Bruce Wagner
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Bruce Wagner | |
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Born | Bruce Alan Wagner March 22, 1954 Madison, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Beverly Hills High School |
Notable works | I'm Losing You (1996) |
Spouse | |
Parents | Morton Wagner Bernice Maletz |
Bruce Alan Wagner (born March 22, 1954) is an American novelist and screenwriter based in Los Angeles known for his apocalyptic yet ultimately spiritual view of humanity as seen through the lens of the Hollywood entertainment industry.
Early life
Wagner was born in
Career
In his twenties, Wagner began writing articles for magazines and writing scripts. His first screenplay, Young Lust, was produced by Robert Stigwood but was never released. It was that experience that ultimately led him to write his modern take on F. Scott Fitzgerald's "Pat Hobby" short stories about an alcoholic screenwriter who never gets ahead.
Wagner self-published (with Caldecott Chubb) Force Majeure: The Bud Wiggins Stories in an edition of 1,000, which sold out at West Hollywood's
He has written essays and op-ed pieces for publications including The New Yorker, The New York Times, Art Forum and Vanity Fair. His novel I'm Losing You was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, and his novel The Chrysanthemum Palace was a PEN/Faulkner finalist in 2006. He has also written essays and prefaces for books by photographers
Wes Craven read an unproduced script of Wagner's ("They Sleep By Night"), which led Craven to ask Wagner to co-write A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987). Wagner and Craven wrote the story and share screenwriting credit with Chuck Russell and Frank Darabont. Wagner and Oliver Stone co-executive produced Wild Palms, the mini-series Wagner created, based on a comic strip that he wrote for Details magazine. Wild Palms aired on ABC in 1993. He was the executive producer and co-writer (with Tracey Ullman) of Tracey Ullman's State of the Union series (2008 - 2010) on Showtime. In 2014, David Cronenberg directed Wagner's script, Maps To The Stars, a film that Cronenberg had been trying to make for a decade. For her role as Havana Segrand, Julianne Moore won Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival in 2014. Wagner accepted the award on her behalf. In 2020, he wrote Mother Tongue, an adaptation of his book I Met Someone. It will be directed by Mike Figgis on location in Hong Kong, in early 2021.
Wagner signed a book deal with Counterpoint Press in 2019 for his novel The Marvel Universe: Origin Stories. When he turned in the manuscript, Wagner said that the editor and publisher told him "the language is problematic." One of their objections was to the word "fat" - a 500-lb. character in the novel playfully calls herself "The Fat Joan" (an homage to the popular social media personality "The Fat Jew") - and stated that "not even a character can call herself that." The writer Sam Wasson wrote about the book's journey in Graydon Carter's digital magazine AirMail ("Bruce Wagner's Woke Universe"), suspecting that Wagner's editor had been cautioned by "sensitivity readers." In the same article, Wasson quotes Wagner as saying, "My entire body of work would be thrown into a furnace if it were to be read and judged by sensitivity readers." On October 13, 2020, Wagner decided that rather than look for another publisher, he would release the novel for free, on brucewagner.la, and into the public domain. Within days, the book became available on-demand through Amazon, for which Wagner receives no profit. The book is also published in a limited, signed edition by Felix Farmer Press, a new publishing house in Los Angeles, for which Wagner also receives no profit by choice.[2]
Personal life
Wagner married actress Rebecca De Mornay on December 16, 1986, and the couple divorced in 1990.[3] He married Laura Peterson in 2009. They later divorced also. He currently is in a relationship with actress Jamie Rose.
Mysticism
After interviewing
Novels
- Force Majeure (1991)
- Wild Palms (1993) (graphic novel)
- I'm Losing You (1996)
- I'll Let You Go (2002)
- Still Holding (2003)
- The Chrysanthemum Palace (2005)
- Memorial (2006)
- Dead Stars (2012)
- The Empty Chair (2014)
- I Met Someone (2016)
- A Guide For Murdered Children (writing as Sarah Sparrow) (2018)
- The Marvel Universe: Origin Stories (2020)
- ROAR: American Master - The Oral Biography of Roger Orr (2022)
Screenplays
- Young Lust (1984)
- A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), "story by" credit, shared with Wes Craven
- Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills (1989)
- Wild Palms (1993)
- White Dwarf (1995)
- I'm Losing You (1998), also director
- Women in Film (2001), also director
- Maps to the Stars (2014)
Acting
- Knight of Cups (2015) as Bud Wiggins
- Maps to the Stars (2014) as Benjie's Chauffeur (uncredited)
- Night Visions (1990) (TV Movie) as Agent
- Shocker (1989) as Executioner
- Scenes from the Class Struggle in Beverly Hills (1989) as Dinner Guest
- How I Got into College (1989) as A
- I, Madman (1989) as Pianist
- Mortuary Academy (1988) as Schuyler
- Stranded (1987) as Reporter
- The New Adventures of Beans Baxter (TV Series) as Vlodia (4 episodes)
- One Crazy Summer (1986) as Uncle Frank
- Head Office (1985) as Al Kennedy
References
- ^ a b "Bruce Wagner : I'll Let You Go : Loss And Reconciliation". Retrieved 2020-12-13.
- ^ "Bruce Wagner's Woke Universe". airmail.news. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
- ^ "Still Holding, Bruce Wagner — book review". New York Magazine. November 3, 2003. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
- Details magazine, March 1994; from FourYogas.com
- ^ "Hollywood Satiricon", LA Weekly, 27 January 2005