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By Jim Freehan
Scheduling is the most critical part of producing a film, C.Tad
Devlin tells his Wednesday evening filmmaking class at Centralia
College. "If you don't preplan, you can have disaster real quick,"
Devlin says. And he should know. As a Hollywood producer and production
manager, Devlin has worked on "George of the Jungle," "When a Man
Loves a Woman," and "Sleeping With the Enemy." Now Devlin wants
to use his talents to help stave off the collapse of local cable
public access television in Lewis County. He's proposing Lewis County
Television - a combination of public access, education and government
programing.
At the same time, he's also a teacher. Devlin is part cheerleader,
as well as instructor, to a few more dozen than a students gathered
around the television studio at Centralia College. "Good now you're
becoming a producer," he tells one member of the class who had a
particularly frustrating day shooting a film for the course. Interpersed
thoughout his lecture are tales from behind the scenes in Hollywood
filmmaking. "On'George of the Jungle' we had 11 lions," he said.
"We had one who growled, one who blinked and one who was a pussycat.
That was the lion we let around the actors." Don Langois drives
nearly two hours every Wednesday night from his home in Greenwater
in rual King County to attend Devlins course. "It's great," he says.
"I've learned a lot. Besides, he's a good storyteller about Hollywood."
But Devlin will tell you Tinseltown is out of of step with Middle
America, and that's reflected by fewer Americans going to the movies
he says. "In 1945, 75 percent on the population went to the movies
on a weekly basis," Devlin says. "In 1997, only 4 percent of the
population goes to the movies each week," Hollywood has increasingly
lost touch with much of it's audience, Devlin says. Films are geared
for urban audience, with the top 10 markets 75 percent of movie
revenue. The top five markets generate 50 percent, he says. "Action
movies make money," Devlin says. "Hollywood love monsters, breasts
and guns."
That sort of entertainment is a long way from Devlin's Middle American
background. Devlin grew up in Dayton, Ohio. As a child he wanted
to be an astonomer. His father, Charles "Reach" Devlin, was a professional
boxer who fought in 247 fights, losing only three by technical knockouts.
He later went on to become a boxing promoter, as well as a machinist
at Delco and at Wright Patterson Air Force Base.
To make a little extra money as a student at the University of
Dayon, Devlin served as "human guinea pig for the space program"
at nearby Wright Patterson AFB. "For $7 a day, I slept in a room
where they attached electrodes to me for a sleep deprivation experiment,"
he says. "They wanted to put me in a tank for 90 days of solitary
confinement, and I said, "No, thanks. I'll just come here and sleep."
After graduating from the University of Dayton, he served in the
U.S. Army as a field artillery officer, and worked as a writer,
producer and director for the U.S. Fourth Army Educational Television
network from 1967 to 1969. "I made Army instructional films," Devlin
says. "Some of the films incuded 'How to Brush Your Teeth', 'How
to Keep Your Locker Clean' and 'How to Bayonet Your Opponent.'"
A crew of about 10 GIs accompanied Devlin as they toured Army Bases
in the Midwest. "My biggest high was staging and filming a war,"
he says. "We had a cast of 2,000 troops." While he was making everything
from killing-your-foe to brushing-your-teeth instructional films.
Devlin met a Hollywood director who told him to look him up after
he got out of the Army. He looked up the director, and Devlin spent
the next two years serving as an apprenitice film editor, splicing
commercials and working shipping office at ABC Television. To make
ends meet, he worked at an aircraft assembly plant in Burbank. Devlin
left Los Angeles and went to New York, making industrial films and
commercials, and working as a photographer. He shot weddings, bar
mitzvahs and parties and worked for renowned fashion photographer
Richard Avedon.
Devlin entered the motion picture industry in 1972 as one of the
five selected out of 3,000 applicants to Directors Guild of America
training program. Since completing the program in 1974, Devlin has
worked on more than 50 major studio and network television project
as an assistant director. His first film was "Dog Day Afternoon"
staring Al Pacino, on which Devlin served as an assistant to the
assistant director. "I remember Bert Harris telling me, 'Mine is
black and Sid's is cream and two sugers,' " Devlin recalled. "I
was basically a gofer." "Sid" was film director Sidney Lumet. Devlin's
next film as a trainee was Woody Allen's Academy Award-wining "Anne
Hall." "Woody Allen is extremly intelligent," he says. "He is what
you would see. He's the first public geek before Bill Gates." As
a film trainee, Devlin made $100 a month. His rent for a one bedroom
studio in Manhattan was $300 a month. To make ends meet, Devlin
drove a cab and washed dishes. "I did what I could to get through,"
he says.
After working on "Sleeping With the Enemy," with Julia Roberts,
Devlin and his wife toured the United States and Canada, looking
for a place to settle down and call home. Devlin says they selected
Chehalis because it reminded him of his hometown of Dayton. "We
have mountains, oceans nearby and we're not culturaly deprived because
we can always drive to Seattle," he says. "God lives here what else
can I say?" Devlin adds that he's not too far from Hollywood. "I
took a meeting with Rob Reiner recently," he says. "I drove down
to Portland, hopped on a plane and flew to L.A. met Reiner and got
back the same night."
Devlin says he doesn't want to crank out yet another "Hollywood
movie". "I want to go after the business Hollywood said it can't
do," he says. Some such projects include stories from Northwest
authors to which Devlin has bought the film rights. Meanwhile, he's
concerning himself with LCTV. Lewis County is hamstrung by residents
unwilling to take a risk and by belief that if someone gains, someone
else loses in a business venture, he says. "People here tend to
be self-detructive when alternate ways of thinking are presented,"
Devlin says. The next step for Lewis County Television is to incorporate,
develop a plan, set up an office, and form a board of directors,
Devlin says. Devlin's asking Centralia, Chehalis and Lewis County
to contribute $1,500 each. "It's time for them to step up to the
plate," he says. "This is not going to break the bank." But Devlin
says he's passed on job oprotunities in the film industry to help
Lewis County Television get started. "It's not Tad Devlin's station.
It's the community's," he says. "(The city of Centralia, the city
of Chehalis and Lewis County) need to pony up the money. I think
it's a huge mistake if they don't."
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