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Interview: Bruce Joel Rubin

Ghost writer's LSD awakening

July 21, 2011 10:26
Bruce Joel Rubin

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

This interview didn't go as expected. Bruce Joel Rubin was meant to talk about his musical Ghost, the stage version of the 1990 movie that won him his Oscar for best original screenplay. He was meant to ruminate on the challenges of adapting his own screenplay for the stage and to look back on what has to be one of the strangest of Hollywood careers.

Strange because what kind of mind is capable of creating not only the shamelessly sentimental love story at the centre of the hit movie Ghost, but also the disturbing Jacob's Ladder, a cult psychological mystery in which Tim Robbins plays a Vietnam veteran struggling to stay sane as he is haunted by demons? What kind of writer comes up with movies as diverse as the blockbuster Deep Impact, the family entertainment Stuart Little 2 and the most personal of projects, My Life, in which he directed Michael Keaton as a man who knows he is going to die.

I wait for Rubin in a windowless room somewhere under the Piccadilly Theatre's stage where the show opened last week. Overhead, director Matthew Warchus is watching a rehearsal. The music, written by rock legends Dave Stewart and Glen Ballard, permeates the building. It's like sitting in a giant speaker with the bass turned up.

The room's oak door opens and in walks a rather timid-looking grey-haired man in his late 60s. He is followed by a biblical surge of sound from the stage above. The heavenly voice that is singing at full throttle belongs to Caissie Levy, the musical's American (and Jewish) co-star. Levy plays artist Molly, the character played by Demi Moore in the film. And just before the door shuts, Levy's voice is joined in tight, anthemic harmony by the voice of Richard Fleeshman playing Sam, Molly's beefcake fiancé.

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