April 5, 2007

SAY, HI, TO SHEP:

'A Christmas Story' director dies in crash: Bob Clark and a son are pronounced dead at the scene of an early morning crash on PCH. (Valerie Reitman, April 5, 2007, LA Times)

"He was a nice guy, good to everybody, a quiet guy," Dodier said of Bob Clark. The producer-director had lived at the Edgewater complex since he relocated to Pacific Palisades from New England after his divorce. Starting out in a one-bedroom unit, he moved into a two-bedroom, second-floor condominium a few years later to make room for his sons, Dodier said. He had rented the larger unit for more than a decade.

"He was a gentleman, one of the nicest people I knew," said his New York business manager, Stuart Ditsky. "He always kept his word. He would never hurt anybody or put in anything in his movies to embarrass anyone."

Clark produced, directed and co-wrote "A Christmas Story," which was released in 1983; more than two decades later, it remains a holiday favorite, shown on television and racking up big DVD sales.

Set in the 1940s and adapted from humorist Jean Shepherd's novel "In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash," the film starred Peter Billingsley as Ralphie, a young boy determined to get a Red Ryder BB gun for Christmas despite everyone's fears that he'd put his eye out. In 1997, TNT showed the film for 24 hours straight -- a first for the cable channel. On the film's 20th anniversary in 2003, a two-disc commemorative DVD was issued.

In a 1997 interview with The Times, Clark said the movie struck a chord with audiences because it deals with a "special time and special feeling. Shepherd's material had the truth and heart in it."

Clark's prolific movie and TV directing career spanned four decades. In addition to producing and directing the cult classic "Porky's" and its first sequel, he also directed "Turk 182" with Timothy Hutton, Robert Urich and Robert Culp; "Rhinestone" with Dolly Parton and Sylvester Stallone; "Loose Cannons," a Gene Hackman-Dan Aykroyd cop comedy; "From the Hip" and "Baby Geniuses."

The "Porky's" franchise earned an estimated $150 million domestically after taking years to get off the ground. The films were based on Clark's experiences during the '50s with five high school buddies in Florida. In a 1985 interview with The Times, co-writer Roger Swaybill talked about how Clark dictated the outline for the movie into a cassette recorder while sick.

"I was weeping with laughter," Swaybill said. "I became convinced that I was sharing in the birth of a major moment in movie history. It was the funniest film story I had ever heard."

Posted by Orrin Judd at April 5, 2007 8:24 AM
Comments

No doubt, the angels have a Red Ryder Carbine Action Range-Model Air Rifle (with the 200 shot magazine and the compass in the stock) all picked out for him.

Posted by: Mike Morley at April 5, 2007 9:32 AM

Well, it comes in 3's:
1. Eddie Robinson
2. Bob Clark
3. Darryl Stingley

Posted by: pchuck at April 5, 2007 9:54 AM

It's funny (well, depressing) watching the Nativist Right go bonkers because the drunk driver he was killed by was apparently an illegal immagrant.

Posted by: Bryan at April 6, 2007 7:10 AM

If we deported every drunk driver there'd be a lot of Minutemen pick-up trucks for sale.

Posted by: oj at April 6, 2007 10:20 AM
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