Biography: life and films
Howard Brookner was an American film director, writer and producer, one of
a generation of talented artists to have his life and career cruelly cut
short by the AIDS pandemic of the 1980s. He was born in New York City
on 30th April 1954, the second of three sons, and he grew up in Great Neck,
Long Island. He went to school at Phillips Exeter, where he won an
award for a play he wrote revolving around a lavatory. After obtaining
a bachelor's degree in political science at Columbia University, he studied
film and art history at New York University.
For his master's thesis, Brookner embarked on a documentary about the counterculture
writer William S. Burroughs. What was originally conceived as a short
film developed into something far more substantial as a bond of intimacy
developed between the amiable, good-looking Brookner and his subject, the
most unpredictable of writers. With funding obtained from various sources,
including the BBC, the film took five years to complete and ended up as a
feature-length documentary entitled
Burroughs: the Movie (1983),
which was screened to great acclaim at several film festivals around the
world. The film also aired on British television on
22nd February 1983, as part of the BBC's
Arena series.
It was an auspicious start to what promised to be a glittering
career.
Not long after this first triumph, Howard Brookner came into contact with
the avant-garde theatre director Robert Wilson and set about making another
television documentary on Wilson's Herculean but ultimately doomed attempts
to stage his monumental opera
Civil Wars at the 1984 Summer Olympics.
Entitled,
Robert
Wilson and the Civil Wars (1987), this was the last film over which
Brookner would have complete artistic control, and also the last to be seen
in his lifetime.
Howard then spent two years trying to break into Hollywood. He finally
persuaded David Puttnam, chairman of Columbia Pictures, to allow him to write
and direct a mainstream movie with a four million dollar budget. Entitled
Bloodhounds
of Broadway, it was to be a period piece adapted from four short
stories by Damon Runyon, set in the twilight of America's Jazz Age.
The film featured several well-known actors of the period, including Madonna,
Matt Dillon, Julie Haggarty and Rutger Hauer. As pre-production got
underway, Brookner was feeling confident that his career was about to take
off.
And then the bombshell landed. For much of the past decade, Howard
Brookner had been pursuing the same hedonistic lifestyle of his contemporaries,
experimenting with hard drugs and having unsafe sex with multiple partners.
It was all part and parcel of the liberated, Bohemian lifestyle that artists of Brookner's
generation were naturally drawn to. No one had any inkling of the disaster
that was just around the corner. When America's gay community
began to fall foul of a new and mysterious disease in the mid-1980s, Brookner
feared the worse. In the spring of 1987, he took tests and learned
that he was HIV positive. By this time, several people known to him
had died from what came to be known as AIDS. He felt he was on borrowed
time. This moment of truth came just a few months before filming was
due to start on
Bloodhounds of Broadway. Fearing how the studio
would react to the news, Brookner kept the fact he was ill and taking medication
to himself whilst the film was being made. The only person he let in
on his secret was his boyfriend Brad Gooch, with whom he had been living since
the early 1980s, sharing a close but turbulent relationship.
Knowing full-well the consequences, Brookner made the decision to come off
AZT, as the side-effects of the drug prevented him from focusing clearly
on his work. He was determined to finish the film, and make the best
that he could of it, at any personal cost. The cost was that the virus
began to wreak its havoc sooner, although such was the understanding about
AIDS at the time that Brookner's chances of recovery were pretty well non-existent.
He must have known that this would be his last film. It
had
to be good. The physical and mental effort of shooting
Bloodhounds
of Broadway was gruelling but the job was finally completed. All
that remained was to edit it into a watchable movie.
Shortly after his last holiday with Gooch in Acapulco in February 1988, Brookner's
eyesight began to deteriorate - the first sign of a brain infection caused
by the AIDS virus. He was admitted to St Vincent's hospital in New
York but was just well enough by the autumn to move into a one-bedroom apartment
bought for him by his parents. As his condition slowly deteriorated,
Brookner kept a video diary, casting himself at the centre of his own personal
movie. His passion for directing films would remain with him right to the
end. He would carefully stage-manage the days that remained
to him, supported by those closest to him.
By the end of 1988, Howard Brookner had virtually lost his sight and his
motor function had gone to the point that he was wheelchair bound and incapable
of moving without help. In spite of his physical deterioration, he
remained in good spirits. Howard never lost his dignity, his drive nor his
mischievous sense of fun. He even believed he would make another
film, adapted from Gooch's recently
published book
Scary Kisses, and held read-throughs in his apartment.
Then came another blow, as cruel as the first. Dissatisfied with Brookner's
original cut of
Bloodhounds of Broadway, the executives at
Columbia Pictures decided they had no choice but to take the film away from
him. It was re-edited with no input from its director and given a voiceover
narration to make the plot less confusing. The prospect of seeing the
film as he had conceived it had provided Brookner with a boost to his dwindling
morale. When this prize was taken away from him, he lost interest and
did not care whether he saw it. The film's release was delayed by Columbia
selling it on to Vestron and then buying it back again. When it finally
came out, almost seven months after Brookner's death, the film was given
a lukewarm reception by critics and audiences.
Towards the end of days, lovingly nursed by his closest friends and relatives,
Howard Brookner accepted death bravely and with characteristic good humour.
He slipped away peacefully on 27th April 1989 and was buried three days later, on his 35th birthday.
In his book
Smash Cut: A Memoir of Howard & Art & the '70s and
the '80s, Brad Gooch (now a highly successful author) writes a moving
and vivid account of his eleven-year long relationship with Brookner, charting
the highs and lows of their ambiguous love affair and culminating in a heart-wrenching
description of the director's last few years as the AIDS virus took its toll.
It is an intensely evocative and devastating work that honours the memory
of a young filmmaker whose talents were never to be fully tapped whilst recording
a colourful and painful chapter in American history. Gooch's
honest and perceptive writing exposes a fragile side to Howard,
giving a glimpse of his inner insecurities - an abhorrence of loneliness
and a need for emotional support.
Thanks to the fundraising efforts of his nephew Aaron, himself a promising
young filmmaker, Howard Brookner's important first feature has been digitally
restored and made available on DVD and Blu-ray, the film's re-release coinciding
with the centenary of Burrough's birth in 2014. It was whilst working
on this project that Brookner Jr unearthed a large quantity of material relating
to his uncle at various sites in the US and Europe, including Burrough's
basement apartment in New York City, the Bunker. Among this treasure
trove of discoveries were a wealth of personal correspondence and many private
films made by Brookner Sr. Some of this material Aaron Brookner was
able to incorporate into his subsequent documentary on his uncle's work,
Uncle Howard, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January
2016 and then at the 2016 Berlin International Film Festival, garnering some
very positive reviews.
© James Travers 2016
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