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Ronald Jay Bass (born March 26, 1942), sometimes credited as Ron Bass, is an American screenwriter and film producer. He won an Academy Award for writing the screenplay for Barry Levinson's film Rain Man, and films that Bass is associated with are regularly nominated for multiple motion picture awards. His films have grossed over $2 billion.[1][2]

Ronald Bass
Born
Ronald Jay Bass

(1942-03-26) March 26, 1942 (age 80)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationScreenwriter, film producer
Notable workRain Man
AwardsAcademy Award for Best Original Screenplay
Rain Man (1988)

Life and career


Bass was born in Los Angeles, California. From the age of 3 to 11, Bass was afflicted with an undiagnosed condition that kept him bedridden. His symptoms included respiratory problems and stomach pains with high fevers and nausea. It was during this illness, at age six, that Bass is said to have started writing.

During his teens, Bass began work on a novel, which he entitled Voleur. He completed this work at age 17 and showed it to his English teacher. He took her critique of his first completed project quite hard. She described the writing as very good, but she felt that it was too personal to be published. Bass's response was to later burn his manuscript. Later in life, Bass recalled "it was like the voice of God telling me I didn't have what it takes to be a writer, and I should find something practical to do with my life".[citation needed] Bass would revisit his teenage writings later in life.

Bass entered law studies, first at Stanford, then Yale, and finally at Harvard Law School, where he graduated in 1967 with a degree in law. He seemed quite confident about his future prospects, saying, "When I learned there was such a thing as entertainment law, I thought, 'This is where I belong'".[citation needed] Back in Los Angeles, Bass began a seventeen-year career practicing law in the entertainment business. He was successful, and eventually rose to the level of partner in his law firm.

Bass has worked with his sister Diane Bass, who served as an uncredited technical consultant on the film Rain Man.

As he moved up the career ladder in law, the love of writing that Bass had acquired as a child never left him. He started writing again, usually during the predawn hours before going to work. Writing and working at unusual hours became a lifelong habit of his. In 1974, he began to rework his novel Voleur, apparently from memory, as he had burned the manuscript in a fit of pique when he was 17. In 1978, he completed the work, renaming it The Perfect Thief (ISBN 0-515-04622-1). This was the first of his three published novels. In 1982, Bass published his second novel, Lime's crisis: A novel (ISBN 0-688-01025-3). The Lime referred to in the title is Harry Lime, the central mystery character of the 1949 motion picture The Third Man. On January 1, 1984, his third novel was published, The Emerald Illusion (ISBN 0-688-02622-2). The following year, he wrote the screenplay Code Name: Emerald, based on this novel. It was his debut as a screenwriter with a produced script.[3]

As a screenwriter, Bass is known for successfully working in collaboration with other writers, including Amy Tan on The Joy Luck Club and Al Franken on When a Man Loves a Woman. He also collaborated on the script for the 2022 film The King's Daughter.[citation needed]

Ron is currently under contract to write an original Screenplay entitled "Pegasus" for Pegasus Productions Corp.


"The Ronettes"


A small controversy has arisen over Bass's use of assistants to help him write screenplays. While it is common for screenwriters to employ assistants to help them with research and typing, Bass employs six or seven mostly female assistants that one journalist dubbed "The Ronettes". According to Bass, his assistants help him in research and also in critiquing his scripts. They enable him to write, revise, or polish a comparatively large number of screenplays each year.[4][5]


Works



Novels



Films


Please see the WGA screenwriting credit system for an explanation of the terms story by, screenplay by, and written by. Also note that under the rules of the Writers Guild of America, Bass has not received on-screen credit for every script he has contributed to. It is thought that Bass has helped to write or consulted on more than 100 screenplays (not all of which have necessarily been produced).[citation needed]

FilmYearWriting CreditProducing CreditAlternate Name CreditAdditional Information
Code Name: Emerald1985ScreenplayAdapted from his novel The Emerald Illusion
Gardens of Stone1987Screenplay
Black WidowWritten
Rain Man1988screenplayAcademy Award for Best Original Screenplay
Sleeping with the Enemy1991Screenplay
The Joy Luck Club1993ScreenplayProducer
Reunion1994TeleplayMade-for-television
When a Man Loves a WomanWrittenExecutive producerRole as "AA Man #1"
The Enemy WithinTeleplayas Ron BassMade-for-television
Waiting to Exhale1995ScreenplayExecutive producer
Dangerous MindsScreenplay
My Best Friend's Wedding1997WrittenProducer
Stepmom1998ScreenplayExecutive produceras Ron Bass
What Dreams May ComeScreenplayExecutive produceras Ron Bass
How Stella Got Her Groove BackScreenplayExecutive produceras Ron Bass
Snow Falling on Cedars1999ScreenplayProduceras Ron Bass
EntrapmentStory & screenplayExecutive produceras Ron Bass
Swing VoteWrittenas Ron BassMade-for-television
Invisible ChildStoryas Ron BassMade-for-television
Border LineStory & teleplayas Ron BassMade-for-television
Passion of Mind2000WrittenProduceras Ron Bass
The Lazarus Child2004ScreenplayExecutive producer
Mozart and the Whale2005WrittenProduceras Ron Bass
Amelia2009ScreenplayExecutive producer
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan2011Screenplay
Before We Go2014Screenplay
Persuasion2022Screenplay
Pegasus 2022 Screenplay In Development

References


  1. Friend, Tad (17 January 2000). "The Two-Billion-Dollar Man" via www.newyorker.com.
  2. "The Making of 'Rain Man'". Rolling Stone.
  3. Dutka, Elaine (10 August 1997). "Ron Bass, Screenwriting Machine" via LA Times.
  4. "Bfi | Sight & Sound | Bass Hysteria". Archived from the original on 2006-02-14. Retrieved 2006-02-18.
  5. "So Long, Soho House! Why Hollywood Players Are Working in Offbeat Offices". The Hollywood Reporter.





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