NOTE: In the summer of 1999, Mickey Spillane arrived in London to be honoured by the late lamented Crime Scene festival at the NFT. He had just flown in from South Carolina, via Charlotte, that morning, and his BBC handler wanted to make sure I understood I had 45 minutes with Mickey, who was, after all, in his 80s. Then he would rest before taking a taxi to Broadcasting House for another interview. After 45 minutes, Mickey shooed the handler away, and I ran out of tape as we continued talking until, literally, he was being pushed into the taxi cab.Caspar Llewellyn-Smith ran what follows, my short version of the interview, in the Daily Telegraph that Saturday--I later transcribed the whole thing for Crime Time, and maybe I'll post that here sometime too; it's worth it!
I, THE JURY, Mickey
Spillane’s 1947 best seller, boasts the most infamous ending in
hard-boiled fiction. Mike Hammer knows the woman he loves has
murdered his best friend. She is seducing him with a strip tease.
She’s also reaching for a gun behind her back. Hammer plugs her in
her naked belly with a slug from his .45.
How c-could you?"
she gasped
I had only a moment before talking to a corpse, but I got it in.
"It was easy," I said.
I had only a moment before talking to a corpse, but I got it in.
"It was easy," I said.
Eat your heart out,
Quentin Tarantino. More than 50 years after writing those words, the
king of pulp fictions is in London. Spillane's 81 years old, but his
handshake could still crush a hoodlum’s trigger finger. He will
deliver a Guardian Lecture tonight to keynote a season of crime films
at the National Film Theatre, which includes the debut of a Spillane
documentary directed by award-winning crime writer Max Allan Collins.
"He was savaged by the critics," says Collins, "so
Mickey developed this persona, entertainer and pitchman."
And how.
Interviewing Mickey is like saddling a bronco who refuses to be
broken, and knows all the cowpunchers’ tricks. Ask about critics
and he’ll tell you about interpreting between Salvador Dali and
Jimmy Durante, who were both speaking English, more or less. Ask
about politics and he’ll tell you about being shot from a circus
cannon. There's no slowing down. And he’s still answering the
inevitable questions about Mike Hammer’s violence with laughter.
"I tell them,
you know why Mike shot that woman in the belly? He missed!"
Nowadays the
violence of so-called neo-noir is high fashion, while Spillane’s
has become somehow declasse. On its 50th anniversary, I THE JURY
went out of print in America for the first time. Mickey’s
surprised to learn he’s coming back into print in the UK with
Robinson Publishing’s HARDBOILED: A MIKE HAMMER OMNIBUS, released
to coincide with his visit. (Note: You can find my essay on the two Hammer omnibuses here).
"Corporate
turnovers," he shrugs. "They thought I’m old and passe.
I tell them I’m not an author, I’m a writer. I’m a
merchandiser. I did Miller Lite commercials for 19 years on TV. The
Mike Hammer TV series has been brought back for the fourth time.
People know me, they stop me on the street."
In the adverts,
Spillane, in trench coat and fedora, played himself as Mike Hammer
with enough ironic humour to launch a thousand Tarantinos. "Hey,
Mickey, got a Lite?" "Sure thing doll." The series
featured many of America’s most famous sportsmen, but he was the
star, the one they all looked up to. Spillane, like John Wayne (who
gave him a treasured vintage Jaguar as a reward for some script
doctoring) was what American men aspired to be. "Things
change," he sighs. Well, almost sighs. "The Blue Ribbon’s
gone in New York. We have no leaders to admire, all we’ve got is that
cocksman in the White House"
Spillane isn’t
crazy about any of the Mike Hammer films either. The first, I THE
JURY, was made by Victor Saville in 1953. Its NFT showing will be its first British showing in its original 3D format, and with the 20
minutes of cuts by the censors restored. But Spillane has never seen it
all the way through.
"I went once
in Brooklyn. Biff Elliott walks on screen and says "I’m Mike
Hammer," and a voice in the audience howled ‘DAT’S Mike
Hammuh?’ I walked out." He laughs again. "Victor
wanted to make an epic, THE SILVER CHALICE, which fell on its face
with a deathly thud. So to save money he gets this slob writer, and
he rooned it! They have Mike getting knocked out with a wooden coat
hanger!"
Ten years later,
Spillane was cast as his own hero. Can you imagine Raymond Chandler
playing Philip Marlowe? Mickey looks at stills from THE GIRL
HUNTERS. "Good grief, did I ever look like that? There’s
Shirley Eaton. What a pro; no ego, she just played the character and
made me look good." The filming was done in Britain, where he
palled around with gangsters like Billy Hills and Jack Spot. "When
we needed a .45 for Mike, Billy brought a sack full of guns to the
set, with live ammo."
The best-regarded
Hammer adaptation is Robert Aldrich’s KISS ME DEADLY, which ends in
nuclear holocaust. Mickey hates it. "They never even READ my
book!" Aldrich saw an apocalyptic strain in Hammer, and critics
have recently tried to connect that to Spillane’s faith. He’s a
Jehovah’s Witness, but the critics got it wrong. "It’s not
the end of the world we witness," he says, "but parousia,
the coming of the peace of God, the end of the system of things as
they are. It’s taking in knowledge."
But confounding the
critics is his favourite pastime. "It tears them up. I had
seven books at once in the top ten best seller list. I said ‘you’re
lucky I don’t write three more!'"
He’s written two
children’s books. The first, THE DAY THE SEA ROLLED BACK, won the
Junior Literary Guild Award. "I keep winning these crazy
prizes," he shrugs. "It meant the book sells to
libraries." And he’s still
writing.
"I’m halfway
through a new Mike Hammer novel," he says. "But I used to
write fast…now my rear end gets tired. I’m not full of piss and
vinegar any more. The vinegar’s all gone." He wrote I, THE
JURY in nine days, originally plotting it as a comic book starring
"Mike Danger". The book revolutionised the publishing
industry.
"I knew it
would be a hit. Paperback reprints were huge during the war, and I
saw a market for originals. All those soldiers coming back. A
little sex wouldn’t hurt, and they’d seen violence. I got a
comic distributor to guarantee a paperback reprint, got a $1,000
advance from Dutton for the hardcover." Soon the only books
outselling Spillane were the Bible and Dr. Spock. "I’ve gone
downhill ever since," he laughs.
Spillane has a
radio interview next. He’s been talking for two hours; I’ve
long since run out of tape. Across the room in the Savoy, a
business meeting has ground to a halt, eavesdropping on Mickey’s
spiel. After he leaves, they ask, "who was that?"
"Mickey
Spillane," I tell them.
"Mickey
Spillane! How do you interview Mickey Spillane?"
"It was
easy," I said.
2 comments :
Interesting read, thanks!
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