Post by darkstar2 on Sept 12, 2008 14:08:05 GMT
I ventured into the UCLA Film archives last night and noticed a lot of new entries have been added on “The Doors” and particularly “Jim Morrison.” My search revealed, “159” entries. Not all of the “159” entries are specifically about The Doors or Morrison but a good many are.
I was surprised to find a listing for the “film treatment” of the script that Jim Morrison and Michael McClure worked on together in 1969. I had no idea that this item still existed. This item is cataloged under the name of "Jim Morrison 1943-1971" at the Bancroft Library at UC Berkley.
Michael McClure had his novel, "The Adept" published in 1971.
In June of 1969 Jim Morrison and Michael McClure used Michael's then unpublished novel, "The Adept" to write a script hoping to secure a film production deal in the near future.
An advance on the script gave them the means to rent office space in 9000 Building on Sunset Blvd and they both got to work on the adaptation.
According to Stephen Davis’ book, “The Life & Times Of Jim Morrison”, page 337 states that a copy of this script is archived at Simon Fraser University of Canada. A search through the SFUC library indicates no such item exists.
Below is the link for the search I conducted through the SFUC library which turned up only one result.
troy.lib.sfu.ca/search~S1/?searchty...dept%26SORT%3DD
The “film treatment” copy of this script is archived at the University Of California at Berkley where it remained in the Bancroft Library until the summer of 2008.
The Bancroft Library is in the process of moving to a new building and is temporarily closed until winter/early spring.
The cataloging information for this copy of the script indicates that the script cannot be removed from the libraries premises and can only be viewed by visiting the library in person.
Following the catalog information from UC Berkley for the script, I've included information for the “New” Bancroft Library which includes a link for periodical updates, and a bit of history about the script and how it was written.
Excerpt from the Howard Smith Interview with Jim Morrison in Los Angeles Nov 6 1969
A reference from page 380 of the book “Break On Through”
Excerpt from the “Feast Of Friends” book (by Frank Liscinadro) written by Michael McClure.
Author Morrison, Jim, 1943-1971.
Title Saint Nicholas : film treatment based on "The Adept" by Michael McClure / by James Douglas Morrison and Michael McClure.
Publisher [Los Angeles : Kwik Script Service, 1971]
Description 74 p. ; 29 cm.
Language English
Added Entry McClure, Michael.
Format Book
Library UC Berkeley All
Library Call Number Availability Notes
UC Berkeley
Non-circulating; may be used only in The Bancroft Library
Bancroft XZ2006.0156 Circ status Bancroft Library closed summer 2008 : bancroft.berkeley.edu/info/move/
melvyl.cdlib.org/F/9JQG4661R8L8DXKA...&format=999
Bancroft Library MOVE
The Bancroft Library Construction News
The Bancroft Library is CLOSED until Winter for the move back to the newly retrofitted Doe Annex.
During the closure period, the Bancroft Reference, Duplication, and Permissions services will continue to operate on a very limited basis due to the inaccessibility of our collections.
----------------------------------------------------
Updates
We are now closed until Winter. The internal reconstruction of the Doe Annex has been completed, and we are beginning our move back to campus. During the closure period, the Bancroft Reference, Duplication, and Permissions services will continue to operate on a very limited basis due to the inaccessibility of our collections. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our users.
For more information, please refer back to this website or call
(510) 642-3781 for updates. Also visit the Frequently Asked Move Questions page.
----------------------------------------------------
The Bancroft Library Move 2005
Since 2005, The Bancroft Library has been undergoing a major construction project which included a complete California state-mandated seismic retrofit of the Doe Annex (the building that houses Bancroft), along with significant programmatic improvements to library. Due to the construction project, the library and its divisions (University Archives, MTP, CTP, and ROHO) were moved to temporary quarters at 2121 Allston Way, 2195 Hearst Avenue, and Room 251 of Evans Hall.
The 2005 Bancroft Library Move was planned by three specially-appointed task forces. The work of the task forces was coordinated by Bancroft Surge Team Coordinator Randal Brandt.
Information about the 2005 Bancroft Surge Task Forces
bancroft.berkeley.edu/info/move/
Howard Smith Interview with Jim Morrison – Los Angeles Nov 6 1969
Howard: Are you gonna be writing films though? You have anything in the works?
Jim: Um, yeah. Probably the….If I do anything in films it will probably be this script called Saint Nicholas that Michael McClure and I wrote based on his novel The Adept which hasn’t been published yet. It’s a contemporary story about a couple of dope dealers that go to the desert to make a score and if I, if I do anything that’ll probably be the first project.
Howard: Are you gonna appear in it also?
Jim: Um…probably.
Howard: It sort of sounds like the beginning of Easy Rider.
Jim: Yeah, I know but there’s nothing I can do about it. This…this story was written before Easy Rider was made, you know and it’s just superficial similarities. It’s….I know people are gonna, you know call attention to that, but I don’t know what to do about it. It’s…it’s very similar to Easy Rider in its superficial aspects. Do you know, I read in Daily Variety yesterday…..Easy Rider was made for about $385,000 dollars and the estimated gross so far….50 to 60 million dollars! He said in a religious hushed tone…50 to 60 million dollars. That’s quite a profit margin, m’dear.
Howard: A lot of bad movies have made that much money too.
Jim: Yeah but they…but they usually cost 10 or 12 million dollars to make. This was…this is like a…breaks precedents all over the place because it’s the first essentially independent, low budget feature to really clean up in the old marketplace. It’s unusual. It’s gonna…it’s gonna open the scene up for a lot of people.
Ref: Break On Through – Page 380
(June 1969) – Jim began working with Michael McClure on several different projects including a screenplay which Morrison described this way, “It’s called The Adept and it is based on one of Michael’s unpublished novels…It reminds me of The Treasure of Sierra Madre. It’s about three cats in search of a psychic treasure…a young guy named Nicholas who lives in New York…a friend of his named Rourke who’s a revolutionary-turned-neo-capitalist, and they both have long hair… They fly to Mexico and meet up with a black cat named Derner. They venture out on the desert to meet a half-breed border guard to make a score.”
Excerpt from the book: "Morrison A Feast Of Friends", by Frank Lisciandro - The Snakeskin Jacket Chapter a rememberance of Jim by Michael McClure. (pages 112-114)
"We decided against talking to Kastner about The Beard. In the meantime, Jim had read my new manuscript, my novel “The Adept”. Jim loved The Beard and wanted to play Billy The Kid in”The Beard,” which I thought would be beautiful. But when he read “The Adept” he said, "Let's do this instead." I said, "Now that's an idea."
Kastner said, "What about The Beard?" Jim said, "We've changed our mind, we want to do a new project based on Michael's novel The Adept." Then Jim told the story of the novel with a vivid sense of drama, great detail and full recall of what happens in it. That's complex since the novel is basically about sensory experience and it's a mystical novel...an adventure novel about an anarchist, visionary idealist coke dealer who is an outlaw motorcycle rider. Sort of a sociopath anarchist, artist, idealist, dope dealer, back in the days of the sixties when those were real people. The characters in it are based on people I knew.
Anyway Jim pitched the entire novel to Kastner and Kastner was interested...Certainly Jim's intellectual abilities were stunning I was pleased to be working with him and at that point I was just beginning to know Jim and Pam. It was a demonstration of Jim's power to recall the novel in its totality, and explain the novel to Kastner, and change it into a film as he told it, and to make it more visual for Kastner. I was impressed.
Finally Kastner passed on it. Said, "No." We were still intent on doing the novel as a film, and we were determined that we would write the script and Jim would star in it. In the meantime Jim had made contact with a man named Bill Belasco who wanted to produce it. So we talked with Bill, and we were pretty convinced that Bill could handle it. At that point Jim and I made arrangements to start writing a film script together."
Belasco rented an office for us on the top floor of the Scam Building. Where is it, 9000 Sunset Strip? That big glass-fronted building in the middle of the Strip. We were on the eleventh or twelfth story, in a corner office with a couple of rooms.
Jim and I made a deal with ourselves, no drinking during the day. No drinking before work, one drink at noon, and no drinking till six o'clock, which was critical for both of us.
We came in with copies of my novel and we got there by ten o'clock every morning. And Jim was never a late.
He was there every morning. I was there every morning. When we first began Jim, because he'd been to UCLA film school, said, "We're going to have to do a treatment before we do the script." I said, "I don't think we're going to have to Jim." Unfortunately we should have done the treatment.
We started working directly from the novel, just adapting the book, as it was. We got a fair distance into it, and then at that point, we were not doing what we wanted to do. Jim and I had seen many things together, both in Los Angeles and London, that we wanted to put in the script. Jim'd say, "You remember that violinist we saw in Sloane Square, man? The kid with the rag hat?" And I'd say, "Yeah." "I want him right here, playing down below the street while the protagonist of The Adept comes to the window and looks down." I'd say, "Okay man."
Then I'd remind him of something or other and say, "Let's have that." So we started adding everything we wanted to have in the script. It became voluminous. And we were getting ideas rapidly. Jim would shoot some of the dialogue and twist the plot to me or we'd go back to the book. We realized that what we were doing was that we were sitting there rapping back and forth to each other, so we hired a secretary. She came in at ten o'clock everyday too, and we started dictating to her. Jim and I would do that all day for, I don't know, three or four weeks.
We worked hard on it in such a fashion that we ended up with a script that was about the size of Moby Dick. I mean it was a couple hundred pages, and more, typed up. Then we realized what we had could not be shown to Belasco as a professional script. In the middle of the night one night Jim cut it down to a ninety page script and he missed, he missed the point. He cut it down to the right length of a script and we had it typed up and gave it to Belasco. But I didn't like what it ended up being, because what we had originally created was a redwood tree. We created a huge script, instead of following a treatment. In a fit of creativity Jim took the redwood tree and cut it down to a ninety page toothpick. What we cut it to was not worthy of what we'd done. I think we should have begun over again following Jim's initial insight. But it didn't happen. It could have been a wonderful film with Jim in it, it would have been beautiful."
END.
McClure, Michael. The Adept. New York: Delacorte Press, 1971.

I was surprised to find a listing for the “film treatment” of the script that Jim Morrison and Michael McClure worked on together in 1969. I had no idea that this item still existed. This item is cataloged under the name of "Jim Morrison 1943-1971" at the Bancroft Library at UC Berkley.
Michael McClure had his novel, "The Adept" published in 1971.
In June of 1969 Jim Morrison and Michael McClure used Michael's then unpublished novel, "The Adept" to write a script hoping to secure a film production deal in the near future.
An advance on the script gave them the means to rent office space in 9000 Building on Sunset Blvd and they both got to work on the adaptation.
According to Stephen Davis’ book, “The Life & Times Of Jim Morrison”, page 337 states that a copy of this script is archived at Simon Fraser University of Canada. A search through the SFUC library indicates no such item exists.
Below is the link for the search I conducted through the SFUC library which turned up only one result.
troy.lib.sfu.ca/search~S1/?searchty...dept%26SORT%3DD
The “film treatment” copy of this script is archived at the University Of California at Berkley where it remained in the Bancroft Library until the summer of 2008.
The Bancroft Library is in the process of moving to a new building and is temporarily closed until winter/early spring.
The cataloging information for this copy of the script indicates that the script cannot be removed from the libraries premises and can only be viewed by visiting the library in person.
Following the catalog information from UC Berkley for the script, I've included information for the “New” Bancroft Library which includes a link for periodical updates, and a bit of history about the script and how it was written.
Excerpt from the Howard Smith Interview with Jim Morrison in Los Angeles Nov 6 1969
A reference from page 380 of the book “Break On Through”
Excerpt from the “Feast Of Friends” book (by Frank Liscinadro) written by Michael McClure.
Author Morrison, Jim, 1943-1971.
Title Saint Nicholas : film treatment based on "The Adept" by Michael McClure / by James Douglas Morrison and Michael McClure.
Publisher [Los Angeles : Kwik Script Service, 1971]
Description 74 p. ; 29 cm.
Language English
Added Entry McClure, Michael.
Format Book
Library UC Berkeley All
Library Call Number Availability Notes
UC Berkeley
Non-circulating; may be used only in The Bancroft Library
Bancroft XZ2006.0156 Circ status Bancroft Library closed summer 2008 : bancroft.berkeley.edu/info/move/
melvyl.cdlib.org/F/9JQG4661R8L8DXKA...&format=999
Bancroft Library MOVE
The Bancroft Library Construction News
The Bancroft Library is CLOSED until Winter for the move back to the newly retrofitted Doe Annex.
During the closure period, the Bancroft Reference, Duplication, and Permissions services will continue to operate on a very limited basis due to the inaccessibility of our collections.
----------------------------------------------------
Updates
We are now closed until Winter. The internal reconstruction of the Doe Annex has been completed, and we are beginning our move back to campus. During the closure period, the Bancroft Reference, Duplication, and Permissions services will continue to operate on a very limited basis due to the inaccessibility of our collections. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our users.
For more information, please refer back to this website or call
(510) 642-3781 for updates. Also visit the Frequently Asked Move Questions page.
----------------------------------------------------
The Bancroft Library Move 2005
Since 2005, The Bancroft Library has been undergoing a major construction project which included a complete California state-mandated seismic retrofit of the Doe Annex (the building that houses Bancroft), along with significant programmatic improvements to library. Due to the construction project, the library and its divisions (University Archives, MTP, CTP, and ROHO) were moved to temporary quarters at 2121 Allston Way, 2195 Hearst Avenue, and Room 251 of Evans Hall.
The 2005 Bancroft Library Move was planned by three specially-appointed task forces. The work of the task forces was coordinated by Bancroft Surge Team Coordinator Randal Brandt.
Information about the 2005 Bancroft Surge Task Forces
bancroft.berkeley.edu/info/move/
Howard Smith Interview with Jim Morrison – Los Angeles Nov 6 1969
Howard: Are you gonna be writing films though? You have anything in the works?
Jim: Um, yeah. Probably the….If I do anything in films it will probably be this script called Saint Nicholas that Michael McClure and I wrote based on his novel The Adept which hasn’t been published yet. It’s a contemporary story about a couple of dope dealers that go to the desert to make a score and if I, if I do anything that’ll probably be the first project.
Howard: Are you gonna appear in it also?
Jim: Um…probably.
Howard: It sort of sounds like the beginning of Easy Rider.
Jim: Yeah, I know but there’s nothing I can do about it. This…this story was written before Easy Rider was made, you know and it’s just superficial similarities. It’s….I know people are gonna, you know call attention to that, but I don’t know what to do about it. It’s…it’s very similar to Easy Rider in its superficial aspects. Do you know, I read in Daily Variety yesterday…..Easy Rider was made for about $385,000 dollars and the estimated gross so far….50 to 60 million dollars! He said in a religious hushed tone…50 to 60 million dollars. That’s quite a profit margin, m’dear.
Howard: A lot of bad movies have made that much money too.
Jim: Yeah but they…but they usually cost 10 or 12 million dollars to make. This was…this is like a…breaks precedents all over the place because it’s the first essentially independent, low budget feature to really clean up in the old marketplace. It’s unusual. It’s gonna…it’s gonna open the scene up for a lot of people.
Ref: Break On Through – Page 380
(June 1969) – Jim began working with Michael McClure on several different projects including a screenplay which Morrison described this way, “It’s called The Adept and it is based on one of Michael’s unpublished novels…It reminds me of The Treasure of Sierra Madre. It’s about three cats in search of a psychic treasure…a young guy named Nicholas who lives in New York…a friend of his named Rourke who’s a revolutionary-turned-neo-capitalist, and they both have long hair… They fly to Mexico and meet up with a black cat named Derner. They venture out on the desert to meet a half-breed border guard to make a score.”
Excerpt from the book: "Morrison A Feast Of Friends", by Frank Lisciandro - The Snakeskin Jacket Chapter a rememberance of Jim by Michael McClure. (pages 112-114)
"We decided against talking to Kastner about The Beard. In the meantime, Jim had read my new manuscript, my novel “The Adept”. Jim loved The Beard and wanted to play Billy The Kid in”The Beard,” which I thought would be beautiful. But when he read “The Adept” he said, "Let's do this instead." I said, "Now that's an idea."
Kastner said, "What about The Beard?" Jim said, "We've changed our mind, we want to do a new project based on Michael's novel The Adept." Then Jim told the story of the novel with a vivid sense of drama, great detail and full recall of what happens in it. That's complex since the novel is basically about sensory experience and it's a mystical novel...an adventure novel about an anarchist, visionary idealist coke dealer who is an outlaw motorcycle rider. Sort of a sociopath anarchist, artist, idealist, dope dealer, back in the days of the sixties when those were real people. The characters in it are based on people I knew.
Anyway Jim pitched the entire novel to Kastner and Kastner was interested...Certainly Jim's intellectual abilities were stunning I was pleased to be working with him and at that point I was just beginning to know Jim and Pam. It was a demonstration of Jim's power to recall the novel in its totality, and explain the novel to Kastner, and change it into a film as he told it, and to make it more visual for Kastner. I was impressed.
Finally Kastner passed on it. Said, "No." We were still intent on doing the novel as a film, and we were determined that we would write the script and Jim would star in it. In the meantime Jim had made contact with a man named Bill Belasco who wanted to produce it. So we talked with Bill, and we were pretty convinced that Bill could handle it. At that point Jim and I made arrangements to start writing a film script together."
Belasco rented an office for us on the top floor of the Scam Building. Where is it, 9000 Sunset Strip? That big glass-fronted building in the middle of the Strip. We were on the eleventh or twelfth story, in a corner office with a couple of rooms.
Jim and I made a deal with ourselves, no drinking during the day. No drinking before work, one drink at noon, and no drinking till six o'clock, which was critical for both of us.
We came in with copies of my novel and we got there by ten o'clock every morning. And Jim was never a late.
He was there every morning. I was there every morning. When we first began Jim, because he'd been to UCLA film school, said, "We're going to have to do a treatment before we do the script." I said, "I don't think we're going to have to Jim." Unfortunately we should have done the treatment.
We started working directly from the novel, just adapting the book, as it was. We got a fair distance into it, and then at that point, we were not doing what we wanted to do. Jim and I had seen many things together, both in Los Angeles and London, that we wanted to put in the script. Jim'd say, "You remember that violinist we saw in Sloane Square, man? The kid with the rag hat?" And I'd say, "Yeah." "I want him right here, playing down below the street while the protagonist of The Adept comes to the window and looks down." I'd say, "Okay man."
Then I'd remind him of something or other and say, "Let's have that." So we started adding everything we wanted to have in the script. It became voluminous. And we were getting ideas rapidly. Jim would shoot some of the dialogue and twist the plot to me or we'd go back to the book. We realized that what we were doing was that we were sitting there rapping back and forth to each other, so we hired a secretary. She came in at ten o'clock everyday too, and we started dictating to her. Jim and I would do that all day for, I don't know, three or four weeks.
We worked hard on it in such a fashion that we ended up with a script that was about the size of Moby Dick. I mean it was a couple hundred pages, and more, typed up. Then we realized what we had could not be shown to Belasco as a professional script. In the middle of the night one night Jim cut it down to a ninety page script and he missed, he missed the point. He cut it down to the right length of a script and we had it typed up and gave it to Belasco. But I didn't like what it ended up being, because what we had originally created was a redwood tree. We created a huge script, instead of following a treatment. In a fit of creativity Jim took the redwood tree and cut it down to a ninety page toothpick. What we cut it to was not worthy of what we'd done. I think we should have begun over again following Jim's initial insight. But it didn't happen. It could have been a wonderful film with Jim in it, it would have been beautiful."
END.
McClure, Michael. The Adept. New York: Delacorte Press, 1971.
