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Richard Elfman PROFILE The son of schoolteachers, Richard Elfman grew up in the vibrant, ethnic, Crenshaw district of inner city Los Angeles. At Dorsey High School he began a lifelong affair with Afro-Latin percussion music. And boxing. (Although bespectacled younger brother, DANNY ELFMAN, preferred the violin to violence.) He went on to Paris, eventually followed by brother Danny, and toured extensively with the avante guard theater troupe, Grand Magic Circus. Richard's French mentor, Jerome Savary, later became the director of the French National Theater. Richard returned to Los Angeles with MARIE-PASCALE ELFMAN and founded the original Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo. The group ultimately morphed into the rock band, Oingo Boingo. Richard has two sons; LOUIS ELFMAN, a hip DJ and budding writer and BODHI
ELFMAN, an extraordinary actor and budding writer/director (he's seen
in films and TV all the time). You might have also heard a bit about his
talented wife, the sweet, wacky, wonderful JENNA ELFMAN. His mother, CLARE
(AKA Blossom) ELFMAN, after a long teaching career, went on to publish
thirteen novels and win an Emmy. Her recent book, "The Case of the
Pederast's Wife," is a historical fantasy about Constance and Oscar
Wilde and will soon be produced as a play. Richard's mother-dearest is
on fire with new projects and serves as his story editor and often collaborator.
Q: Were there any cultural influences at the time that stick out in your mind? RE: I think I was more
rooted in the artistic past than the time period of the film: Duke Ellington,
Cab Calloway, Josephine Baker, and also dreaming of an avant guard future
where my brother, Danny Elfman, was musical king of truly original compositions.
There were very little contemporary influences, however. My rule with
the Mystic Knights was nothing contemporary. Either great recreations
of past art that people Q: Were there any mind altering drugs that did the trick? RE: Damn! I have been to city after city this last year, across the country, around the world--London, Barcelona--invited to speak at theaters screening "Forbidden Zone," and someone usually asks that question. Nope. No drugs for this Mystic Knight. I am, and was at the time of making "Forbidden Zone," a Scientologist--and we don't take drugs. I am not a prude, or a defender of the "War on Drugs," or anything like that. I smoke cigars and enjoy some fine red wine with weekend dinners, etc., but I believe that true creativity, however whacky, crazy, off-the-wall, whatever, is available without chemical influences. If anything, the effect of drugs hinders one's ability to take the necessary practical steps to formulate and present the work to others--or, in other words, do the things one has to do to get the film made. I get my absolute wildest creative ideas while listening to music. (And if you think "Forbidden Zone" is far out, just wait until you see what's coming!) Q: Tell me any funny stories that come to mind when you were making "Modern Vampires." Any run-ins with actors? Any untimely deaths? RE: We used real vampires and many people died in the making of the film. (Just joking.)
So I confronted the four guys. They said they didn't like how black people
were being portrayed (like they would screw anything). I started jumping
up and down about how they all read the script a month earlier when they
auditioned, that nothing in the film was racist as ALL the characters,
white and black, behaved in the same amoral manner and, if anything, the
white people behaved worse than the black people. One of the mutineers
said that as I was white, what did I know about being black? I countered
angrily that I wasn't white, I was a red nigger, grew up in Crenshaw and
could kick any one of their asses--right there, right now! (True story,
and I was a semi-pro boxer for many years.) Luckily, I remembered that
one of the group was a former marine, and I quickly qualified my remark
that I'd kick anyone's ass...except Cedric. Anyway, one of the guys was
a stand-up comic. We talked censorship, how he reacted to political correctness,
use of the "N" word, which offends some blacks yet others use
it regularly, etc. He didn't listen to the criticism and used the "N"
word regularly in his act. I said that about one in five people are anti-
social, maybe 2 1/2% of the population outright suppressive--particularly
to Art and artists. Was I, were we, going to censor ourselves, censor
Art to avoid pissing off a few assholes? Hell no. We all hugged and the
guys shot the scene with gusto and bravado. Whew!!! (By the way, when
the film screens on TV they always cut out that seen and no one knows
how the gang bangers turned into vampires, so try and watch it Q: What were your best/worst experiences making "Streets of Rage"? What was it like working with Mimi Lesseos?
So Mimi is a sexy, beautiful... real life killer...with a jealous, white-hot Latina temper to boot. It was rumored that she and Sumatra were involved together romantically and fought like cats and dogs on the set. Sumatra, purportedly a gentleman, would never strike a woman, even if he was spitting out his own teeth, which was almost the case on a regular basis. Ah, film making!
Q: What were your best/worst experiences making "Shrunken Heads"? Any crazy stories?
Q: How did you end up collaborating with Daniel on "Date or Disaster"? Was it a mutual music related background? RE: Daniel is an old friend. He actually developed the film with a different director, who left for another job, and took over on day two. I am planning a new project with Daniel called "Brave New Rosenberg", along with Mexican star Jaime Aymerich and a bunch of super models. Q: What has happened with "Date or Disaster"? Was there video distribution? RE: Because of the deal that Daniel cut with the Screen Actors Guild, it can only be shown over the internet. Q: What are your upcoming projects? RE: "Brave New Rosenberg", a whacky story of two private eyes in East L.A. who chase a girl into another dimension. Lots of music, Crouching Tiger/Hidden Stooges special effect fights. It will be a low budget masterpiece and a lot of fun. Then there is "Trio", a higher budgeted film, kind of in the Stephen King vibe, about three old men who acquire supernatural powers and all hell breaks loose. Q: Tell us about the magazine you are editing. Any projects you are excited about/working on that are not feature films?
Q: What is some advice you would give to would-be horror/B-Movie directors? Producers? How do you come up with the money? Get a film produced? Distributed?
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