Great Wounded Fellow

Frank Pierson's King of the Gypsies, which is out today on DVD, is a fairly difficult film to sit through. It's a stab at trying to give a Godfather-like treatment to gypsy culture, and there's just no believing it. While it "isn't the worst film of the year," said N.Y. Times critic Vincent Canby in his 12.20.78 review, "the gypsies should sue."


Degraded Polaroid photo of King of the Gypsies star Sterling Hayden and journalist during filming in late '77 (or was it early '78?) at Manhattan's Plaza hotel.

But the film carries a special memory for me, however, as I managed an interview with star Sterling Hayden during filming in Manhattan in late '77. Hayden, who lived in my home town of Wilton, Connecticut, and whom I knew faintly because of this, was the first "name" guy I ever sat down with for a piece.

A good actor but an even better writer, eloquent and blustery, and a "bothered" malcontent from way back, Hayden -- 62 at the time -- was a tall, bearded Zeus-like figure, and one of the first bohemian-minded older guys I'd had the pleasure of slightly knowing.

He liked being the ornery old rebel, and was fairly open to hanging with younger fans like myself. I visited his Wilton home two or three times to listen and learn and shoot the shit. (It helped that I knew all of his films, and had strong opinions about his best performances.) I never got high with Hayden, but I knew a couple of Wilton guys who told me they did. Hash, they said.

Hayden had some legendary problems with the bottle. He wasn't all that different from Roger Wade, the alcoholic writer he portrayed in Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye. (Hayden was less bitter.) He would do rehab and fasting from time to time. I remember him saying once that fasting "is the precise opposite of debauch...the hard thing is to hold that middle ground, hold that middle ground."


My King of the Gypsies interview with Hayden took place in a hotel room at the Plaza hotel, where filming was happening that day. It was sometime in the mid-afternoon, and I remember that he downed a couple of large glasses of Johnnie Walker Red over a two hour period. Hayden wasn't much of a give-and-taker. He was the Great Man who'd been through it all, knew it all and had a lot to say. It was all about feeding him set-up lines and and letting nature takes its course.

He told me that producer Dino de Laurentiis had given him a copy of Lorenzo Semple, Jr.'s script of Hurricane, in hopes that Hayden would agree to costar. When De Laurentiis asked what he thought, Hayden said (or so he told me), "I gotta tell ya -- I think it's crap!" Bristling, De Laurentiis replied, "You're the first person who's said that!" A day or two later Hayden talked to a De Laurentiis development guy who said, "Naahh...you're not the first."

The best moment of our interview happened when Hayden began speaking of his farmer role in Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900. He said that Bertolucci had let him write his own dialogue, and was proud of a line he'd written for his death scene. I knew it and said it before he did -- "I've always loved the wind." Talk about a bonding moment.

What's With S.D.?<< previous | next >>The Women

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on June 3, 2008 at 11:44 AM

comment #1

Rich S. Author Profile Page says ...

Why Jeffrey, you look positively dashing!

Funny you should mention Roger Wade, because that's the first thing I thought of when I saw that photo. And then you go on to describe the "old fashioned drinking party" you had with him. Good stuff from the HE archives.

Posted by Rich S. Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 1:35 PM

comment #2

Major Calloway Author Profile Page says ...

So coy. But it is a nice picture.

Posted by Major Calloway Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 1:36 PM

comment #3

BurmaShave Author Profile Page says ...

Awesome. Why I come here.

Posted by BurmaShave Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 1:36 PM

comment #4

Major Calloway Author Profile Page says ...

Dammit, you beat me!

Posted by Major Calloway Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 1:37 PM

comment #5

Major Calloway Author Profile Page says ...

I never got high with Hayden

But, alas, it's within the realm of possibility that you could have....

Posted by Major Calloway Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 2:18 PM

comment #6

nemo Author Profile Page says ...

The cracks make that photo look like an old painting. A young Renaissance prince meets an Old Testament prophet wearing Lyndon Johnson's hat.

Posted by nemo Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 2:19 PM

comment #7

Karsten Author Profile Page says ...

What Burma said; these things are such GREAT stuff. More, Jeff.. more.

Posted by Karsten Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 2:29 PM

comment #8

Cadavra Author Profile Page says ...

GYPSIES is one of my favorite movies of the 70s; not only is it NOT a chore to sit through, but I gain more from it with each viewing, and I'm thrilled I can finally give my worn-out 16mm print a well-deserved funeral.

Pierson has always been amused by my affection for it. I once dug up a lobby card and asked him to inscribe it. He wrote, "To Mike, the last surviving fan of 'King of the Gypsies.'"

Posted by Cadavra Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 2:37 PM

comment #9

Luke Y. Thompson Author Profile Page says ...

Young Wells appears to have something of a Mitchum-like quality to him.

Posted by Luke Y. Thompson Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 2:56 PM

comment #10

p.Vice Author Profile Page says ...

That aside about 1900 pretty much explains why the movie is such a huge piece of shit.

Posted by p.Vice Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 3:28 PM

comment #11

Movie fan09 Author Profile Page says ...

Posted by LYT at June 3, 2008 02:56 PM

Young Wells appears to have something of a Mitchum-like quality to him.

something i've always said.

Posted by Movie fan09 Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 8:29 PM

comment #12

The Winchester Author Profile Page says ...

Agree with the "renaissance-like" quality of the photo. Very classy.

But what I really want to know is what's the thread count on that jacket?

Posted by The Winchester Author Profile Page at June 3, 2008 10:57 PM

comment #13

Terry McCarty Author Profile Page says ...

Re HURRICANE:
For anyone who doesn't know the film, Hayden was likely courted for the role Jason Robards played--the evil patriarch with incestuous thoughts about daughter Mia Farrow--in love with native Dayton Ka'ne (who starred in one other DeLaurentiis extravaganza called, if I remember correctly, BEYOND THE REEF).

Posted by Terry McCarty Author Profile Page at June 4, 2008 12:59 PM

comment #14

jany Author Profile Page says ...

Si vous etes interesses par le dossier, ou desirez en savoir plus, contactez-moi par mail, et je vous mettrai en contact.
Best regards,Jane, CEO of high availability solutions

Posted by jany Author Profile Page at April 22, 2011 6:08 AM

Leave a comment