from Cuckoo's Nest to Shoot the Moon, the best divorce movie ever made, to Scent of a Woman, to the great satire Melvin and Howard. He rarely makes mistakes, and he manages to maintain a distinctive American voice. And he manages to stay timely."[11]

Roth once again expressed his admiration for Goldman in an October 2017 New York Magazine article titled "The 100 Best Screenwriters of All Time." Here Roth writes, "The man whose work made the biggest impression on me, because of his audacious originality, his understanding of social mores, his ironic sense of humor, and his outright anger at being human, and all with his soft spoken grace and eloquent simplicity is Bo Goldman. This degenerate horse player of a man lived his life like he lived his politics, never shying from a fight. His words were silk, never wasted or misplaced, and he would throw away what others would consider glorious and did it all without a moment’s fanfare.”[15]


Filmography



Films


YearFilmCreditNotes
1962 The Paradine Case Screenplay By Based on the novel The Paradine Case by Robert Hichens
1972 When the Legends Die Soundtrack Wrote lyrics to "When You Speak to the Kids", "The Riderless Wagon", and "Summer Storm".
1975 One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest Screenplay By Based on the novel One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey

Co-Wrote Screenplay with Lawrence Hauben

1979 The Rose Screenplay By Co-Wrote Screenplay with Bill Kerby
1980 Melvin and Howard Written By
1981 Ragtime Screenplay By (Uncredited) Uncredited Revision
1982 Shoot the Moon Written By
1984 Swing Shift Screenplay By (Uncredited) Uncredited Revision
The Flamingo Kid Screenplay By (Uncredited) Uncredited Revision
1988 Little Nikita Screenplay By Co-Wrote Screenplay with John Hill
1990 Dick Tracy Screenplay By (Uncredited) Uncredited Revision
1992 Scent of a Woman Screenplay By
1996 City Hall Screenplay By Co-Wrote Screenplay with Ken Lipper, Paul Schrader, and Nicholas Pileggi.
1998 Meet Joe Black Screenplay By Co-Wrote Screenplay with Ron Osborn, Jeff Reno, and Kevin Wade
2000 The Perfect Storm Screenplay By (Uncredited) Uncredited Revision
2016 Rules Don't Apply Story By Co-Wrote story with Warren Beatty

Television


YearTV SeriesCreditNotes
1948 The Philco Television Playhouse Associate Producer
1956-59 Playhouse 90 Writer, Associate Producer
1957 The Seven Lively Arts Producer
1961 ABC Close-Up! Producer 1 Episode
1961-62 Theatre '62 Writer 2 Episodes
1963 NBC Children's Theatre Writer 1 Episode
1964 The Defenders Writer 1 Episode
1974 Great Performances Producer 2 Episodes

Awards


Academy Awards
Preceded by Best Adapted Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1976
for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Succeeded by
Golden Globes
Preceded by Best Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1976
for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Succeeded by
Writers Guild of America Awards
Preceded by Best Screenplay – Adapted
Bo Goldman

1976
for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Succeeded by
New York Film Critics Circle Awards
Preceded by Best Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1980
for Melvin and Howard
Succeeded by
National Society of Film Critics Awards
Preceded by Best Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1981
for Melvin and Howard
Succeeded by
Boston Society of Film Critics
Preceded by
None
Best Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1980
for Melvin and Howard
Succeeded by
Wallace Shawn and Andre Gregory
for My Dinner with Andre
Writers Guild of America Awards
Preceded by Best Screenplay – Original
Bo Goldman

1981
for Melvin and Howard
Succeeded by
Academy Awards
Preceded by Best Original Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1981
for Melvin and Howard
Succeeded by
Golden Globes
Preceded by
Callie Khouri
for Thelma & Louise
Best Screenplay
Bo Goldman

1993
for Scent of a Woman
Succeeded by
Writers Guild of America
Preceded by Laurel Award for Screenwriting Achievement
Bo Goldman

1998
Given to a writer who has consistently
"advanced the art form"
Succeeded by

References


  1. Bernard Weinraub (25 February 1993), "A Screenwriter Profits From His Years of Pain", The New York Times. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  2. "Bo Goldman Biography (1932-)".
  3. Calder, Lendol (22 February 1999). Financing the American Dream. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691058276.
  4. Harris, Michael. The Atomic Times: My H-Bomb Year at the Pacific Proving Ground.
  5. "Legendary Screenwriter Bo Goldman discusses his craft".
  6. Weinraub, Bernard (February 25, 1993). "A Screenwriter Profits From His Years of Pain". The New York Times.
  7. "Amy Goldman". 17 January 2018.
  8. Kael, Pauline (January 18, 1982). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker.
  9. Denby, David (January 1982). "Cinema Reviews". New York Magazine.
  10. Edelstein, David (January 1982). "Shoot the Moon". New York Post.
  11. Willens, Michele (September 13, 1998). "The New Season/Film: Looking Ahead; Awaiting Kubrick, Malick, 'Mail'". The New York Times.
  12. Maslin, Janet (December 23, 1992). "A Lust For Life". The New York Times.
  13. Ebert, Roger (December 23, 1992). "Scent of a Woman". Chicago Sun-Times.
  14. Turan, Kenneth (November 13, 1998). "Dead Man Goes a-Courtin = Los Angeles Times".
  15. "The 100 Best Screenwriters of All Time". New York Magazine. October 2, 2017. Archived from the original on January 3, 2018. Retrieved January 3, 2018.



На других языках


[de] Bo Goldman

Robert „Bo“ Goldman (* 10. September 1932 in New York City) ist ein US-amerikanischer Drehbuchautor.
- [en] Bo Goldman

[ru] Голдман, Бо

Роберт (Бо) Голдман (англ. Robert "Bo" Goldman; род. 10 сентября 1932[1][2], Нью-Йорк, Нью-Йорк) — американский писатель, бродвейский драматург и сценарист. Лауреат двух премий «Оскар» из трёх номинаций.



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