To learn more about Stephen Jared (above), I asked him five questions and below are his replies.1. Where did you get the idea for Jack and the Jungle Lion? At its core, the story is about a real character becoming like the fictional counterpart he had always hoped to be, and had always lived vicariously through. ! Consequently, not only does he find himself, he finds true lov! e. Jack Hunterâs story parallels Joan Wilderâs story in Romancing the Stone. "Jack and the Jungle Lion" has been with me for many years. I did spend some time pushing the story in Hollywood and everyone told me it was great, but then said 18-year olds wouldnât know what to make of the 1930s time period. Itâs self-published because you canât find this type of old-fashioned romantic adventure in bookstores. Funnyâ"I always saw myself as someone who likes whatâs popular. I like popcorn entertainment. But at some point it became clear that yesterdayâs popcorn entertainment and todayâs popcorn entertainment arenât the same.
2. Do you have other tales in mind for its hero, Jack Hunter? Well, in the early 1940s Jack Hunter went to Shanghai. Iâd love to tell that story. I intend to, but weâll have to see how much interest there is in this Amazon adventure first. So far, itâs been very encouraging.
3. When did you first become a! classic film lover? I grew up when Spielberg and Lucas were releasing their early films. In interviews, especially while promoting Indiana Jones, they kept referencing classic movies. I soon wanted to know everything there was to know about classic movies.
4. If you could play any role in a classic film, what would it be and why? I couldnât possibly replace the work of any great starâ"nobody could. Look at Humphrey Bogart or Cary Grant and you can see they have stories to tell before they open their mouths then they start talking and their story becomes more and more convincing. Back then, stars and studios worked together at creating these larger than life figures. As you and your readers know, in the old days they wanted you to believe they werenât actingâ"that it was really who they were. I think those old films benefit from that. Today, itâs all about whoâs available, and whoâs affordable. Itâs not about building a film ar! ound a particular talent. Casts are easily interchangeable tod! ay. Can you imagine a Marx Brothers film replacing Groucho with Bob Hope? It couldnât be done. But today it can. So, when you ask about filling in the shoes of a classic Hollywood performer, I am not being at all humble in saying that the whole idea is preposterous.
That saidâ"just to offer some insight into meâ"Iâd answer the Henry Fonda role in "The Lady Eve." I certainly could not have done a better job than him in that, but I think it was a role I could have handled, given my nature, my look and acting abilities. Henry Fonda in other things, like "Once Upon a Time in the West," was way better than I ever could have been. In fact, if you play those two films back to back, you might be convinced Henry Fonda was an acting genius.
5. The crazy question: Between what performers do you want your Hollywood Walk of Fame star to be located and why? Between Douglas Fairbanks and Cary Grant. Watch their films and look at their facesâ"you see only exube! rance and vitality, the pleasure of being alive. The fact that we get old and die never seems to register. It just doesnât come into their thinking. I really like defiance of death. Iâd love to be able to reach out from a heavily trampled sidewalk and grab a little of their immortality.
Stephen Jared's web siteGreat classic films, best all time movies
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