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A quotation from Annie Proulx?
Jeff Wrangler:
Friends,
I've been searching through my files, hard copy and electronic, trying to find a particular quotation from Annie Proulx. She is said to have said that she would not write a sequel to Brokeback Mountain because Jack is dead, and you can't have Ennis without Jack.
I thought I had the source of that quotation somewhere, but I cannot find it to save my soul. Can anyone help me out?
Much obliged, pardners! ;D
moremojo:
I know nothing about the sequel reference, but I believe it is in the "Getting Movied" (correct title?) essay, in the STS publication, where she states that you can't have Ennis without Jack. Do you remember both references appearing in the same statement?
Edit: I amended "Getting Storied" to what I believe to be the correct "Getting Movied" (sorry, don't have the book in front of me).
Jeff Wrangler:
Thanks, Scott!
That's one place I haven't checked, because I didn't think that's where it was, but my memory isn't the best. I know that in "Getting Movied" she discusses the responses she's received to the story, and her own response to seeing the movie, but I was thinking she had made the comment in an interview, or something.
Also possible my memory is confounding two separate statements.
Anyone else?
Jeff
opinionista:
Here it is Jeff:
Recently posted to the magazine's website: Annie Proulx's October 13, 1997, short story, which inspired the film. (Update: The magazine's taken down the link. Copyright conflicts? Profits to be generated from sales of the story-to-screenplay mini-book? But a commenter saved the day—the link above is now to Outspoken Clothing, which is bravely hosting the story itself. Thanks, commenter and host!) Proulx talks about writing it in the L.A. Times:
Proulx, 70, in town recently for the premiere of Ang Lee's film adaptation of "Brokeback Mountain," says that while she was "blown away" by the movie, she doesn't welcome the return of Ennis and Jack to the forefront of her consciousness.
"Put yourself in my place," the author says. "An elderly, white, straight female, trying to write about two 19-year-old gay kids in 1963. What kind of imaginative leap do you think was necessary? Profound, extreme, large. To get into those guys' heads and actions took a lot of 16-hour days, and never thinking about anything else and living a zombie life. That's what I had to do. I really needed an exorcist to get rid of those characters. And they roared back when I saw the film."
The story bubbled forth from "years and years of observation and subliminal taking in of rural homophobia," says Proulx, whose Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, "The Shipping News," was also adapted for the screen. She remembers the moment when those years of observed hatred began taking form. It was 1995 and Proulx, who lives in Wyoming, visited a crowded bar near the Montana border. The place was rowdy and packed with attractive women, everyone was drinking, and the energy was high.
"There was the smell of sex in the air," Proulx remembers. "But here was this old shabby-looking guy…. watching the guys playing pool. He had a raw hunger in his eyes that made me wonder if he were country gay. I wondered, 'What would've he been like when he was younger?' Then he disappeared, and in his place appeared Ennis. And then Jack. You can't have Ennis without Jack."
Proulx didn't think her story would ever be published. The material felt too risky; Ennis and Jack express their love with as much physical gusto as any heterosexual couple, and it happens in full view of the reader, without any nervous obfuscation. The backdrop is that wide expansive West that bore forth John Wayne and the Marlboro Man — but here the edges of the mythos fray, and the world becomes chilly and oppressive.
The story was published in the New Yorker magazine in 1997, and screenwriter Diana Ossana read it one night when she couldn't sleep."It just floored me," Ossana says, speaking after a screening of "Brokeback Mountain." She ran downstairs to show it to her writing partner, who happens to be Larry McMurtry ("The Last Picture Show," "Lonesome Dove") and suggested they turn it into a screenplay.
...
The movie, like the story, does not pull any punches. The sex is just as graphic, the critique of rural homophobia just as angst-ridden and raw. Proulx doesn't pretend to know how the movie will play with audiences, but she likes that her message will be broadcast through such a popular medium.
"There are a lot of people who see movies who do not read," Proulx says. "It used to be that writing and architecture were the main carriers, permanent carriers, of culture and civilization. Now you have to add film to that list, because film is the vehicle of cultural transmission of our time. It would be insane to say otherwise, to say that the book is still the thing. It isn't."
In the Southern Voice, more about the hard ride between story and screenplay:
“I recognized immediately that this was a story that was a work of genius,” says McMurtry...“And I wondered, why didn’t I write it? I’ve been there in the West my whole life.”
Before the end of the year, the two had optioned Proulx’s short story with their own money, but waited in vain as directors and stars came and went on the project. Gay filmmaker Gus Van Sant was attached for a while, as was fellow gay auteur Joel Schumacher.
Actors who saw the screenplay would tell Ossana it was the most beautiful script that they’d ever read but then, a few months later, would strangely distance themselves from the project.... Continued.
http://emdashes.blogspot.com/2005/12/original-brokeback-mountain-online.html
Jeff Wrangler:
Thanks, Natali!
You're a peach! ;D :-*
Jeff
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