"Beyond the Sea": Bobby Darin Bio Film (aka Walden Robert
Cassotto),
Obsession of Kevin Spacey
Dec 14th, 2004
"Beyond the Sea" is one of the more intriguing films of
the season because
it revolves around Bobby Darin, an obsessive star who,
through sheer force
of will, overcame showbiz conventions to let his voice
sing out even as he
fought against the tick-tick-ticking of life's merciless
deadlines.
Bobby Darin is known to the public for "Splish Splash",
"Beyond the
Sea","Dream Lover", "Mack the Knife", and "If I Were
a Carpenter"
Kevin Spacey, who portrays Darin, spent 15 years getting
this picture made,
primarily because Spacey's mother made Darin an icon
within the walls of
the actor's childhood home in Woodland Hills. "My mother
was in love with
Bobby Darin," Spacey said, "and I sang all his songs
into a hairbrush when
I was just a kid. I was just 12 or 13 when he died."
Darin
Bobby Darin was born Walden Robert Cassotto in New York,
NY, in May 14,
1936. Growing up in a rough slum section of the Bronx,
New York, Bobby
barely survived several serious bouts of rheumatic fever
which left him
with a damaged heart.
He married the actress Sandra Dee, had one son, and separated
from her in
1966, and died of heart failure in 1973, at age 37.
[See Mini Bio at
end.Rather Revealing].
The double Oscar winner didn't merely seek a spot-on portrayal
of Bobby
Darin.
To make "Beyond the Sea" a reality, he also needed the
singer's obsessive
drive.
Los Angeles Times
By Geoff Boucher
Times Staff Writer
Dec 12 2004
The restaurant on Melrose Avenue was empty when Steve
Blauner walked in,
and the aging showbiz manager correctly surmised that
his lunch date had
rented the place out for efficiency, or maybe for effect.
A waiter pointed
Blauner to a rear room and its lone occupant, who rose
from his table and
extended his hand. It was the actor Kevin Spacey, bathed
in a warm aura
cast by the window at his back.
"That was so the light would be in my eyes," Blauner recalled,
using the
blunt language that meshes his Bronx youth and Hollywood
education. "And
they say backlight makes you look younger."
That meeting more than a year ago was to discuss a film
about the music and
life of Bobby Darin, a figure of deep passion for both
men. Despite the
privacy afforded by the empty restaurant, it was hard
to imagine that
anyone else in Hollywood would have been leaning in to
eavesdrop. A Darin
biopic was a pitch that had languished for more than
a decade, and Darin
himself was a pop-culture figure who stirred the passions
of dedicated
music fans but, to the mainstream mind, was either forgotten
or anchored
more to "Splish Splash" than "Beyond the Sea."
Still, Blauner arrived as a protector of the flame — he
was Darin's friend
in youth and devoted business manager to the end. Spacey,
meanwhile, came
to the table as the Hollywood star who, after more than
a decade, was
within reach of turning his lifelong reverence for Darin
into a career
moment. He wanted to co-write the screenplay, he wanted
to direct the film,
he wanted to star, he wanted to sing … he wanted to be
Darin.
Blauner cut to the chase and, give or take a few choice
adjectives, said
something like this: "You're too old, you shouldn't sing
and you're out of
your mind to direct."
The lunch that followed was either four hours or six hours,
depending on
which man you ask, but both agree how it ended. Blauner
gave his blessing
that Spacey, 45, would portray Darin on screen — in his
early 20s and 30s —
and that Spacey would sing every song in the movie. What's
more, Spacey
would also direct and co-write the film along with Lewis
Colick.
"His passion for the project was unreal," Blauner said.
"It was like a
Mafia sit-down. There was no way to say no to him. It
was like that with
Bobby too. There was no sense arguing."
The result of that meeting and many other surrendered
arguments is "Beyond
the Sea," which opens Friday in Los Angeles and New York.
It is one of the
more intriguing films of the season because it revolves
around an obsessive
star who, through sheer force of will, overcame showbiz
conventions to let
his voice sing out even as he fought against the tick-tick-ticking
of
life's merciless deadlines.
Whether that particular man is Kevin Spacey or Bobby Darin
depends on how
you read the script.
In one childhood scene in "Beyond the Sea," a wide-eyed
Darin stares at a
poster of Frank Sinatra framed outside the entrance of
the Copacabana club
in New York as the child's mother clutches his hand,
telling the boy that
someday he will trump Sinatra in fame and voice.
The movie delights in the improbability of all that once
Walden Robert
Cassotto (Darin's real name) reaches his 20s with a receding
hairline and a
grave heart condition. But the tenacious Darin, gifted
with sublime timing
and verve as a singer, rose to fame with the bobby-soxer
hit "Splish
Splash" in 1958 and, a year later, the pouting teen torch
song "Dream
Lover."
Defying all counsel, he then recast himself into something
resembling that
Sinatra poster with the unlikely smash "Mack the Knife"
and "Beyond the
Sea." Just over half a decade later, Darin made another
startling detour
and became a bluejeaned folk singer, and still had hits,
such as "If I Were
a Carpenter." The singer died of heart failure in 1973,
at age 37.
Just as Darin's mother made a Sinatra show bill a compass
point from a New
York sidewalk, Spacey's mother made Darin an icon within
the walls of the
actor's childhood home in Woodland Hills. "My mother
was in love with Bobby
Darin," Spacey said, "and I sang all his songs into a
hairbrush when I was
just a kid. I was just 12 or 13 when he died."
But a hairbrush and a Hollywood film are not the same.
Spacey sings every song in the film — a gaudy gamble on
his part. A Darin
biopic had long been deemed impotent as a film prospect
because the
American public knew little about Darin's face — or life.
They did know the
voice that sang "Mack the Knife" and "Dream Lover." That
voice, though, is
never heard in "Beyond the Sea."
"I knew Bobby Darin, suh, and you are no Bobby Darin!"
Spacey said as he
roamed the floors of the Capitol Records tower one afternoon
last month.
It's a line Spacey has been using a lot lately to poke
the eyes of the
critics and Darin purists who have taken shots at his
ambitious venture.
The Capitol tower is called the House That Frank Built
in deference to
Sinatra's years of platinum and gold, but outside one
of its storied
studios there is a large photograph of Darin in which
his expression
suggests a stern artist at work. Spacey, well armored
by his years on stage
and sound stage, said the gaze of his old idol made him
gulp. "I saw that,
and it was like he was saying, 'All right, you think
you can do this? You
better be good.' "
Dealing with obstacles
Upstairs in a conference room in the tower overlooking
the Hollywood Hills,
Spacey spoke of "Beyond the Sea" like a portrait artist
giddy to receive a
royal commission but still fatigued and nervous awaiting
the public display
of his take on the king.
The actor spent three years honing his voice for the role.
He spent equal
amounts of energy working on the story and the film's
nonlinear, dreamlike
styling, which he said finds its rhythm in Darin's songs
and heartbeat but
adds the dreamy melody of a film beholden to Fellini's
"8 1/2 ." After he
coaxed executives at Warner Bros. to part ways with the
project after it
spent a decade and a half spinning its wheels in the
studio's boardroom
mud, he also had to raise more than $20 million to make
the picture under
the Lions Gate banner.
"At that time the consistent argument I would hear was,
'Well, it's a
terrific script, the story is good, the music is terrific,
we think you
might be good in it, but how many people have really
heard of Bobby Darin?'
" Spacey said. "I would ask, 'What difference does it
make?' The assumption
is that people only go see films about well-known people
if they know their
story. I've never been quite sure why that doesn't apply
to fictional
characters."
Darin is a nonfiction character with a life that certainly
presents
opportunities for melodrama. Besides his race to fame
before his heart
gives out, there's a family secret that creates an explosive
situation in
Darin's life and internal struggles as well as a volatile
relationship with
movie star wife Sandra Dee, who is channeled in "Beyond
the Sea" by actress
Kate Bosworth.
Darin is also a bit of a fictional character in the film
thanks to that nod
to Fellini. There are scenes of Darin as a child (toting
an ominously
tick-tick-ticking pocket watch) reappearing for conversation
with his adult
self, including one at the funeral for the singer's mother
that finds a
curtain in the rear of the chapel that rises to show
a cheering theater
audience awaiting the still-grieving Darin.
The film is more akin to the expectation-bending style
of "Man on the
Moon," the Milos Forman study of Andy Kaufman's life,
than to any standard
music biopic such as "Ray," the Ray Charles life story
that has been well
received this season and, fairly or not, seemed destined
to be a conjoined
topic of discussion for "Beyond the Sea."
"I'm glad 'Ray' came out," Spacey said. "I think any musical
or any music
film is good for the genre and helping revive these types
of movies."
But while "Ray" has sequences of imaginary images, it
uses the iconic
singer's recordings for its music and has nothing like
the hyperreality
sequences in "Beyond the Sea" in which the mundane world
gives way to
chorus-line dimensions. The film has big, showy musical
numbers that recall
some of the bolts-of-light-in-the-black creations of
"Chicago." But unlike
that celebrated return to the fanciful tightrope of musical
films, "Beyond
the Sea" makes sharp turns back into a world that is
very realistic and of
the not-so-distant past.
And isn't it a thin line between "Moulin Rouge" and "Cop
Rock"? Spacey gave
out a sharp, loud laugh. "Yes, that's perfect, it's true."
He laughed
again. "I like that."
Whether Spacey is channeling Darin or engaged in one of
Hollywood's most
elaborate vanity projects will soon be decided.
The most pressing question about "Beyond the Sea" would
seem to be this:
Can Kevin Spacey sing? The answer is yes, by most accounts,
which is why
the lobby of the Wiltern LG theater was crowded Monday
night. Spacey is on
a 10-city tour with a 17-piece orchestra in a sort of
ode to Darin that
also serves as a promotional vehicle for the film and
real, live proof that
the actor is singing.
Before the show, a dashing man with an urgent expression
and dark hair
combed back like a shark's fin stood at the will-call
window. It was Dodd
Darin, the singer's son, who is not only an advocate
for the film project
but, as portrayed by a child actor in the film, an endearingly
soulful
character in the story.
"This is an amazing night, and Kevin Spacey has accomplished
wonderful
things with this film and with the attention it has focused
on my father,"
he said.
Early reviews of the film by less invested parties have
been less upbeat,
and some have been marked by a mocking tone that is reserved
for musical
flops. Spacey's one concert performance before the Wiltern
was also given a
sour review by Times music critic Robert Hilburn.
But the Wiltern crowd was cheery for the two-time Oscar
winner taking a
tightrope walk as crooner. Wearing a tux topped by Darin's
bow tie, which
was presented to him as token and totem by the singer's
relatives, Spacey
looked out on a crowd dotted with Hollywood glitterati
and praised Darin as
one of the great talents of the ages.
In "Mack the Knife" he peppered the song with some of
Darin's
finger-popping asides and tweaked the lyrics to say the
killer was back in
"L.A. town."
"I am having," he said a bit later, "the time of my life."
A cross-country quest
His steps toward the microphone began in New York at a
Greek coffee shop
where he met with Phil Ramone, the longtime music producer
who not only
worked in the studio with Darin (as well as Sinatra)
but also worked on
films such as "A Star Is Born," "Flashdance" and "White
Nights."
The pair had settled on the meeting place because they
remembered it from
their respective studies at Juilliard, which sits across
the street from
the trays of baklava.
The Grammy-winning producer was interested but taken aback
at the core of
Spacey's plan for the movie: "If someone went to see
this as a stage
production they would expect the lead actor to sing —
so I want to sing."
Spacey's complete career as a recording artist before
that afternoon was
one track he performed on the soundtrack to the film
"Midnight in the
Garden of Good and Evil." It was a stilted version of
"Black Magic" that
still makes the actor wince and wasn't done any favors
by its inclusion on
a track list that includes Tony Bennett, Joe Williams
and k.d. lang.
However, a few a cappella performances off the cuff persuaded
Ramone to
sign on to mentor Spacey as singer and to be the eventual
film's music
supervisor. The pair would spend months laboring on Spacey's
voice and
delivery and the delicate balance between mimicry and
persuasive
performance.
"Bobby was in fact a really good singer, if not a great
singer, but his
charm was in his timing and jazz styling, the way he
would drop a beat,"
Ramone said. "That's a hard thing to teach, a hard thing
to assimilate.
Kevin spent two years living with the music. He had an
iPod loaded with
Darin, with himself, with the songs just as orchestral
beds…. Some songs
would flip, 16 bars of Bobby, then 16 bars of Kevin."
Ramone compares the process to Robert De Niro's famed
and arduous sculpting
of his body to inhabit the different life chapters of
Jake LaMotta in
"Raging Bull." One day, two years into the process, Spacey
was at Abbey
Road Studios in England, the legendary recording space
for the Beatles,
when Ramone heard something different coming through
the speakers. "It
wasn't Bobby Darin. It wasn't Kevin Spacey. It wasn't
slick imitation. It
was what I was waiting for."
If the film fails to get the world snapping its fingers
with Darin's music,
Spacey will be able to heal any wounds by busying himself
as the first
American to be artistic director of London's storied
Old Vic Theatre, a
world-class gig that will relegate Hollywood to a supporting
role in his
life for a few years.
And he will no longer need any mundane hairbrush to imagine
himself as the
great Bobby Darin.
There is a scene in the film in which Spacey-as-Darin
smashes his own vinyl
records in a fury. If you look closely, though, you'll
notice that the
album sleeves were re-created for the moment, and that
they feature Spacey
in elaborate copies of those originals that his mother
stared at for hours
on end.
The actor doesn't even try to dodge the question. "You
know I kept every
one of them."
Spacey's Darin maneuver
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0201239/bio
Did not find out until the age of 32 that the woman he
thought to be his
sister was in fact his mother and and the woman he thought
was his deceased
mother was in fact his grandmother.
This was listed in VH1's '100 Most Shocking Moments of
Rock & Roll
History'. Elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
1990.
When he was still a struggling songwriter at the now famous
Brill Building
he met then up and coming singer Connie Francis. After
a rocky beginning,
the two hit it off and were soon madly in love. He had
wanted to marry
Connie but her over-protective father wouldn't let her
date anyone, let
alone marry. When Darin suggested the two elope, he was
soon chased from
one of her shows by her father with a gun.
The two only saw one another twice since that incident.
Once was during a
television appearance in which the two sang together
and the other was
during the filming of "This Is Your Life" (1952) centered
on Connie in
which the announcer had congratulated Bobby on his recent
marriage to
actress Sandra Dee.
Connie has stated several times that not marrying Bobby
was one of the
biggest mistakes she has ever made in her life.
Biography for Bobby Darin
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0201239/bio