Hollywood Success? It's Easy ... Just Get Altman to Hire You

Hollywood Success? It's Easy ... Just Get Altman to Hire You

Published: September 01, 2009 @ 11:32 am
Print this page
By Julian Fellowes (to Eric Estrin)

When Julian Fellowes signed on to write the “Gosford Park” script that later won him an Academy Award, it was actually his second Hollywood breakthrough, his first one coming as an actor some 20 years earlier. He built on his acting success in the U.S. and his native Britain to become a successful producer, director and novelist and also wrote the book for the Broadway musical adaptation of “Mary Poppins.”

 

Fellowes, whose latest novel, “Past Imperfect,” is being published this week in the U.S., spoke with Eric Estrin about a turning point in Universal’s black tower, the strength of Robert Altman and how to avoid suicide.

 

 

After I left drama school I went into rep, which in those days everyone did. And then I went into the West End of London, in a comedy that became a hit. And then I did another one, and I did an Alan Ayckbourn and I did a Noel Coward revival. For about six years, I suppose I was kind of in the West End.

 

Then I had one of those moments where I thought, This isn’t a bad career, but it’s just not the career I want. And I had the opportunity to get a green card, which was very difficult then, and I thought, I’m going to do this -- I’m going to go out to L.A.

 

That was in the early ‘80s. I lived in Los Angeles for two or three years, and although it wasn’t a triumph career-wise, I did a couple of TV movies with Lynda Carter and various other things. Then I had this kind of Hollywood moment when Herve Villechaize was leaving “Fantasy Island” and they decided to replace him with a young English valet. I went through endless meetings trying to get the part.

 

I even made it to the top of the black tower at Universal, to the point where they asked would I be prepared to sign a seven-year contract. I didn’t get the part -- but it was an eye-opener. Because I NEARLY got it, I had to address whether I really wanted it.

 

I realized I didn’t want to be stuck doing a kind of middlebrow thing, I just didn’t. I wanted to get more into feature films and if I did television I wanted it to be more less formulaic. It generated in me a passionate ambition to get back and make my career do what I wanted.

 

You know, one of the things about being an actor is you’re very passive all the time. You sit there by the telephone waiting for it to ring, but you can’t make it ring. And suddenly I became sort of angry about that, and I decided to start producing as well as acting. I do feel that was the moment of my life when I took back the reins instead of just being on a toboggan going downhill.

 

I started writing film scripts, and one of them was for Bob Balaban, the actor-producer --an adaptation of a novel by Trollope called “The Eustace Diamonds.”

Tags: Gosford Park, Julian Fellowes, Movies, Robert Altman
Sign Up For First Take

Get Our Daily Email, and Receive Invitations to Our Screenings Series

Start your day with all of the news worth knowing

What's First Take?

Transformer Sound

Description

Eric Estrin has covered Hollywood for People, TV Guide, Television Week and Los Angeles Magazine, where he was contributing editor and TV critic.  He also has written episodes of many shows, including Cagney & Lacey, Miami Vice, Hercules and Outer Limits. He created the Script Project for LA Observed.

Subscribe to Hollywood Breakthrough
Most Popular
Wrap Tweets