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Reply #150 posted 07/09/16 7:53pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

116) INT. CLUB -- NIGHT

STAGE
THUNDER! Prince walks center-
stage...and bows. The AUDIENCE goes
BERSERK! He acknowledges Wendy and
Lisa, and then the entire Band. The
CROWD is jumping out of their skin! He
straps on his guitar, gives a deft
signal and--

I'm not a woman
I'm not a man
I am something that U'll never understand
I'll never beat U
I'll never lie
And if U're evil I'll forgive U by and by


MUSIC. The Band launches into "I Would
Die For You." Vanity squeezes her way
through the crowd and stands watching
Prince from the wings. He presses his
lips to the mike and SINGS.

The MUSIC continues as we...

CUT TO:

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Reply #151 posted 07/09/16 7:54pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(117) INT. LIVING ROOM, PRINCE'S HOME -- NIGHT

Prince walks through the LIVING ROOM
slowly, gazes at the smashed table, the
broken lamp and dishes. Every item in
the room suddenly takes on a profound
significance. His father's slippers
under the sofa, his mother's knickknacks
on the table, her pen and ink drawings
on the wall. After a moment, he picks
up his father's slippers, studies them a
long time.

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Reply #152 posted 07/09/16 7:54pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(118) INT. BEDROOM -- NIGHT

The DOOR opens -- a LIGHT snaps ON. He
walks into the room, places his father's
slippers in the CLOSET. His Mother's
dress is lying in a heap on the floor.
He picks it up, and puts it away.

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Reply #153 posted 07/09/16 7:55pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(119) INT. BASEMENT -- NIGHT

as he descends the steps hesitantly.
The FLOOR is covered with rubble. He
sits on the steps, stares at his
father's MUSIC on the floor.

"I Would Die For You" continues as we...

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Reply #154 posted 07/09/16 7:56pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(120) INT. CLUB -- NIGHT

Cuz U - I would die 4 U, yeah
Darlin', if U want me 2
U - I would die 4 U

I'm not your lover
I'm not your friend
I am something that U'll never comprehend
No need 2 worry
No need 2 cry
I'm your messiah and U're the reason why


Prince on-stage SINGING "I Would Die For
You." The AUDIENCE is captivated,
locked into his grip again. His eyes
seem to be focused on something far
away. He closes them tightly, presses
his lips against the mike.



The MUSIC continues as we...

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Reply #155 posted 07/09/16 7:57pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(121) INT. BASEMENT, PRINCE'S HOME -- TWILIGHT


He's in the final stages of cleaning the
basement floor. The debris has been
swept up, shelves righted, smashed items
thrown away...

He stacks his Father's music neatly,
tears welling in his eyes. He places it
in new boxes, stands wearily, a
fulfilled look on his face. Suddenly he
stops -- stares at the awful chalk marks
on the floor: his Father lying down,
the gun gripped in his hand...

"I Would Die For You" continues as we...

CUT TO:

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Reply #156 posted 07/09/16 7:58pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(122) INT. CLUB -- NIGHT

Prince on-stage SINGING "I Would Die
For You." He's lost to himself now,
locked into a personal horror he alone
can see. The CROWD is pressed against
the stage, mesmerized by his
performance. Billy Sparks is also drawn
in, amazed at the power being generated
from the stage. Prince sweeps the
audience with his eyes, then fastens on
Vanity earnestly, SINGS directly to her.

The MUSIC continues as we...

CUT TO:

U're just a sinner I am told
Be your fire when U're cold
Make U happy when U're sad
Make U good when U are bad
I'm not a human, I am a dove
I'm your conscience, I am love
All I really need is 2 know that U believe (Yeah)

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Reply #157 posted 07/09/16 7:59pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(123) INT. BASEMENT, PRINCE'S HOME -- DAWN



He pulls a HOSE from behind the washer,
draws it on to the floor. He hesitates
a moment, gazes one last time at his
Father's outline, tears welling in his
eyes. He turns the water on, watches as
the dusty yellow chalk gives way
reluctantly, mixing with the water,
swirling down the drain. Calmness
sweeps his face like a passing cloud.

Just then SUNLIGHT blazes in through the
casement windows. Water droplets
glisten brilliantly in the morning
light. He turns the water off, goes to
put the hose back -- stops suddenly,
surprised...

...his Mother's earring lies on the
floor.


He's entranced, picks it up, stares at
it a moment. Everything he's been
through comes rushing at him like a loco
motive. The confusion, the shouting and
violence, the darkness that eclipsed his
parents' life -- it's all there, lying
just below the surface, settled into his
heart. But now there's a difference --
he knows it's there and has discovered
what could happen when it takes control
of your life.

So as he stands in the basement, on the
clean cellar floor, he realizes
that...he'll just take one thing at a
time, and do it right. Better than
anybody else. He smiles, realizes that
in the last few weeks, he's never felt
better than he feels right now. He
turns quickly, flips the earring to the
stairwell...


...Vanity plucks it from the air. Their
eyes lock and they share smiles of pure
joy. He picks up his father's music,
and they both head up the stairs.

"I Would Die For You" continues as we--

CUT TO:

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Reply #158 posted 07/09/16 8:00pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

"I Would Die For You" continues as we--

CUT TO:

I would die 4 U, yeah
Darlin', if U want me 2
U - I would die 4 U

Yeah, say it one more time

U - I would die 4 U (U)
Darlin', if U want me 2
U - I would die 4 U
2 3 4 U

I would die 4 U {x2}
U - I would die 4 U

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Reply #159 posted 07/09/16 8:01pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

(124) INT. CLUB -- NIGHT

CELEBRATION! Everyone is JUMPING up and
down. Prince is radiant, strutting
across the stage, his hands upraised.
The CROWD goes WILD! He flashes a wide
grin to Vanity, then twists, eyeballs
the CROWD wickedly, wonderfully. It's
too much!

Everyone is joining in now. Even Morris
and Jerome, standing in the wings, start
DANCING like crazy. Then suddenly they
catch themselves, stop, act dignified.
But Vanity sees them and busts up. They
catch her look, laugh heartily and join
in again.

1 2 3, uh!

"Like what the fuck do they know? {backwards message}
All their taste is in their mouth
Really, what the fuck do they know?
Come on, baby
Let's go crazy!"

The MUSIC segues into a fierce BEAT.
The CROWD lets out a ROAR! Prince
strips off his guitar, streaks center-
stage. The Band launches into "Baby,
I'm A Star."

...And the CROWD laughing, dancing,
shouting and loving. The CLUB is ALIVE!

And the MUSIC continues...forever...

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Reply #160 posted 07/11/16 8:06am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Hey, look me over
Tell me do U like what U see?
Hey, I ain't got no money
But honey, I'm rich on personality
Hey, check it all out
Baby, I know what it's all about
Before the night is through
U will see my point of view
Even if I have 2 scream and shout

Oh baby, I'm a star!
U might not know it now
Baby, but I are, I'm a star! (No!)
I don't want 2 stop till I reach the top
Sing it! (We are a star!)

Everybody say nothin' come 2 easy
But when U got it, baby, nothin' come 2 hard
U'll see what I'm all about (See what I'm all about)
If I gotta scream and shout (If I gotta scream and shout)
Baby, baby (baby), baby (baby), baby (baby)
Yeah… yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah! (Star!)


Oh baby, I'm a star!
U might not know it now
Baby, but I are, I'm a star! (No!)
I don't want 2 stop till I reach the top
Sing it! (We are a star!)

Everybody say nothin' come 2 easy
But when U got it, baby, nothin' come 2 hard
U'll see what I'm all about (See what I'm all about)
If I gotta scream and shout (If I gotta scream and shout)
Baby, baby (baby), baby (baby), baby (baby)
Yeah… yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah! (Star!)

Might not know it now
Baby, but I are, I'm a star!
I don't want 2 stop till I reach the top
Sing it! (Star!)
Baby, baby, baby
Oh baby, I'm a star!
Baby, baby, baby
Somebody (We are a star, yeah!)

(Baby, I'm a star)
We are a star, yeah!
Star, ooh! (Baby, I'm a star)
We are a star, yeah!


Doctor!

Baby, baby, baby, baby - ooh!
We are a star!

{backwards message}

"Like what the fuck do they know?
All their taste is in their mouth
Really, what the fuck do they know?
Come on, baby
Let's go crazy!"



The MUSIC segues into a fierce BEAT.
The CROWD lets out a ROAR! Prince
strips off his guitar, streaks center-
stage. The Band launches into "Baby,
I'm A Star."

...And the CROWD laughing, dancing,
shouting and loving. The CLUB is ALIVE!

And the MUSIC continues...forever...

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Reply #161 posted 07/12/16 11:09am

OldFriends4Sal
e

http://movieline.com/2012...ever-made/

Exclusive Book Excerpt: How A Terrible Script for Prince's Purple Rain Became The Best Rock Musical Ever Made

Purple Rain

It's been called the greatest rock musical ever made, the movie that launched Prince into the mainstream consciousness: 1984's Purple Rain. The semi-autobiographical story of a Minneapolis musician known as The Kid and his struggles with success, love, and an abusive father -- told as much through Prince's tortured swagger as through iconic chart-topping songs like "When Doves Cry" and the titular "Purple Rain" -- struck a chord with audiences and earned Prince an Oscar for Best Score to boot. But, as recounted in an exclusive excerpt from John Kenneth Muir's book Purple Rain: Music on Film, the film was headed for the rocks until neophyte director Albert Magnoli dared to tell Prince the truth about the film's initial script: "Well, I think it sucked."

Muir chronicles the history and lasting impact of Purple Rain in his new tome, on shelves today, from Prince's early quest to find the right film vehicle for himself to his collaboration with director Magnoli in making drastic changes to screenwriter William Blinn's original script (then called Dreams) -- a script that, Magnoli and producer Robert Cavallo say had been passed over by countless directors. Also included: What happened when Prince subsequently put himself in the director's chair for Under the Cherry Moon (1986) and Graffiti Bridge (1990), Tipper Gore's infamous shock over the lyrics to "Darling Nikki," and considered analysis of the themes and symbolism that make Purple Rain resonate.

In Movieline's exclusive excerpt, Magnoli recounts his first, insightful encounter with Prince and how he pitched the shy artist on the story that would become Purple Rain. The film's lore has long held that Purple Rain's story originated from Prince himself -- but according to Magnoli, it was destined to be a much different film before he stepped in.

Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Limelight Editions, an imprint of Hal Leonard.

=======

Meeting His Majesty, Prince

The next task at hand was to introduce Magnoli to Prince, and simultaneously, for Magnoli to further familiarize himself with the artist, his background, and his works. Magnoli knew and had liked the 1982 Prince hit singles “1999” and “Little Red Corvette.” He held a powerful image of the artist as “a loner” and “iconoclastic,” but more research was still necessary to get an authentic feel for the man and the performer.

So, while he finished an editing job on a Wednesday and Thursday and prepared for a flight to Minneapolis on Friday to meet his movie’s star, Magnoli wanted to learn everything he could about the musician. “I didn’t know his early career,” Magnoli acknowledged.

“‘Send to the editing room every video and any foot¬age you have on Prince, so I can see the visuals,’” Magnoli remembers saying to Cavallo on the phone. “So he sent me all of this video of Prince in concert in Minneapolis, and it was during his bikini-wearing, high-heel wearing, long coat days. This was prior to the 1999 album, where I think he had his self-titled album Prince . . . I think that’s what it was called. He was wearing a jacket on the cover [of the album] with a bikini bottom, with his chest sticking out, looking very androgynous.

“So now I’m watching all this video that supports this androgyny, and I’m thinking, Wow . . . okay. . . . I realized trying to bring Prince to the public—and I always knew I wanted to cross over from an urban base to a wider one—was going to be difficult,” Magnoli explains.

“So I’m watching all this imagery, but I do see the vulnerability under all that crap, and I think, Okay, I need to focus on that,” he notes. “That’s where this is coming from anyway.”

An encounter on the way to the airport didn’t exactly quell Magnoli’s concern that the visuals surrounding Prince might have difficulty playing in Peoria. He asked his African American cab driver on the way to LAX if he knew of the performer/songwriter Prince. The man did know of him, so Magnoli next pressed the gentleman on what he thought about him.

The man replied that Prince was gay, and furthermore, couldn’t imagine that Prince was not gay.

“Don’t forget,” admonishes Magnoli, “we’re back in 1983 now. Nowadays it’s not even an issue. We’ve come a long way, baby. But now I’m thinking, All right . . . more . . . stuff. But when I later met him, I realized, no, this is not even an issue. This is just the noise. This is just the chatter. I never factored it in, ever -- ever -- from that point on. The frills didn’t bother me. The purple coats didn’t bother me. This was all the stuff, all the chatter, that anybody who didn’t know the soul would just latch on to. And they were going to do that anyway. As long as I could stay focused on the heart and soul, I knew I would be fine.”

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Reply #162 posted 07/12/16 11:09am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Albert Magnoli, from the archive of John K. Muir

When Magnoli arrived in Minneapolis late in the evening, he met Steve Fargnoli, who promptly informed him that his new story was off and the Blinn story was back on. Fargnoli -- whom Magnoli sometimes jokingly referred to as “the second part of a three-part series,” approached him with grave seriousness.

“The first words out of his mouth are: ‘Understand this: I don’t give a damn about the story you told Bob [Cavallo]. We’re doing the story that’s already written.’ And I said, ‘Uh huh.’”

Then Magnoli was taken to actually meet with Prince. In a hotel lobby, Magnoli first met Chick, Prince’s legendary, Nordic bodyguard, whom Magnoli described as a very “tall, Viking-looking person,” and then went off to a corner to observe the dynamics of the situation.

“To my right were the elevator doors,” Magnoli explains. “To my left, across the lobby, was the front door of the building, where Steve [Fargnoli] and Chick were positioned. Then the doors opened at the crack of midnight sharp and out walks Prince by himself.

“Because he didn’t know who I was, he didn’t see me. He saw Chick and Steve at the end of the hall and walked to them, which allowed me to do a right-to-left pan with Prince, unencumbered by him knowing I was looking at him. As a result, I ended up filling [in] the whole story based on him walking across the lobby. Because what I saw was extreme vulnerability, in spite of all the bluster and the costume and the music. This was a vulnerable young man. I saw all the heart and soul. I saw all the emotional stuff. I saw the tragedy of his upbringing. I just saw stuff and felt stuff that filled in the three-act story.”

Together, Prince, Magnoli, Cavallo, Fargnoli, and Chick went to a working dinner. “I was looking at Prince and I could tell he didn’t like being looked at,” Magnoli says. “He’s very shy. Everybody ordered food, and as soon as the waitress left, Prince looked at me and said, ‘Okay, how did you like my script?’

“I realized a few things there. One, he said, ‘my script,’ which meant that he had personally invested himself in whatever it was that William Blinn had written. And two, that he hadn’t been told anything that I felt about it.”
“The words that came out of my mouth were the following: ‘Well, I think it sucked.’”

Magnoli pauses for dramatic effect. “At that moment, Steve dropped his head, Chick leaned closer to me, and Prince looked startled. Then I could see him thinking and what he was thinking was: ‘I wasn’t told this before this meeting was to take place. Why wasn’t I told?’ Then he looked toward Steve, because obviously Steve had told him nothing. That look to Steve took about three seconds, but it was telling to me, because now I saw how the operation worked. He had been kept in the dark about this.”

“So then Prince looked back to me and said, ‘Why does it suck?’ And I said, ‘You know what, it’s not important why, but here’s what we can do about it. Let me tell you the story.’ So now, with even more passion, because I have more information now that I’m looking at this kid, I told this story.

“There was five seconds of silence. Then he looked at Steve and said, ‘Why don’t you take Chick and go home.’ Then he looked at me and said, ‘Why don’t you come with me?’ ‘I’m just going to take Al for a ride.’”

Not knowing exactly what was going to happen, Magnoli remembers feeling a little uncertain. Had he offended Prince? Had he made him angry?

“We got in his car; he got behind the wheel, I got into the passenger’s seat, and he took off fast,” Magnoli notes. “The next thing I knew, we were driving in pitch-black darkness, [with] not a light in sight. I had no idea where we were. It looked like we were driving in a black tube. A day later I realized we were in horizon-to-horizon farmland, but there were no lights. So I was thinking, He didn’t like the story . . . and now I’m dead. I can die right now. and no one will know. . . .”

This nighttime ride was not the beginning of a murder plot, however, but the start of a very fruitful working relationship for Magnoli and Prince. Even though the story Magnoli had recounted involved the lead character (Prince himself, hereafter called “The Kid”) being at odds with his parents, his bandmates, and even his girlfriend, Prince never once flinched from a warts-and-all, three-dimensional presentation.

“The thing about Prince is that he wasn’t concerned about his image,” Magnoli reveals. “He was concerned about whether the film would communicate. Would the music communicate?

“I said to him, ‘If you’re willing to let me have your father in the movie give you a kick in the face on a certain page and get thrown across the room -- if you’re willing to take that hit -- we can make a great movie.’

“And he said, ‘I’m willing to take that hit.’ So that was it, metaphorically, realistically, and literally. Because he does get smacked by his old man in the movie.

“And then I jokingly said to him, ‘There isn’t a person on the planet who wouldn’t want to hit a rock star in the face,’” Magnoli continues. “And he laughed and said he understood that. We both understood that the image of these people as entitled and selfish was a target. We understood that.

“We never discussed warts and all. It just became part of the script and it was totally embraced,” Magnoli explains.

When interviewed some time later, Prince reflected on the seemingly biographical aspects of the Magnoli script. “We used parts of my past and present to make the story pop more, but it was a story,” he emphasized.

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Reply #163 posted 07/13/16 2:51am

LBrent

Um.

So.

In the original script starring Vanity, we'd have gotten barn sex, no doves crying, a rape, no Purple Rain and supposedly they're still in love at the end?

Pass.
[Edited 7/13/16 2:57am]
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Reply #164 posted 07/13/16 5:14am

OldFriends4Sal
e

LBrent said:

Um. So. In the original script starring Vanity, we'd have gotten barn sex, no doves crying, a rape, no Purple Rain and supposedly they're still in love at the end? Pass. [Edited 7/13/16 2:57am]

What do you mean no Doves Crying?

Purple Rain was still in place...
Instead of the Beautiful Ones, there was G-Spot & Electric Intercourse

In this script there would also be Wednesday & whatever song for the Barn Scene

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Reply #165 posted 07/14/16 7:57am

OldFriends4Sal
e

DETROIT FREE PRESS

Published: Friday, July 27, 1984
Section: FTR
Page: 3C

'PURPLE RAIN' HAS NON--STOP DRIVE
PRINCE RELEASES A STORM OF ENERGY

CATHARINE RAMBEAU
Free Press Movie Critic

Is "Purple Rain" a movie, or is it a concert on film?

It's both -- but whatever you choose to call it, it's solid entertainment.

Starring Prince, new music's funkiest star, the movie has music as loaded with energy as a sky full of lightning Prince and photography that stays right in the middle of whatever's going on at the moment. The movie itself has non-stop drive.

Set mostly in a nightclub, "Rain" has a plot that disappears like a loon into a Canadian lake, surfacing only when the music dictates. The Kid (Prince) wants to be the hottest musician around; so does his show-biz rival Morris (Morris Day). They vie for the affections of Apollonia (Apollonia Kotero), a luscious singer-dancer.

THE FACT that nearly all the characters in "Purple Rain" use their real names says something; these characters are, in many instances, simply playing themselves. Billy Sparks, the hefty fellow wearing the Detroit Tigers baseball cap, is indeed Billy Sparks, Prince's Detroit-based road manager; Apollonia Kotero really does head the singing group called Apollonia 6.

So it is not surprising that the best of "Purple Rain" is when the dialogue stays short and sweet and the camera closes in to see what's going on with whom. Credit for that goes to Albert Magnoli, the film's 30-year-old writer, director and editor (in his major film debut), and to cinematographer Donald Thorin, whose credits include "An Officer and a Gentleman" and "Against All Odds."

And because Magnoli is willing to suggest ideas and then allow Thorin and the audience to flesh out those ideas, "Rain" acquires a mysterious quality that's more than a little appealing.

PRINCE'S KID, full of sweetness and pent-up rage, commands "Rain." With a voice ranging from ethereal falsetto to blatantly sexual, he radiates an innocent "Who? Me?" grin just as he makes a move that reeks of unadorned sex. When the Kid is on an onstage roll, he's as quick and deadly with his guitar as a salesman hustling Veg-O-Matic's cut/dice/slice capabilities.

The other star of "Rain" -- he almost steals the show -- is Morris Day, lead singer of the Time, as a preening gent short on morals and long on gold brocade. In a "Who's on first" routine, he's at his good-buddy best; but when he stops by the Kid's dressing room just long enough to one-line "How's the family?" after tragedy has struck, he's demonic.

Clarence Williams III, last seen in television's "Mod Squad," is masterful as the Kid's father. With almost no lines, Williams creates a broken, desperately unhappy man out of a character it would be easy to simply despise.

PURPLE RAIN

RATING: 7

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Reply #166 posted 07/14/16 8:29am

LBrent

OldFriends4Sale said:



LBrent said:


Um. So. In the original script starring Vanity, we'd have gotten barn sex, no doves crying, a rape, no Purple Rain and supposedly they're still in love at the end? Pass. [Edited 7/13/16 2:57am]


What do you mean no Doves Crying?


Purple Rain was still in place...
Instead of the Beautiful Ones, there was G-Spot & Electric Intercourse



In this script there would also be Wednesday & whatever song for the Barn Scene



I didn't see that.

But the director was a cutie.
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