Actor-Director Tony Bill Sails Through Holywood .. . & Guides Dudley Moore & Mary Tyler Moore In 'Six Weeks' HOWARD ROSENBERG BY ERIC ESTRIN ony Bill stands at the helm of his 65-foot sailboat, Olinka, tanned and grinning. The balmy breeze ruffling his hair is also powering his craft gently up the southern California coast. It is late sum- mer, the hottest, smoggiest day of the year in Los Angeles. But here on the water it is cool and clear, and Bill, decked out in white slacks and red shirt, looks as if his only concern in the world is keeping his sails full and enjoying the afternoon sunshine. A Hollywood Renaissance man, Bill, now 42, achieved film success first as an actor (Shampoo, Washington Behind Closed Doors), next as a producer (The Sting, Taxi Driver), and most recently as director of the critically acclaimed My Bodyguard. He has just finished shooting Six Weeks, his second directorial effort (star- ring Dudley Moore and Mary Tyler Moore). Despite all his activity in the film industry, Bill makes it abundantly clear that this is where he feels most comfortable. "I go to work so I can afford the boat - let's put it that way," he says, in a voice flat and calm as to- day's sea. "Sailing is my only habit." If Bill sounds a little different from the typ- ical, "show-business-is-my-life" movie pro- ducer, it's because 20 years after breaking into the business playing Frank Sinatra's little brother in Come Blow Your Horn, he is still, in a sense, the new kid on the block, a Hollywood maverick struggling to do good work outside the competitive confines of the corporate film-making machinery. "My feeling is, you spend so much time not making movies, that that's what you should pay attention to in your life," he explains. Accord- ingly, Bill surrounds himself with good friends and good art, and spends as much time as possible on the water, enjoying an av- erage of two or three long sailboat races each year to places like Honolulu and Puerto Val- larta. It's a schedule that allows him barely enough time to make movies, and certainly not enough to concern himself with the cap- rices of the business, which he considers a dying industry. "I'm totally ignorant about the movie business," he says. "I try not to pay at- tention to anything I have no control over. I just kind of don't go anywhere I can't walk." The lifestyle suits him well. In a business where connections are said to be everything, Bill has gone outside the system to establish a network of his own and based it in Venice Beach, miles away from the Hollywood hustle. He has staffed it with neophytes in need of a break, and risen to the challenge by turning out an unusual ration of successful, quality films. What's more, he's managed to become well liked by the Hollywood establishment while doing so, an unachievable accomplishment for 12 other independent-minded filmmakers who can't seem to get their work distributed to the public. For that, Bill owes something to his boyish charm and even-tempered personality - a combination that makes him a talented deal- maker without causing him to sacrifice his personal vision. But Bill, or TB, as his friends call him, maintains that if he makes it look easy, it's only a little Hollywood sleight-of- hand. When it comes to directing, he insists, any appearance of sophistication on his part stems not from knowledge or skill, but from his ex- pectation of eventual failure. "I feel like I'm condemned for the rest of my life to go to work knowing that I don't know what I'm do- ing," he admits. "I do not have the confidence of the kind of director who says, 'I know just where to put the camera; we don't need to film the rest of that sequence; we're gonna cut over there, and then we're gonna come back over here." Bill had been looking around for a film to direct since My Bodyguard in 1980. There were things about directing he clearly enjoyed - the opportunity to use a synthesis of his outside knowledge, for instance, and his knack for functioning as an inspirational team captain. The script he decided on (by David Seltzer) is the story of a congressional candidate who's drawn to the head of a cosmetics empire after he flips for her young daughter. Bill was attracted to Six Weeks for several reasons, including the chance to work with Dudley Moore in his first dramatic role. Ac- cording to Bill, Moore was everything he ex- pected. "It was as good as it gets," he says. "You show up in the morning, and laugh your ass off all day long while doing good work." And Moore, in turn, praises Bill for creat- ing "an atmosphere where everyone can con- tribute. Tony is very relaxed and he's very willing for actors to do what they want, what they feel comfortable doing. The fact that he doesn't consider himself a strong director is actually much more of a help than a hindr- ance because it allows me to deliver what I can instead of aiming for somebody's image of what I can do." After Bill came aboard, Mary Tyler Moore was signed to play the female lead, adding an- other light-hearted touch to what is essentially a bittersweet family drama. T H E M O V I E M A G A Z I N E