Catching Up With . . . Paul Davids
Hooray for (Edgy) Hollywood ... and More
by Brooke C. Stoddard '69
Paul is one of only a few Classmates who made a career in
Hollywood. He moved to Los Angeles soon after graduation, and set out to make
television shows and movies. These are edgy, but on the edge is where Paul
always wanted to be.
Paul grew up in Kensington and Bethesda, Maryland. His
father was a noted scholar and professor of American diplomatic history at
Georgetown (who taught Jacqueline Kennedy and, via that acquaintance, shaped
the original stories for Profiles in
Courage) and his mother a teacher. Paul’s sister leaned to swimming
competitively, but Paul took to making 8mm movies. He had a fascination with
animation, soon fueled by the Sinbad stop-motion animation movies of Ray
Harryhausen. An 8mm movie that Paul made at age 14 won a national magazine
award, so he was getting encouragement.
Growing up only a few miles from the grave of F. Scott
Fitzgerald likely had an influence on Paul’s selection of Princeton for higher
education. He majored in psychology and was pre-med but worked on his writing.
He won the F. Scott Fitzgerald Award in our junior year, as well as a poetry
prize and Tiger Magazine’s prize for humorous writing. All this led to his
decisions to forego a medical career and try his talents in Hollywood, a path,
of course, also trekked by Fitzgerald.
Paul was chosen for a very select group to study at the new American
Film Institute Center for Advanced Film Studies, a course that opened doors and
introduced him to film heavyweights such as William Wyler, Charles Bronson, and
John Huston. He also met his wife
Hollace Goodman while in Cambridge, Mass., to work on a Warner Bros. movie set
and married her in 1972. Paul and Hollace now have two grown children and,
looking back, Paul says "the marriage provided a stability in my life during a
career with huge amounts of rejection, and I am very grateful for that.”
After the AFI education, Paul worked for Hollywood agent
Paul Kohner before helping produce episodes of F. Lee Bailey’s Lie Detector and then 80 episodes of the
original Transformer cartoons,
keeping alive his love of animation. A bit later, Paul and a literary agent
pitched the idea of writing Star Wars
books, the premise being that a rising generation in the 1990s should not be
allowed to lose interest in the time between the completion of the third movie
and that of the fourth many years later. Hollace was Paul’s co-writer of six Star Wars efforts during this period;
the illustrated books were translated into many languages and sold millions of
copies.
It was not until Paul was 45 that he produced a major cable
TV movie. This was Roswell: The UFO
Coverup, which originally aired on Showtime in 1994 and has become
something of a cult classic on TV. It starred Kyle MacLachlan and Martin Sheen
and proposed that the 1947 Roswell debris was really an alien space craft
crash, an interpretation to which Paul still subscribes. The movie was
nominated for a Golden Globe Best TV Motion Picture Award. A few years later,
Paul directed his first feature, a biography of Timothy Leary, with whom Paul
worked on the film during the last year of the LSD-advocate’s life; it’s called
Timothy Leary’s Dead.
Interest in the Leary film energized Paul’s next effort,
which was writing and directing Starry
Night, a fantasy about Vincent van Gogh – the artist comes back to life in
a Pasadena Rose Bowl Parade, discovers that his paintings (which he could never
sell during his lifetime) now fetch small fortunes and sets about stealing
them. Universal Pictures picked it up for its Home Entertainment division, then
licensed it to TV around the world, and Universal has helped Paul with several
subsequent films. Paul notes with
great pleasure that the DVD of Starry
Night is sold at the gift store of the Museum of Modern Art which owns
Vincent’s original painting of that name.
The artist subject nicely dovetails with the fact that through the years Paul has
become an extremely prolific artist in his own right, with books showcasing his
paintings now available (through Blurb online) and even a major exhibition in
2014 at the Ritz-Carlton in Laguna Niguel, CA.
Since the early 1990s Paul has made almost a dozen
independent films, about one every two years. His most successful commercially,
and available on Netflix among other places (most of Paul’s movies are
available on DVD), is The Sci-Fi Boys,
a documentary about sci-fi, horror, and fantasy special effects told by movie
persons who, like Paul, became fascinated with special effects at an early age.
Peter Jackson, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg appear as well as less
well-known but Paul Davids’ personal heroes Ray Harryhausen, George Pal, and
Forrest J. Ackerman.
A more recent feature documentary that aired extensively on
the Sundance Channel and on TV around the world was Jesus in India. The premise is that Jesus traveled to India at some
time between his childhood and the beginning of his ministry (the Gospels being
silent on this period), thereby picking up some Hindu and Buddhist
philosophy. It also raises as a
possibility that Jesus may have survived the crucifixion and returned to India,
living a long life there and being buried in Kashmir, which purportedly has
Hebraic and Jewish roots. Princeton Religion Professor Elaine Pagels appears in
the film to say that the basic premise of Jesus possibly having traveled to
India during the so-called "Missing Years” cannot be ruled out.
Another was Before We
Say Goodbye with an all-Latino cast focusing on the incident of the Lady of
Guadalupe and other purported miracles. More recent is The Life After Death Project, picked up by the Syfy Channel last
year and scientifically investigating a particularly fascinating case of communication
with the dead . . . a case that involved Paul directly and
one of Paul’s film mentors: the late Forrest J. Ackerman. This drew a great
deal of interest and has been followed by The
Life After Death Project 2: Personal
Encounters.
Says Paul: "I chose controversial subjects and dealt with
them in a controversial way. It was always my intention to create fire storms
with the things that I did. Jesus in
India stirred the religion editor of the Wall Street Journal to say it was a ‘cavalcade of crackpots’ (What?
Pagels? Libel!) I liked that, though, because so many of my movies have been
about persons considered crackpots in their time but who made tremendous
contributions, even becoming accepted as mainstream – witness van Gogh and
Leary, or Forrest Ackerman who was ridiculed in the 1930s for saying man would
one day fly to the moon.”
A future film project involves Marilyn Monroe; another takes
up Paul’s father’s contribution to Profiles
in Courage.
Paul believes he may have attended more movie premieres in a
non-working capacity than just about anyone in Hollywood – a case for the
Guinness Book of World Records, he says -- a reason being that Hollace has been
in charge of premieres at Universal for almost two decades… and before that at
Tristar and Columbia Pictures, back to the pre-Ghostbuster days. "These have been wonderful fun,” he says, "but
thank goodness I don’t drink,” the attendant parties always flowing abundantly
with liquor.
Paul’s principal hobby is magic, which he has practiced from
a young age, and he has been a member of Hollywood’s Magic Castle (and the
Academy of Magical Arts) for decades. But he puts most of his spare time into
painting as discussed above– in different media and different styles. These
have enjoyed exhibitions throughout California as well as in Mexico and Utah.
Many are posted at Paul’s art website pauldavids-artist.com
and eight to ten coffee table books of his art are planned (three now being
available in hardback or digitally at Blurb.com)
Paul has also written three books of poetry, all available
online. His poetry spans the humorous (think Shel Silverstein), beginning with Poems to Read While Driving on Freeways,
to the serious, and to personalities such as Edgar Allen Poe. "Like my
paintings, I hope my poetry is discovered by The Establishment,” says Paul. "Hopefully
while I’m still above ground! We’ll
see.” Some of Paul’s poetry finds
audience on YouTube clips. Paul has created a character called Professor Hack
Harddrive, whom Paul impersonates rapping some of his poems on various topics
to a background of visuals.
Like many hard-working Hollywood professionals, Paul
occasionally gets out of town. He vacations in Sedona, Santa Fe, and Big Bear
Lake, California. Both son and daughter are grown and have successful careers
in the film industry, the one in digital effects, the other in advertising art
design. He points out that his son, Scott, can be either praised or blamed (as
an editor) for much of Sacha Baron Cohen’s "Borat”
and also "Bruno.” Hollace maintains her position of SVP
of Special Projects at Universal Pictures.
To learn more about Paul and his works, try the website
noted above (www.pauldavids-artist.com), as well as pauldavids.com, and there
are separate websites for many of his movies. He welcomes correspondence at roswellufo@aol.com or
starrynightmovie@aol.com.