12A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 4, 1999 Writer Ridley reaches screen with 'Three Kings' Los Angeles Times John Ridley says listening is a key to writing. With a new TV show, third novel and much-anticipated film, his hearing must be acute. His screenplay about the Persian Gulf War is now the basis for the Warner Bros. movie "Three Kings," starring George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg and Ice Cube, which opens Friday. He also is a supervising producer on "Third Watch," the new NBC drama exploring the gritty world of big-city paramedics, police and fire- fighters. And Knopf has just published his third novel, "Everybody Smokes in Hell," and promptly dispatched him on a cross-country book tour. But Ridley, a blossoming Hollywood success story if there ever was one, isn't likely to be found hanging out at showy Hollywood eateries. Look for him at Norm's, a coffee shop chain featuring steak and eggs. Like all his favorite haunts, Norm's is just the kind of place on the fringes of Tinseltown where a writer can go to observe ordinary people and listen. Always listen. "If you want to be a writer," Ridley explains, "you've got to be a listener first." At 33, the Wisconsin-born Ridley is proof that show business success does not always occur overnight. In Ridley's case, it has been a gradual yet steady ascent stretching back more than a decade, from the days he performed in small New York night- clubs as a stand-up comedian, to Hollywood TV and film writer, to novelist. Piece by piece, year after year, his resume has grown until now, he believes, his writing is beginning to have an impact, which he hopes will showcase African Americans. "The lead characters of all my books have been black," Ridley says. In "Third Watch," he points out, the ensemble cast includes whites, blacks, Latinos and women. And, in "Three Kings," although director David. O. Russell changed the lead character from black to white in cast- ing Clooney, he kept an African American (Ice Cube) in one of the lead roles. "Three Kings" is based on a -script Ridley wrote in the mid-1990s called "Spoils of War." The story, which takes place during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, revolves around some American GIs who find a map that leads them to a treasure cache in Iraq. Although the outlines of the story are the same, Ridley says writer- director David O. Russell made sig- nificant changes in the final script. "He has made it more of a political story," Ridley says. "More about America's role in the war." Ridley, receives a "story by" and a co-pro- ducer credit on the film. While the movie was going for- ward, Ridley remained busy in televi- sion. Last year, he was a writer on the NBC series "Trinity." While the show was short-lived, it brought him in contact with John Wells and Ed Bernero, who asked him to work on their latest creation, "Third Watch." "They're both good guys, bright guys," Ridley says. "I didn't know if I would work in television this year or not, now with the movies and stuff, but they called me up and it sounded exciting. It has turned out great." Yes, he understands that Hollywood is, first and foremost, an industry about commerce so any pro- ject has to be one that can make money, but the fun is the process of creating. "I really like to create," he says. "I enjoy writing. I would like to do things that are a bit different, things like writing a movie and making sure that the lead character is a black guy." But achieving his goals has required patience. A native of Milwaukee, Ridley knew early on that he wanted to expand his horizons. He moved to New York with a dream of becoming a stand-up comedian. Meanwhile, he had enrolled at New York University, majoring in, of all things, East Asian studies. "In the '80s, everybody was afraid of Japan," he recalls. "I was very fond of the culture and the people were very interesting." While living in Queens, he would stop in at a dojo (a martial arts gym) a block away. "When you are doing stand-up, you have nothing to do all day," he says. "You go out at night, tell jokes for 20 minutes, and that is your day. I would spend all day with guys who took classes." Ridley eventually became so pro- ficient in martial arts that he joined a karate team, competed in tourna- ments and rose to the level of third- degree brown belt in "shotokan" karate (Okinawan karate). He even learned Japanese and lived for a time in Japan. Back in the United States, he con- tinued to pursue a career in stand-up, eventually landing spots on "The Late Show With David Letterman" and "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno." In 1990, he moved from New York to Los Angeles, but soon found him- self writing comedy on the side. He not only wrote for such sitcoms as "Martin," "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" and "The John Larroquette Show," but was hired to do "punch-up work" on numerous films . Meanwhile, Ridley also found time to work on novels. His first book was called "Stray Dogs," which became the basis of Oliver Stone's 1997 film, "U Turn." Critics said his second novel, "Love Is a Racket," had all the elements of "classic noir." In his latest novel, "Everybody Smokes in Hell," Ridley uses Hollywood as the backdrop as he tells the story of Paris Scott, a night clerk in a scuzzy convenience store, who comes into possession of the last musical works of a grunge band singer just before the star commits suicide. Problems arise, however, when he tries to peddle the tape for $1 million and discovers that others would rather kill for it. "It's a 'story about the American work ethic," Ridley says. "It's about a guy who has a lot of ideas and big dreams, but he doesn't have the capacity to fulfill them." The characters that fascinate Ridley most are not your stereotypi- cal Hollywood power players -- the arrogant directors, the egomaniacal stars, the screaming studio execu- tives. Instead, Ridley says, he is drawn to the "down-and-out fringe characters" who are so consumed with Hollywood's lure of riches and fame that they fail to see behind the curtain: so many hollow souls, ruined marriages and lives tortured by addiction. "You're always reading about peo- ple in Hollywood who are divorced or in rehab or whatever," he says. "Yet, people say, 'If only I could get in Hollywood, wouldn't life be great?' ... (But) there is nothing wrong with being a normal American." 5 Courtesy of Gramercy Pictur(-s Illeana Douglas portrays a prostitute In "Action," a hypnotist In "Stir of Echoes" and a sultry teacher in "Happy, Texas." Acton -oriented Douga delgt witU new roles n Hilywood Los Angeles Tunes Illeana Douglas sat in the passenger seat of a reporter's Isuzu Rodeo with a neap of Hollywood in her lap and mis- chief in her smile. The 34-year-old actress had agreed to let a stranger in on one of her favorite pastimes - ogling celebrities' houses - and she had come prepared: Two dog-eared guidebooks, marked with scribbles and yellow Post-it notes, were within easy reach. "My friend found it first. He showed me the place and I said, 'She does not live there.' Then we drove by and I said, 'Oh, my God, it's her!' "Douglas said excitedly as she spotted the stuccoed bungalow of a famed actress (whose name Douglas asked to omit to protect the star's privacy). "Now, I drive by all the time. It gives you a little adrenaline boost." Douglas paused for a moment, sud- denly aware of how odd it must seem for one recognizable actress to be spying on another. " 'Why do you like to drive by famous people when you are a famous person ?' That would be the obvious question," said the veteran of more than 20 films. She had an answer: "I don't consider myself to be a famous person, I guess." Douglas' modest self-appraisal is part of what has made her best roles so mem- orable. Whether playing Robert De Niro's most scarred victim (he bit her cheek) in Martin Scorsese's "Cape Fear" (1991), Matt Dillon's suspicious, figure- skating older sister in Gus Van Sant's "To Die For" (1995), or her first leading role (as a songwriter) in Allison Anders' "Grace of My Heart" (1996), the emer- ald-eyed, whippet-thin Douglas brings a frank vulnerability to the screen. But with September's launch of "Action," Fox TV's acidic comedy about Hollywood in which Douglas and Jay Mohr star, the self-effacing actress may have to update her self-image. If the measure of her fame to date has been, as she says, "a guy coming up who's had eight beers and says, 'You're an actress, right?' " Douglas now seems poised to become a real star, the kind whose house she herself might want to visit. Pretty in an off-centered way, Douglas exudes both a shy elegance and a goofy charm (think Anjelica Huston crossed with Lucille Ball).Believable playing both losers and winners, sex sirens and down-and-outers, she looks familiar. And yet there's a feeling that you can't quite place her. "There is a very off-kilter aspect to her - a sensuality but without an overt sex- uality," said Chris Thompson, the writer and executive producer of "Action," who said he envisioned Douglas when he cre- ated the role of Wendy Ward, a former child star turned high-class prostitute turned movie executive. "She can be world-weary without being cynical. She manages to portray a character who has had a rugged road, but does not feel sorry for herself. She has a quirky sani- ty." Lately, she's also had a lot of work. In addition to her role in "Action," Douglas can be seen on the big screen playing a perpetually stoned hypnotist (opposite Kevin Bacon) in Artisan Entertainment's spooky "Stir of Echoes." This mdonth, Douglas appears as a Texas schoolmarm in Miramax's "Happy, Texas." Upcoming feature projects include "The Last Treasure," a romantic comedy opposite Denis Leary and directed by Tom DiCillo. In show business, this is what's known as range. In "Action," she's a sleek, sexy, seen-it-all Hollywood casualty - the kind of woman who can be trusted to tell you the truth, even as she's stealing your Rolex. In "Happy, Texas," she's a small- town, big-haired naif - the type who might actually fall for an escaped convict (Steve Zahn) who is passing himself off as a gay beauty pageant coordinator. "Sometimes people will say to me, 'Why do you seem so happy?' But I can't believe I'm getting to do this," Douglas said during a two-hour, on-the- road interview that took place all over Hollywood. "I'm so consciously appre- ciative of the fact that I've managed to make a living in this business. Wen I talk to young actors, I say it's about stamina. If you're the last person standing, you will be successful." What is most fun about Douglas in person is exactly what seems to make her perfect for her role in "Action," which depicts movie industry players as nothing short of ruthless. Though she has Hollywood roots (she is the granddaughter of Helen Gahagan, star of "She," and the late Melvyn Douglas, who won an Oscar for his supporting role in "Hud" ), she has an outsider's take on the movie business that mixes genuine enthusiasm for its magic with a clear-eyed comprehension of its brutal customs. But this is a woman who has wit- nessed how mean modern Hollywood can be, particularly to female actresses above the age of 22. ("I call it the 'Logan's Run' theory: When you're 30, they try to kill you.") This is a woman who has auditioned in vain for a peanut butter commercial ("I asked them, 'How can I say, "Mmm-mmm, peanutty!" if my mouth is full?' ") and who has, on occasion, had trouble paying her bills. "I auditioned once for a (TV series) pilot called 'Incredi-girl' - the story of a girl who plays a superhero, yet her life is not all it's cracked up to be. And for whatever bizarre reason, I made it to the finals," Douglas said, launching light- heartedly into a story so devastating it could easily be an "Action" subplot. "They'd flown me out from New York, and afterwards, they drove me back to the hotel and there was a message wait- ing for me: 'So-and-so from Universal called. Sorry, it's not going to work out.' They didn't even tell me directly! The operator delivered the news. "The next thing I knew I got a call say- ing, 'You're going to have to check out of the hotel within the hour.' I remember being so crushed that I didn't get the worst pilot ever written. Like, 'What do you mean they don't want me for Incredi-girl? I am lncredi-girl!' " shi said, her eyes .huge with mock outrage. "Your standards get lower and lower, from a high of''ll never do TV' to a low point where you're auditioning for one scene on 'Blossom' and saying, 'Please! I have to pay my rent!'" Which helps explain, in a roundabout way, how Douglas came to be an expert in Hollywood landmarks. Although until recently her permanent residence was i New York (she moved to Los Angeles year ago after marrying producer Jonathan Axelrod), she has lived here off and on in a series of what she calls "hor- rible studio apartments with no bedding and a large TV and a bottle of Absolut Kurant vodka and a phone I'm desper- ately holding onto, hoping it will ring." Born in Massachusetts, Douglas grew up in Connecticut in a "kind of hippie- esque family. Very 'Free to Be, You an Me,' " she says. The youngest of threw kids, Douglas says she saw movies as the glue that bound her family together, even after her parents divorced. She moved to New York at 18 to study acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Art and the Neighborhood Playhouse. Five years later, in 1988, a tongue-in-cheek list of her attributes on her resume - "Great legs, bloodcur- dling screams" - prompted a phone cal from Scorsese, who needed someone t shriek in "The Last Temptation of Christ." The next year, she had her first on-screen acting role in Scorsese's seg- ment of "New York Stories" and began what would be an eight-year romance with the director. Lately, Douglas has begun sounding a lot like her TV character - or maybe she always sounded this way.,Those who have seen "Boy Crazy, Girl Crazier," a short film she wrote and directed i'. 1995, say it echoes "Action" in its depic- tion of two aspiring actors who are will- ing to sell each other out (and far worse) in order to snare a part in a film. "(When you're working), acting is the easiest thing in the world. How hard can it be? You have 100 people looking at you. You're totally the center of attention. You ask for a latte and someone hands it to you," she said as the SUV idled in front of a shabby-looking apartme4l building that was briefly the residence of Elizabeth Short, nicknamed the "Black Dahlia." Douglas looked up at a banner draped over the building's entrance - "Move-In Special: $300!"- and won- dered how many aspiring actors had lived there. *1 $ 0 Earn $10 in a 1 hour computer-mediated negotiation experiment that is being held in the business school in the early Fall. Days: Friday, Saturday, or Sunday Times: 1:00, 2:30, and 4:00 PM. To be included in the pool of possible subjects, register at: http://www.umich.edu/-cisdept/DDM To participate, you 18 and a Michigan must be over the age of Student. I 0 E lm F i co-author of Chicken Soup For The College Soul Get your copy of the book autographed. Read Daily Arts. Write for Daily Arts. Recycle Daily Arts. Or find it online. www.mic higandaily. com I) 11 11 INT. 7:0 I m U w - - 'n~r i .7'"' I