Lawrence Turman, producer who spotted a winner in 'The Graduate,' dies at 96
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, November 27, 2024


Lawrence Turman, producer who spotted a winner in 'The Graduate,' dies at 96
The film producer Lawrence Turman in his office on the University of Southern California campus, in Los Angeles, Jan. 19, 2006. Turman, who was relatively new to the movie business when he was struck by an obscure novel titled “The Graduate” and turned it into the 1967 landmark film starring Dustin Hoffman that helped define the 1960s and the antihero genre, died on Saturday, July 1, 2023, at his home in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles. He was 96. (Misha Erwitt/The New York Times)

by Neil Genzlinger



NEW YORK, NY.- Lawrence Turman, who as a novice movie producer in 1963 read about a novel by a largely unknown writer named Charles Webb, took a $1,000 option on it and thus set in motion the making of “The Graduate,” a landmark film that helped define the 1960s and the antihero genre, died Saturday at his home in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles. He was 96.

His son John confirmed the death.

Turman had producing or executive producing credits on more than 40 feature films and television movies, including the boxing film “The Great White Hope” (1970), with James Earl Jones; “The Drowning Pool” (1975), a drama that starred Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward; the thriller “The Mean Season” (1985), with Kurt Russell and Mariel Hemingway; the family comedies “Short Circuit” (1986) and “Short Circuit 2” (1988); and the drama “American History X” (1998). But it was “The Graduate” (1967) that made his career and propelled those of actors Dustin Hoffman and Katharine Ross, director Mike Nichols, and screenwriter and actor Buck Henry.

It started in October 1963 when a write-up of a new novel called “The Graduate” caught Turman’s eye.

“I read a review in The New York Times and I thought, ‘Wow; sounds like an interesting possible screenwriter,’” he said in a featurette on the 25th anniversary DVD release of “The Graduate,” thinking that Webb might be useful on a future movie project. “So I read the book. And, for whatever reason, I wasn’t so keen on him as a screenwriter, but the book just stayed with me.”

Turman had produced a few movies with Stuart Millar, but their business partnership was dissolving, and Turman was not exactly a power player — the $1,000 he put down to secure the rights to “The Graduate” came out of his own pocket.

“I barely had it,” he said, “but I believed in it” — that is, in the novel — “and I wanted to get my hands on it.”

Once he did, it took years to get the film made. One of his first steps was a leap of faith: He recruited as his director Nichols, a New York stage director who had yet to pilot a movie, although by the time “The Graduate” was released, Nichols did have his first film directing credit, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” (1966). It turned out to be a good instinct on Turman’s part: “The Graduate” won Nichols the Oscar for best director and earned a best-picture nomination.

Turman also had trouble getting a studio interested.

“I submitted ‘The Graduate’ to every single studio,” he wrote in a 2005 how-to book, “So You Want to Be a Producer.” “They all said no. No one thought it was funny. No one thought it was any good. In short, no one liked my taste.”

He finally found a taker in Joseph Levine of Embassy Pictures, who at the time, Turman wrote, was “king of the schlockmeisters,” known for bringing “Godzilla” to American screens in the 1950s. “The Graduate,” the top-grossing film of 1967, drew big crowds in Los Angeles, providing Turman with grounds to gloat.




“We had lines around the block,” he wrote. “And in those lines were some studio executives who had originally turned the picture down.”

The movie told the story of a disillusioned recent college graduate (Hoffman) who has an affair with an older woman (Anne Bancroft) but who actually loves her daughter (Ross). Turman, a hands-on producer, was an integral part of the casting, including the selection of Hoffman, a relative unknown, over Robert Redford and others for the main role.

“Dustin Hoffman was goony but sweet and sincere,” Turman told the Times in 1971. “All the others we tested were playing at being goony.”

Turman saw something of himself in Ben Braddock, Hoffman’s character, and in other figures in the films he produced.

“I’m like the guy who married six times and always to the same type of woman,” he said in the 1971 interview. “Every one of my pictures is about how does a guy choose to live his life? What’s his inner gyroscope?”

Lawrence Turman was born Nov. 28, 1926, in Los Angeles to Jacob and Esther (Goldberg) Turman. His father owned a fabric business, and after spending two years in the Navy and earning a bachelor’s degree in English literature at UCLA, Lawrence spent several years working for him, growing increasingly restless.

“I soon realized that I got little satisfaction, and no pleasure, trying to convince some clothing manufacturer to buy periwinkle blue lining from me instead of, say, royal blue from my competitor,” he wrote in his book.

He answered an advertisement in Variety that said “Experienced agent wanted” and somehow landed the job with no experience. His several years as an agent — which, he said, included placing five actors in Alfred Hitchcock’s “North by Northwest” (1959) — taught him the inner workings of the movie business and introduced him to Millar. In 1961, the two of them produced their first movie, “The Young Doctors.” (Their later projects included Judy Garland’s final film, “I Could Go On Singing,” from 1963.) On his own, he produced “The Flim-Flam Man” (1967), and a few months later, “The Graduate” was released.

Turman’s most recent credit was as an executive producer on “The Thing” (2011) — he had been a producer on the 1982 version — but in 1991, he had taken a new path. He became director of the Peter Stark Producing Program at the University of Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts, which has trained numerous producers now active in Hollywood. Turman retired two years ago.

Turman’s marriages to Suzanne Trieb, Margaret Buckley Parker and Lorie Berger ended in divorce. In addition to his son John, from his marriage to Trieb, he is survived by two other sons from that marriage, Andrew and Peter; and four grandchildren.

Turman was sometimes self-deprecating when talking about the effect of “The Graduate” on his career, but in his book, he included a chapter on the film that ended with this reflection:

“The afterlife of any achievement is quite lovely, whether it’s Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak, Einstein’s discovery of E=mc(squared), or something as mundane as producing ‘The Graduate.’ It lives after you until, finally, it’s the lead item in your obituary. But until that time, it is continually referenced and, I must confess, continually pleasing.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

July 9, 2023

Rijksmuseum to return Colonial objects from its collection for the first time

Paper magazine, the oral history: 'They were wide open'

They hold weeds, and an artist's sublime vision

The List Center galleries present works by Sung Tieu and Lex Brown

Coeur d'Alene Art Auction to hold 38th annual Western art auction

Christie's to host the largest exhibition of Arab art in London

The Newport Art Museum announces new Executive Director

Baltimore Museum of Art and Saint Louis Art Museum to donate Hip Hop digital interactive archive

Daniel Handal's exhibition 'Engaños' now on view at Clamp

Themes of displacement, migration, and absence on view in 'How A Home Is Made' at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery

'Urban explorers' and accused spies chafe in legal limbo in Albania

Abraham Lincoln letter from early Civil War era sells for $85,000

British Library announces a new interactive exhibition showcasing how technology is transforming storytelling

Lawrence Turman, producer who spotted a winner in 'The Graduate,' dies at 96

When the street moves to the opera house (and subverts it)

Ravi Zupa Typewriter Gun installation on view at Shepard Fairey's art gallery

'Uncle Vanya' review: Confidences by candlelight

Director of new Women's History Museum withdraws, citing family issues

ROTATIONS featuring a variety of works in glass now on view at Heller Gallery

When Animals Become Art: Leiko Ikemura at The Feuerle Collection

Orleans House Gallery in Twickenham announces site-specific exhibition with new works by Phoebe Boswell

'The Verbal Visual' abstractions of language now on view at Shin Gallery

'Twenty-Five Treasures' is now on view at Paul Thiebaud Gallery

What's the story with Colleen Hoover?

Album Review: "An Evening in Greenwich Village" by Orian Rose

Why Prefer to Neat Nelly's and What is Neat Nelly's process for addressing customer complaints

Why Tufting Guns Have Become Popular

Album Review: "An Evening in Greenwich Village" by Orian Rose




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful