Book Read Free

The Man Who Heard Voices

Page 1

by Michael Bamberger




  The Man Who Heard Voices

  ALSO BY MICHAEL BAMBERGER

  The Green Road Home

  To the Linksland

  Bart & Fay (a play)

  Wonderland

  This Golfing Life

  The Man Who Heard Voices

  Or, How M. Night Shyamalan Risked His Career on a Fairy Tale

  MICHAEL BAMBERGER

  GOTHAM BOOKS

  GOTHAM BOOKS

  Published by Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

  Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.);

  Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England; Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd); Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd); Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi–110 017, India; Penguin Group (NZ), cnr Airborne and Rosedale Roads, Albany, Auckland 1310, New Zealand (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd); Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  Published by Gotham Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  Copyright © 2006 by Michael Bamberger

  All rights reserved

  Gotham Books and the skyscraper logo are trademarks of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Bamberger, Michael, 1960–

  The man who heard voices,: or, how M. Night Shyamalan risked his career on a fairy tale / by Michael Bamberger.

  p. cm.

  1. Lady in the water (Motion picture) I. Shyamalan, M. Night. II. Title.

  PN1997.2.L33B36 2006791.43'72—dc22 2006014777

  ISBN : 978-1-101-21820-4

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  While the author has made every effort to provide accurate telephone numbers and Internet addresses at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.

  For Ellen Nalle and Jay Hass,

  ambassadors of love.

  Trust thyself, and another shall not betray thee.

  —BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

  Contents

  April 17, 2004

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  April 18, 2006

  Author’s Note

  April 17, 2004

  My wife and I are movie buffs. We go to the movies regularly on Saturday nights, and every so often, when the kids are in school, we sneak off and see a matinee, when the prices are lower and you can sit wherever you like. A cup of hot coffee during the noon showing of The Talented Mr. Ripley on a cold and drizzly workday—it’s an altogether pleasant thing. I am nothing like a movie expert. (Ingmar Bergman, man or woman? I don’t know.) Mostly I just like the escape, the drift into a dreamworld. Christine’s the same way. We have similar tastes.

  There are, of course, Saturday evenings when we don’t go to the movies, and the third Saturday of April 2004 was such a night. It was a balmy night, humid and breezy, odd for Philadelphia at that time of year. I remember the night well because of the dinner party we attended. Christine, if I may say this about my wife, improves any party, and because I’m a sportswriter, some hostesses confuse me with the witty scribes they remember from old TV shows, Oscar Madison in The Odd Couple, maybe. Anyway, we’re invited to some nice gigs. I am not a party person, but sometimes you can’t help yourself.

  We were the guests of a sparkly couple, Bob and Susan Burch, we knew through friends. They live in one of the grand mansions still standing on the Main Line, the string of affluent Philadelphia suburbs. We had not been to their house before. The walled driveway went on forever, and above the entrance road, in an apple orchard, one of the Burch children was riding a pony, no saddle, with war paint on his face and a quiver of arrows across his shirtless back. What we thought was the house was actually the guesthouse, so we kept going. Jim Courier, the tennis player, was with us. He saw the boy on his pony and the Philadelphia skyline ten miles beyond and interrupted himself in midsentence to say, “Where the hell are we?”

  Bob Burch—a book reader, God bless him—got rich selling sweaters, and if he ever had a boss in his life, you cannot tell. When Susan recounted a cross-country family trip in a Winnebago, Mother Susan at the wheel and a goggled Bob almost keeping up on his latest bike, it sounded like a scene from an Albert Brooks movie. Her guest list comprised an unlikely hodgepodge of people. Brian Roberts, who runs a giant cable company, was there with his wife, Aileen, a Philadelphia do-gooder, visiting the Burches for the first time. Courier was there with a date, a former model and pianist, and there were five or six other people, including an investor/weekend poet and a futurist. Christine and I were the only poor people, relatively speaking, on hand that night—we have a nice collection of yard-sale art—but this was a crowd no longer worried about money. (Surely a lie, but it is the privilege of the city-dwelling working typist to romanticize such people.)

  The guests of honor, a phrase I use casually here, were M. Night Shyamalan, the screenwriter and director, and his wife, Bhavna, then a doctoral candidate in psychology at Bryn Mawr College. The Burches and Shyamalans lived near each other and were involved in some of the same charities, and Susan had wanted to get Night and Bhavna over for some time. It was not easy, because the Shyamalans guarded their free time carefully, and Night was famous for being secretive and private. Susan knew they avoided parties in general, especially if the conversation was likely to run to old golf courses or new hedge funds. Susan’s social IQ is at the genius level, and she laid out the guest list for Bhavna ahead of time; on that basis, she got the Shyamalans, as the salesmen say, “to yes.” The Shyamalans didn’t know the other guests, but in a manner of speaking, they had picked them.

  I had read M. Night Shyamalan’s surname a hundred times in The Philadelphia Inquirer—he had grown up in suburban Philadelphia and made his movies in and around the city—but I didn’t know how to pronounce it (as it is spelled, except the y just sits there doing nothing: SHA-ma-lon). He was a Philadelphia celebrity in a low-key way, though Philadelphians are not much for hero worship. In the days of the Founding Fathers, the city claimed Benjamin Franklin; in the nineteenth century, the city’s great industrialists were its stars, your Lippincotts (books), your Baldwins (locomotives), your Stetsons (hats), plus the Barrymores (actors). For most of the twentieth century, the Main Line bluebloods were still prominent, with their estates and their horses, plus Grace Kelly and Rocky Balboa, although you c
ould argue that he was a movie character. In the new millennium, there was Allen Iverson, the elfin NBA basketball player; Donovan McNabb, the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback; and M. Night. Nobody I knew really talked about him. You just went to see his movies. I had seen his three big ones: The Sixth Sense (disturbing, in a good way); Unbreakable (didn’t like it while watching it, but it stayed with me); and Signs (entertaining but didn’t linger).

  Christine and I had seen The Sixth Sense on a Saturday night, every seat taken, people murmuring about the streets they recognized. We were blown away by the surprise ending, like everybody else. You know the supermarket chain Trader Joe’s? When I’m in it, I can never tell if it’s a grocery store for foodies or a big-box discount place. I had the same kind of thing with The Sixth Sense. I didn’t know if it was an especially entertaining movie—or something more momentous. I was curious to meet Night, but not in any crazy way. Meeting the famous and the faintly famous, it’s an occupational hazard in my line of work. Barry Bonds did a whole verbal rage thing on me once. All part of the fun.

  Before I get to Night, let me tell you about his wife, Bhavna. She is Indian, like Night, with traces of a British accent, from her Hong Kong childhood, and a quiet, poised manner. Listening to her, you knew she was an academic heavyweight, but she had the stillness and manners of a princess. She had a delicate beauty, like that of an idealized Miss India, with glossy lips and the figure of a swimsuit model. Night had coaxed her into his camp when they were undergraduates at New York University, when he was just another kid writing scripts and borrowing money to rent cameras and spotlights. He must have had some major mojo going, Austin Powers and then some. I’m sure he wasn’t a total schlub, but please. He was a writer. I’ve been there. It’s not easy.

  And then there was Night, with his drooping earlobes, bug’s-life eyes, curling lips, nasal voice. He was slender and boyish, with gym-built arms and jet-black hair that had a few silver strands hanging just over the tops of his ears. He was wearing high-fashion jeans and a short-sleeved, post-nerd un-tucked plaid shirt, wide open at the neck, and a leather necklace that held a Sanskrit prayer in a silver case, like a miniature mezuzah. He and Bhavna arrived last, holding hands as they made their way through the small Saturday-night-fever crowd. In almost no time, Night looked completely comfortable. He was warm, friendly, interesting—amazingly energetic. He laughed readily, as if you were saying funny things. He’d enter any debate without ever getting haughty about what he knew. I go down the New Age road skeptically, but I felt a powerful force coming off the guy.

  Outside the big house and down a hill there was a giant tepee and a roaring bonfire nearby that, late in the evening, was encircled by the menfolk. There was a Native American theme going on at the Burches’, and it worked for Night. He talked about his next movie, The Village, and how at the start of the shoot, the main actors—William Hurt, Joaquin Phoenix, Sigourney Weaver, Bryce Howard (Ron Howard’s daughter, he pointed out)—had gone into some sort of sweatbox built deep in the woods where an American Indian holy man led them in meditation. He was talking about big stuff—community, faith—with strangers, and we weren’t looking at our shoes. It was all very 1967. Night’s shirt was half open—Tom Jones in his prime. “It was my idea, as a bonding thing, but it was for the actors. What happened in there, what they wore, what they talked about, I don’t know,” Night said. “Pretty cool, right?” I was amazed at the effort he was making—that’s not recommended in the celebrity handbook—and by how open he was and how trusting. Also, by how much he loved to talk.

  Earlier, Night had asked Jim Courier about his tennis career, about his training methods, about the tennis academy he’d attended for high school. Night said he’d followed Courier’s professional career as a player on his own high school tennis team. Night spoke of how he had disliked it when his opponents came on the court with a stack of virgin rackets, aluminum, titanium, whatever. “My feeling was always, What did you do to deserve those rackets?” Before long, Courier was asking Night about his days in junior tennis as if they were significant, and to Night, they were.

  With Brian Roberts, Night was much the same. Brian’s company, Comcast, was trying to buy Disney at the time. That was all over the papers day after day. Night had made three big movies for Disney, starting with The Sixth Sense, which had grossed close to $700 million in worldwide ticket sales. He had made The Village, not yet out, for Disney, too. The first two movies starred Bruce Willis and the third Mel Gibson, but The Village would be sold on its director. Brian asked Night a series of incisive questions about the movie business and its players, about Michael Eisner and Harvey Weinstein and Night’s prediction for the future of movies in the movie house. Listening to Night’s long, involved, articulate answers, you would have thought he was Michael Eisner’s boss. Brian is an excellent reporter and listener, and you could say he was leading the whole thing, getting the information he wanted, but something else was happening, too. Night was having exactly the conversation he wanted to have with Brian, the man he’d be making movies for if the Disney deal went through.

  Night didn’t anoint himself the star of the evening. The rest of us did that for him. I had often seen Bob Burch or Brian Roberts or Jim Courier or Aileen Roberts in that role, but not this evening. Night told us excellent star-of-the-show stories, the kind you hear on late-night talk shows. One involved, as these stories often do, his parents, both doctors, both émigrés from India.

  Night: I’ve got exciting news.

  Mother: Yes?

  Night: I’m gonna be on the cover of Newsweek.

  Mother: That’s nice.

  Father: Not Time?

  Night: No, not Time. I’ll be the first director ever on the cover of Newsweek.

  A beat.

  Father: Doesn’t Time have a much bigger circulation?

  Night laughed and then everybody else did, too. The underlying burden implied by the story—his parents’ titanic expectations—was ignored.

  You could tell that Night—with his sagging ears and swollen eyes—heard and saw everything going on that night. I watched him watching a housekeeper remove a wineglass from a serving tray, hold it up to a light, and disqualify it for soap streaks. How Night read this simple act of professionalism, I do not know, because I did not ask. My thing as a reporter has always been to get to the bottom of something, ask the right questions of the right people. Night’s methods, I guessed, were totally different. I got the feeling that he had some secret move up his sleeve, one that let him come up with a big idea, invent a killing phrase (“I see dead people”), and sell close to $700 million worth of movie tickets across the world. I wondered how he did it.

  On the car ride home and on the phone the next day, I polled some of the other guests on the subject of Night. They used different words—smart, quick, fun, cocky, likable, boyish, odd, captivating—and had different impressions, but all had felt the force of his personality. They could remember what he was wearing, the phrases he used, the way he twisted his rings while talking.

  I sent Night a letter saying that I’d be interested in writing a book about him, about his methods, about how his head worked. Through his assistant, he invited me to his office, in a farmhouse on an old horse farm. We talked for several hours and followed that with several lengthy telephone conversations. By then he had read a book of mine about a big public high school in the Philadelphia suburbs. In the book, an eleventh-grader dies after a night of drinking. A female teacher has a relationship with a male student. A senior boy and a junior girl have a baby. It’s all real names and real events. A boy with cerebral palsy, a social outsider, makes it to the prom.

  “If you wrote about me the way you wrote about the kids in that high school, I’d read that,” Night said.

  “You realize that nobody from the high school had any say about what went in the book, don’t you?”

  “Of course.”

  “I’d need the same thing from you.”

  “It would have to be t
hat way. If it wasn’t like that, the book would have no credibility. I want to see somebody else’s take on what I do. I want to learn something.”

  On that basis—no contract, no lawyers, no agents, nothing but a handshake—I started hanging out with him.

  For a long time afterward, I thought about that balmy April evening at the Burches’. I wondered: Was the whole thing some kind of movie? Did Night direct us—without saying a word—on where to stand, what costumes to wear, what to say? Did he get Susan Burch, in some telepathic way, to put her son on a pony in their apple orchard as a magnificent piece of background scenery?

  If he had these powers, where did they come from? Could another person develop them?

  And if he could have that kind of power over a dinner party, what kind of power could he have over one of the largest entertainment companies in the world?

  What kind of power could he have over me?

  And what else could he do with his powers? Was there a great, good thing he could do?

  Anyway, Night began as an intriguing subject. What he would turn into I could not then know.

  Contents

  April 17, 2004

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  April 18, 2006

  Author’s Note

  April 17, 2004

  My wife and I are movie buffs. We go to the movies regularly on Saturday nights, and every so often, when the kids are in school, we sneak off and see a matinee, when the prices are lower and you can sit wherever you like. A cup of hot coffee during the noon showing of The Talented Mr. Ripley on a cold and drizzly workday—it’s an altogether pleasant thing. I am nothing like a movie expert. (Ingmar Bergman, man or woman? I don’t know.) Mostly I just like the escape, the drift into a dreamworld. Christine’s the same way. We have similar tastes.

 

‹ Prev