John belushi actor biography books
Wired (book)
book by Bob Woodward
Wired: The Short Life and Fast Times of John Belushi is a non-fiction book by American journalist Bob Woodward[1] about actor and comedian John Belushi.[2] The hardcover edition includes 16 pages of black-and-white photos, front and back.
Interviews
Many friends and relatives of Belushi, including his widow Judith Belushi Pisano, Dan Aykroyd, and James Belushi, agreed to be interviewed at length for the book, but later felt the final product was exploitative and not representative of the John Belushi they knew.[3] Pisano wrote her own book, Samurai Widow (), to counter the image of Belushi portrayed in Wired.
Reception
In , Tanner Colby, who co-authored the book Belushi: A Biography with Pisano, wrote about how Wired exposes Woodward's strengths and weaknesses as a journalist.[4] While in the process of researching the anecdotes related in the book, he found that while many of them were true, Woodward missed, or didn't seek out, their meaning or context.[5]
For example, in Woodward's telling, a "lazy and undisciplined" Belushi is guided through the scene on the cafeteria line in Animal House by director John Landis, yet other actors present for that scene recall how much of it was improvised by the actor in one single take.
John belushi actor biography books External links [ edit ]. If Belushi interests you I'd say this is probably the book to start with. Rather than a biography, this is more an account of the subject's progressive degeneration, justified perhaps as a moral tale about what the temptations of success and an access to money can do to a person. The track "Who's Making Love" peaked at numberBlair Brown told author Tanner Colby that Woodward had "tricked" her into describing her and Belushi’s preparation for a love scene in Continental Divide, and Brown remained angry at Woodward years later while telling the story of Woodward’s deceitfulness.[5] Colby notes that Woodward devotes a single paragraph to Belushi's grandmother's funeral, where he hit a low point and resolved to get clean for the filming of Continental Divide, while Woodward diligently documented every instance of drug abuse over a period of many years that he turned up.
"It's like someone wrote a biography of Michael Jordan in which all the stats and scores are correct, but you come away with the impression that Michael Jordan wasn't very good at playing basketball," Colby concluded.[5]
Dan Aykroyd denounced Wired publicly. Interviewed on television by Bobbie Wygant for NBC 5 in , Aykroyd responded to the question of whether Woodward had interviewed him before writing the book:
[Woodward] spoke with me about an hour and a half, and you know there's things in [the book] I don't remember saying to him, and first of all, the book, I've skimmed through excerpts of it, it's really pulpy and trashy, it's not well-written at all, and Bob Woodwardhere was a man with a very respectable career - All the President's Men, The Brethren, and his research and newspaper work - and all of a sudden he does a book called The Short Life and Fast Times of John Belushi, what a kind of a cheap, you know He's just stepping down into that seedy world, and I think he's really avoided many issues in the book.
He certainly has avoided the issue of what a funbag John was, what a great guy he was, what a warm, humorous, really, you knowconcerned, and bright, educated, well-read individual this guy was. How did he get to be so successful? He was smart, you know, he wasn't just given his break, and he had to work for what he had, and Woodward completely skirts that, and it's a depressing, sordid, tragic book, he jumps around the issue of the police probe, and the fact that some of the people that were purveying drugs to John were friends of police force members in Los Angeles, and this is something that he wimped out on, and I've heard that he really didn't write most of the book, that it was John Anderson, his researcher, who put down most of the material on paper, and for my part I just think that it's very depressing summer reading.
Film adaptation
The book was later adapted into a critically panned feature film also called Wired, in which Belushi was played by Michael Chiklis and Woodward was played by J.T.
Walsh.[6][7]