David Weisman(1942-2019)
- Producer
- Additional Crew
- Director
Born in upstate New York, after one viewing of
La Dolce Vita (1960), David Weisman
dropped out of Syracuse University's School of Fine Arts in the early
1960s to design film-posters in Rome -- where, by learning fluent
Italian, he managed to meet
Federico Fellini, create the poster for
Otto e mezzo (8 1/2) and work for
Pier Paolo Pasolini. The teenager's
linguistic skill also enabled him to freely work as an artist in
Québec, France, Holland, Israel, Germany, and Brazil. Back in New York,
Weisman was discovered by Otto Preminger,
who hired him to replace Saul Bass, to create
the titles for
Hurry Sundown (1967). Having
interned as Preminger's assistant on the Paramount movie, Weisman
turned to experimental film-making with a splinter-group from
Andy Warhol's Factory and, in 1967, he began
the five-year-long production of underground cult classic
Ciao Manhattan (1972), a
chronicle-à-clef about and starring sixties-icon
Edie Sedgwick (featuring
Isabel Jewell,
Roger Vadim, plus Factory luminaries
Brigid Berlin,
Viva and
Paul America), which Weisman co-wrote and
co-directed with Warhol alumnus,
John Palmer. Weisman then worked
as associate director on avant-garde film
The Telephone Book (1971), and
created an English-language film edited from a series of Japanese
samurai-movies which was successfully released as
Shogun Assassin (1980) by
Roger Corman's New World Pictures. In 1981,
after producing
Bad Manners (1984) (a comedy with
Martin Mull and
Karen Black), Weisman's
collaboration with Leonard Schrader
began on
The Killing of America (1981),
a feature documentary created for Japanese theatrical release about the
evolution of U.S. violence. Schrader's background in Latin American
literature and Weisman's familiarity with Brazil prompted them to look
for a film project they could make "below the equator". In 1982, when
Ciao Manhattan (1972) was
re-released (breaking box-office records at The Quad Cinema in New York
upon publication of bestseller "Edie: An American Biography", by
Jean Stein &
George Plimpton), Weisman used
the proceeds to acquire the "Kiss of the Spider Woman" screen rights
from Manuel Puig, then develop the
screenplay with Schrader and commence pre-production on the film with
Burt Lancaster and
Raul Julia in the lead roles. In October of
1983, with William Hurt replacing the
ailing Lancaster, Weisman began
Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985)
in São Paulo Brazil with director
Hector Babenco -- financed only by
private investors on two continents who believed in the project. After
Babenco's health crisis in mid-1984, Weisman completed the film's
problematic editing with Schrader. Post-production took 14 arduous
months, much of it (for lack of funds) done in Weisman's home. He was
obliged to re-dub most of the film's dialogue, re-cut the negative and
mix the soundtrack twice, before "Kiss of the Spider Woman" was
accepted in Official Competition at the Cannes Film Festival in 1985,
where William Hurt won the Best Actor
award. Weisman subsequently collaborated with novelist
Manuel Puig on two original
screenplays (Seven Tropical Sins, Chica Boom). They were working on
Madrid 1937 for Milena Canonero to
direct, at the time of Puig's death in 1990. After the international
success of
Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985)
in 1986, Weisman was recipient of an Academy Award Nomination for Best
Picture -- a first for an independent film made for little more than a
million dollars. Weisman began producing the $40-million
Ironweed (1987) for Taft-Barish but left
the production in early 1987 over creative differences with director
Babenco. Weisman then produced the indie film
Spike of Bensonhurst (1988)
with Sasha Mitchell and
Ernest Borgnine, directed by ex-Warhol
associate, Paul Morrissey.
Continuing his Latin American-themed collaboration with
Leonard Schrader, Weisman produced
Schrader's directorial debut,
Naked Tango (1990), a mythic
love-story set in the bordellos of 1920s Buenos Aires, starring
Vincent D'Onofrio,
Mathilda May,
Esai Morales and the late
Fernando Rey. Working with
Schrader, Weisman adapted Spirit Break (1997) from the novel "The Long
Walk" and co-wrote
Girl on Fire (2011), an original
screenplay based on Weisman's experiences with
Edie Sedgwick during the making of
Ciao Manhattan (1972).