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Saint of the Underground:

The Life and Sins of Timothy Agoglia Carey

Timothy Agoglia Carey lived and died an underground legend. Crafting one of the most sporadic and disjointed film careers in history, he was a man who refused to compromise; always forgot to check his spelling; and never, ever listened to a goddamn word anybody said to him. He caused a full-blown riot at the world premiere of his one and only completed visions of film brilliance, The World's Greatest Sinner, when he fired a gun into the roof of a jam-packed LA theatre.

His misplaced ambition and passion for life burned a trail of insanity and wide eyed beauty that's been followed by such contemporary icons as Crispin Glover and Andy Kaufman. Carey once scaled the wall of 20th Century Fox Studios in a full suit of armor, trying to get a part in the 1954 film Prince Valiant; he was kicked in the ribs by Karl Malden and stabbed with a pen by Marlon Brando during the making of 1961's One Eyed Jacks; he shot himself in the head with a blank, just to get some attention during a live stage performance; Richard Widmark beat him up on the set of 1956's The Last Wagon; he faked his own kidnapping and ransom note during the filming of Paths of Glory, just to get some press; he pulled a gun from his lunch box on the set of the Godfather II and shot Coppola (with blanks of course); he brought John Cassavetes over to his house, put him in a dog attack suit and let three rotweilers attack him, all without telling Cassavetes what was going on, yelling words of encouragement from the next room, "It's not you they hate, it's the suit!!!" Through all of this, and much, much, much more, he always remained true to the world he most definitely helped create and flourish, the underground. Timothy Carey was one of the only actors Stanley Kubrick ever allowed and trusted to improvise at the drop of a hat. He turned down a big part in the Godfather because he felt the money he'd make would destroy his ability to properly pursue his own art. And John Cassavetes once said that Carey's film The World's Greatest Sinner 'had the brilliance of Einstein'.

The Kubrick Connection

It's ironic that a man, whose name is so widely unrecognized, could make such an impression on so many people. When you've seen Carey, you don't forget him, whether you know who he is or not. Carey made his biggest impressions on people during his short, but memorable stint with Stanley Kubrick. Kubrick saw promise and passion in Carey's impulses, when other director's just saw problems. A great example of Carey's overwhelming presence is in Stanley Kubrick's 1956 film The Killing. Carey was cast as Nikki Arane, the sniper who's hired to shoot the horse at the racetrack. Carey's scenes in The Killing are some of the most memorable and intense examples of his amazing ability to create an unmistakable character out of very little. Just ask any one who's seen The Killing. First, ask them if they know who Timothy Carey was. After they say no, ask them if they remember the guy in The Killing who shoots the horse and talks through his teeth. They will no doubt say something along the lines of, "oh yea, he was great." Carey's whole body of work is filled with underwritten roles blown into career making performances, all thanks to him.

In Kubrick's next film, 1957's Paths of Glory, Carey turned what could have been a fairly straightforward and potentially flat scene into one of the most memorable moments in the entire movie. In this film, Carey plays a soldier who's lead down a path to be tied to a post and executed. During this scene, Carey improvised all of his dialogue becoming a withering and crying mess; a terrified and pleading man, who knows he's going to die. The reality of Carey's character impulse gives this scene all the more power. The star of the film, Kirk Douglas, didn't like the idea of Carey's improvisations because he felt Carey was overshadowing him (which he was) and Douglas made this fact known to Kubrick. Kubrick walked up to Carey, leaned over and whispered in Carey's ear "make this a good one 'cause Kirk doesn't like it." When Paths of Glory had it's general run, one critic in New York referred to Timothy Carey as "Kubrick's good luck charm." After Paths of Glory, Kubrick went on to make Spartacus in 1960. Carey was originally cast in the film, but eventually his presence was no longer requested. Kirk Douglas was, once again, the star and executive producer of the movie and he no doubt remembered Carey's energy and ability to make a scene more than it was. This is most likely the reason Carey was left out of the Spartacus club, Douglas was afraid of Carey's smothering star power.

Carey worked with Kubrick again, although Kubrick always had the highest of praise for Carey. Throughout his life, Carey realized the contributions he made to Kubrick's early days and he seemed hurt by the lack of loyalty Kubrick showed him after Kubrick's personal exile to England. God only knows what Carey's presence would have done for Kubrick's later films. One can only imagine Carey's role in Lolita or Dr. Strangelove, Full Metal Jacket or even The Shining.

The Cassavetes Connection

Timothy Carey and John Cassavetes started out running neck and neck in the film world. Both men were prominent character actors in the 1950s with a strong and enormous presence; both played off-kilter, strange men; and both worked with James Dean. Both Carey and Cassavetes had a hand in creating the world of underground film, yet ironically, they both claimed not to be a part of it. Cassavetes once told a reporter "I was never part of anything" in response to a question about his involvement in the underground. While Carey stayed away from being associated with underground filmmakers and continued being looked at as just a good actor in bit parts. However, in 1956 they both began working on their own films. For Carey it was World's Greatest Sinner and for Cassavetes it was Shadows. Shadows was completed and released in 1959. Sinner was completed in 1962 and released in 1963. Shadows went on to win accolades and awards the world over, while Sinner went on to be called the worst movie ever made and an absolute mess.

Carey and Cassavetes became friends in the 1960s. Cassavetes helped Carey raise the money for his next directorial project, Tweet's Ladies of Pasadena, which got underway in 1968. During the production of Tweet's, Cassavetes' wrote a part for Carey in the 1971 film Minnie and Moskowitz. The character's name was Morgan Morgan, a loudmouth coffee shop sloth. Carey was allowed to run amok with the character, improvising and soul searching through his still undefined character. Cassavetes shot thousands of feet of film of Carey's improvisational rants and revelations. Carey was finally getting the star treatment he deserved when Cassavetes hugged him and told him "You made the film Tim." This action no doubt endeared the two to each other, but it certainly left the rest of the cast with a rather jealous and askewed view of Carey and Cassavetes' affection for him.

This slow burning resentment from cast members came to a boil in the only other Cassavetes' film Carey worked in, 1976's The Killing of a Chinese Bookie. Carey played Flo, a member of a tight nit group of mobsters out to kill Cosmo (Ben Gazzara), the owner of a strip club in LA. Carey's performance in Bookie is nothing short of amazing; his presence pours from the screen, at times almost drowning out the other people. Carey's ability to turn other actors into mere props and furniture shows more here than in any other film. This, however, did not go unnoticed by the other members of the cast. Most notably would be Seymour Cassel. During one scene in particular, Cassel is supposed to grab Carey by the collar and rough him up a bit but instead he grabbed Carey by the neck so hard Carey couldn't turn his head. Carey told Cassavetes he was going to break a bottle over Cassel's head if he did it again and Cassavetes responded by telling Carey to do it, punch him in the nose if he tried it again. Keep in mind that Cassel and Cassavetes were the best of friends for years and years. Cassavetes felt Carey was making Bookie a better movie and was willing to put his friendship with Cassel on the backburner, if he had to. Once again, Carey crafted a memborable character with his free flowing dialogue and surreal statements that seem rooted in underworld creepiness and sin. All of Carey's scenes in Bookie have a strange feel to them. You can feel the alienation in the air, and see the distance he's given from the other performers. He is the existential spirit of reality in the film, his world filled with people and partners, yet he remains apart and detached from them. This was true for his character in the film, for himself on the set, and even in life.

Another example of Cassavetes overwhelming care and affection for Carey was in the early 80s when Cassavetes ran across Carey outside of the Paramount lot. The two men got into a conversation about old times and when Carey smiled, Cassavetes noticed a cap had fallen off of one of Carey's front teeth. He drove Carey to the dentist and paid the bill. At Cassavetes' funeral in 1989, Carey delivered an astounding, poetic and beautiful requiem for the man who had done so much for him. "His grace humility. Artistry against all odds. His light will never be extinguished. Cassavetes always perpendicular to humanity. Antidote against apathy in my life as a thespian. To me, he will always be a theantropist. Hail Cassavetes."

The World's Greatest Sinner

Film is still such an open and undefined form of expression. In film there are many different techniques, different ways of conveying feeling and ideas, different methods of presenting visual composition and story structure. The best part is that most of these techniques haven't even been used or thought of. This is what makes movies so interesting and what makes them a legitimate art from, and a constant challenge for the film artist. Unfortunately, most participates in the film industry don't take these things into account. Most filmmakers use what's already there and recycle, coating their canvas with diluted colors, borrowed invention and artificial inspiration. Well, when I think about all of the half-assed movies I've seen throughout my life, all I can say is, thank God for The World's Greatest Sinner!

Timothy Carey began crafting his one and only fully realized moment of personal celluloid brilliance in 1956 in El Monte California, where he lived most of his adult life. He shot The World's Greatest Sinner with his own money, the final budget running around $100,000. He shot it mainly in his El Monte home and on the city streets. He used people off of the streets of El Monte and got a young man, an unknown musician named Frank Zappa to do the soundtrack. Reportedly, Zappa begged Carey to do it. Carey told Zappa, you come up with the music and you got it. This was Zappa's big break in music, the start of a long and illustrious career. (Just for the record, soon after Sinner's completion Zappa went on the Steve Allen show and referred to it as "the world's worst movie". This remark rings of a true idiot and ingrate if you ask me. In fact, I find it rather ironic that Zappa's entire persona in the world of music can be traced back to The World's Greatest Sinner, right down to Zappa's running for president).

The story of Sinner remains one of the most prophetic and groundbreaking in film. It's the story of Clarence Hilliard, a man who's tired of his every day, hum-drum life. He's an insurance salesman with a beautiful family, a Mexican gardener and a horse. One night, he stumbles across a rock n' roll show happening near his home. He becomes so moved by the music and dancing that he heads home and turns over a new leaf. He decides that he's God, he changes his name to God Hilliard and starts a rock n' roll band. He travels the country in a gold lamae suit or a black suit jacket with gold God embroidered on the sleeves, working crowds into a frenzy! He preaches his gospel and develops a cult of rabid Followers. He tells his Followers, who wear nazi like armbands with an F on it (F for follower), that there is only one God and that God is man. His Followers riot and destroy city streets while God seduces an old lady for cash and runs for president. He has sex with fourteen-year-old girls and slaps his 8-year-old daughter in the face when she begs him to accept Jesus. He forces one of his Followers to commit suicide when he begins to stray from God's teachings. He challenges the real God to a fight to the death and eventually has that battle in the films final, a mind-melting moment of brilliant insanity and over the top artistic realization. The World's Greatest Sinner makes other so-called groundbreaking films seem like a joke. Carey's creation, his canvas, his brainchild is quite possibly the most awesome and inspiring depth charge ever put on film.

The idea for Sinner came from Carey's intense desire to create something new, something that would really push the envelope and give people something to think about. Carey once said about the point behind Sinner, "I was tired of seeing movies that were supposedly controversial. So I wanted to do something that was really controversial." Calling Sinners' subject matter controversial simply doesn't do it justice. Sinner was controversial, bold, dumbfounding, mind bending, and earth shattering. It's cultish, religious and political subjects predate Jim Jones (which Carey proudly mentioned time and time again), Manson, Heaven's Gate and Pat Buchanan. The rock n' roll performances that Carey unleashes in Sinner reek of punk rock and no wave madness, and this was 1956! Sinner seems to be hundreds of years ahead of it's time, in it's messages, in it's purpose and it's method. It's like an alien viewpoint of the hypocrisy of man and his mental machines and addictions, religion, politics, lust, ultra ego and extreme self-doubt. Sinner is one of the fullest and intense films ever made, and almost no one has seen it. On it's initial release in 1963, it was only screened a few times, and to a bad response. It's no surprise though, when one watches the film, you can almost taste the hate for the general viewing public and the world around. Carey's Hollywood alienation and misunderstandings drip from the screen of Sinner like blood from a stigmata. To this day Sinner remains the underground's greatest POW, a lost masterpiece of a personal vision fulfilled through independence and a desire to create something new and amazing. And while critics of the day referred to Sinner as "a travesty of the arts," this critic views it as his all time favorite film. I swear to God Hilliard, I'm telling the truth.

Wealth of Unrealized and Misunderstood Brilliance

Beyond being one of the most misunderstood and underused actors in the history of film, Timothy Carey had a lifetime of ideas and dreams that never materialized. Carey's mind seemed to be full of surrealism (which explains his hero worship of Salvador Dali) and color. His concepts and dreams were just too much for people to grasp, especially studio people. When it came to performances, you could safely say that Carey helped other actors come up with a character more times then he got to play one. Carey's career is filled with failed screen tests, in which his performance is almost mirrored by the eventual actor of choice. Carey's energy and naked honesty often made more enemies than friends, and unfortunately, enemies, more than friends, can see when you've got something they want and need. Carey's characters were never allowed out of their cage, he would spend months developing the personality and behavior of a character only to have his screen time edited down to a moment or two. The reason? It seems as though his presence always took away from the stars, his energy and screen presence left everyone else looking flat and artificial. In this way, he was kind of like James Dean, who he worked with on Dean's first film, 1955's East of Eden (Carey was uncredited). But even if you try to sweep all of Carey's misuse and abuse as an actor under the studio rug, you can't look past all of his ingenious and insane film concepts that never saw the light of day.

Carey's follow up to The World's Greatest Sinner was a film called Tweet's Ladies of Pasadena. It began filming in 1968 and never got finished. It's the story of Tweet Twig (played by Carey), a giant child/man who roller-skates everywhere he goes. His wife is a 300-pound British female wrestler and he works for the "Don't Drop A Stitch Knitting Club," a group of little old ladies (some of which were played by guys in drag) who dress in Indian garb for no apparent reason. Tweet Twig tries to clothe all the naked and homeless animals in the world, so he takes in any and every stray he sees. The animals talk to each other and run amok in his small house. The imagery of the film seems to be extracted from the dreams of a child; the angles, colors and structure of the story seem to drift from the coherent to the unattainable; in other words, Tweet's Ladies of Pasadena is an amazing piece of psychedelic madness that never got off the ground (beyond a rough 90-minute work print). It's interesting if only for the fact that it presents a side of Carey that couldn't exist further from the person portrayed in Sinner. It shows Carey's character ability as well as his ability to craft ideas so far apart, that association is practically impossible. Tweet's was eventually pitched as a TV show, but it never went anywhere.

Another potential fuse that never got lit was Carey's script for a film called Al. Carey started shooting this in the mid 50s, even before he began shooting Sinner. Al is the story of an Alabama salesman who gets stuck in L.A. traffic on his way to get his pregnant wife to a hospital. Once he gets off the freeway, he drives aimlessly, trying to find a hospital. The film deals mainly with Al's odd encounters with the people of LA. The film shows Carey's fascination with the everyman, with the strangeness that existed in the normal man's life and personality. Carey saw the sparks that made life strange, that made life interesting.

Sadly, all that came of Al was a wonderful script and footage Carey shot in the mid 50s. Universal wanted to make it, but not with Carey in the driver's seat. Universal wanted Daniel Petrie to direct but Carey was dead set against anyone but him making Al a reality. So as you can imagine, Al died a slow death, just like Tweet's.

Carey had many other ideas that never even got as far as Tweet's and Al did. Two more films Carey envisioned were Flore and Greenwood. Carey wrote Flore with his long time wife Doris. Folore is about a guy who works in a car wash. He tries to solve a necrophilia/murder case to use the reward for his girlfriend's art school tuition. Greenwood is about a guy named Cass Matthews who pays for his 25,000 acres of alligator sanctuary by recording pop records in Memphis. Timothy Carey wrote a number of teleplays too. My Casa is Yours, about a singing Mexican cowboy who dreams of being a pro soccer player. Another one is Commercials (written with his wife as well), about an ad executive who joins forces with an anarchistic, dog loving street musician. These are just a sample of the gigantic amount of ideas Carey never got off the ground, thanks to the misunderstanding of the studios.

One more point of interest that I'll mention just for fun is the fact that Timothy Carey was going to be in Apocalypse Now. His idea for the character was to be a member of a Marine K9 unit who spends all day picking fleas from the necks of his killer dogs, petting them and talking to them like his children. It sounds like a brilliant moment, Coppola didn't like the idea.

The Insect Trainer

Carey's final creative blast was his most impassioned and surreal project, a stage play called The Insect Trainer. He began laying the foundation for The Insect Trainer as far back as 1981. Subtitled "an intimate collaboration with Salvador Dali," the play is about a man named Guasti Q Guasti. He's a dishwasher at a Chinese restaurant who, as a side note, makes friends with a cockroach. One day he farts near an old lady. The power of the gas knocks the woman out of her chair, she hits her head on the floor and dies. Guasti is put on trial for murder. The majority of the play is Guasti defending himself in court, with Guasti delivering intensely dense and surrealistic lines, many of which are directed at the audience. These segments were to be enormous, stream of consciousness rants on the attributes of farting and the necessity of such an act. The Insect Trainer deals with one of Carey's most obsessive subjects, farting. Carey felt that farting was the key to removing all inhibitions, something a good actor has to be able to do. Carey once said about prepping his cast for The Insect Trainer, "First I'd take a big fart in front of them. That's always a big help. I always thought if you really want to be a good actor, you've got to be able to fart in public. That, to me, is the most important. If you are so inhibited that you can't fart, I don't mean around your friends, I mean just a fart, out loud somewhere. I don't mean the 'silent creeper', everybody does that. I mean fart out loud! Just that you can do it and not be afraid of it. Humility is very important."

Carey died on May 11th, 1994 as a result of his fourth stroke in less than six years, right before The Insect Trainer went on stage. Carey's son, Romeo Carey went on to play the part of Guasti Q. Guasti, making sure that his dad's vision got the proper treatment it deserved. It seems poetic that Carey would die right before his final passion became complete. His whole life was composed of wild ideas that lead him in circles of frustration and disappointment, yet he never became bitter or tired. His energy, kindness, creativity and life seemed to grow and grow with each passing year, with each passing let down. Carey was truly the saint of the underground, the man who walked through it all, the studios, the independents, TV, the stage. From lying his way into the Marines when he was 15 years old to making the world's greatest movie, The World's Greatest Sinner, Carey's life was filled to the brim with self-inflicted madness and genius. His wandering dreams and ideas never ending. In fact, when hearing Carey speak about The World's Greatest Sinner back in 1992, one can't help but think about his life as a whole, "I'm changing Sinner every second! I took my last cut of the show last year, that's after years and years! I'm not afraid to turn it around. Some people say, 'Oh, this is boring now.' That I'm losing my touch 'cause I'm doing too much. But a creative person can do it a thousand times, five thousand times, and still enjoy it because he's creating each time. You wine and dine something! You don't say, 'OK, it's gonna take me two weeks and that's it.' It's something that's going to be with you for the rest of your life.
-Sam McAbee
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