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David Bowman
AI is transforming customer service. It's real and it works. And with fin, we've built the number one AI agent for customer service. We're seeing lots of cases where it's solving up to 90% of real queries for real businesses. This includes the real world, complex stuff like issuing a refund or canceling an order. And we also see it when FIN goes up against competitors. It's top of all the performance benchmarks, top of the G2 leaderboard. And if you're not happy, we'll refund you up to a million dollars, which I think says it all. Check it out for yourself@finai Monday.com AI agents took over my work and I absolutely love it. Chasing deadlines, writing status reports, updating stakeholders. Agents handle the daily grind. Now I stay in the loop only when it matters.
Aaron Tracy
Create your own AI agent in minutes on Monday.com.
David Bowman
Oompa Loompa Dooma de Do your favorite podcast is waiting for you. Oompa Loompa Doom La dee dee Making a movie as hard as can be.
Lizzie Bassett
What do you get when you don't have a script?
Aaron Tracy
Shooting is rushed and your deadlines have
David Bowman
slipped Final cut is due and it's making you weep Tell the composer they
Aaron Tracy
can't sleep I don't like the sound of that.
David Bowman
Oompa Loompa Doompa De Da thank you for joining whoever you are watching movies. Face of such glee. What went wrong with wrong? You'll have to listen and see.
Aaron Tracy
Listen and see. And action.
Lizzie Bassett
Hello and welcome back to what Went Wrong. Your favorite podcast, Full stop. That just so happens to be about movies and how it's nearly impossible to make them, let alone a good one, let alone a warning to all parents that it is your job to shape your child into a good person and the only time you can do it is when they are a child. And if you fail, your child may be incinerated in a goose egg garbage inferno. And it will be your fault. And also candy. I am one of your hosts, Lizzie Bassett, here as always with Chris Winterbauer. Chris, what do you have for us today?
David Bowman
Today, Lizzy, we are diving into a movie that begs the question, what if we did seven in a Chocolate Factory, but with kids? And we are joined by a very special guest. So we are Talking about the 1971 adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory called Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. We'll get into the title, but we have an incredible guest today. We are joined by the man behind a podcast I have been binging for the last Seven days the Secret World of Roald Dahl. Which is amazing. And we will have posted on our patreon and whatnot before this episode. So hopefully you guys have listened. Please welcome Aaron Tracy to the podcast. Aaron Tracy is a best selling writer producer. He's worked across nearly every form of entertainment from television to audio dramas to narrative nonfiction. As we mentioned, he is the creator and writer and narrator, great voice of the Secret World of Roald Dahl. Which is a remarkable look into the Zelig esque, I would say, life of the world's most or one of the world's most successful children's books bossers. Aaron, welcome to what Went Wrong.
Aaron Tracy
Oh, thank you so much. I'm so excited to be here. That was quite an introduction, Zelig. You're absolutely right. I should have said Zelig. I think I said Forrest Gump on my show, but he was this Zelig figure.
David Bowman
It's a more contemporary reference. That is fair.
Aaron Tracy
I prefer Zaleg. Yeah, no, I appreciate you listening to the show.
David Bowman
It's an amazing miniseries that you think, how many episodes have been released as of today? Is it 9 so far or is
Aaron Tracy
it 9 so far?
David Bowman
You know, you've listened to the first episode and it ends with effectively and it's gonna get crazier. And then that's kind of how you end every single episod. And yet somehow doll ups himself in every episode. So we're gonna get into the details of his life in a few moments. But I wanna start Aaron with Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. So let's start quickly, Lizzie, with you. Cause you can provide a template here for Aaron. What we like to do is start with, you know, what's your relationship to this movie? Had you seen it before? And what were your thoughts upon watching or rewatching it for the podcast? So, Lizzie, maybe you can dive in to begin. Sure.
Lizzie Bassett
Yes, of course I'd seen this before, as I think all children, I assume, have. I don't know if they're still showing this to children, but they certain when we were growing up, I'd seen it many times as a kid. I don't think I had watched this as an adult at all. And there were certain portions of the movie that are so like, burned into my mind's eye. Like when they first open the, you know, the door into the candy room or whatever he calls it, the chocolate room, that I will see in my head playing on the back of my eyelids as I die. Like I know exactly what it looks like, I know what the Mushrooms look like. I know what that disgusting chocolate river looks like. But then there's whole sequences, like, the entire beginning of this movie. I was like. David and I were like, are we watching the right thing? It's a slow start. It's a slower start than I remembered, and a very, very weird start. Charlie's teacher, David pointed out, looks like he should be in a Pink Floyd music video. And there's never been a more apt description of a man and his teeth, I think, than that, I guess. You know, I always kind of knew that, like, this is a children's movie book for adults. But I didn't know how much that was the case until rewatching it as an adult. And I was like, I don't know if this is for kids at all. This is horrifying. Truly, genuinely sc. Especially when they're in the tunnel. Man, Gene Wilder is so fun and holds this movie together in a way that if you didn't have him, I don't know how watchable this is just because of how bonkers and all over the place it is. And all the other actors are wonderful. I particularly love Roy Kinnear, and he looks so much like his son that I was like, wait a minute.
David Bowman
I know.
Lizzie Bassett
Is this a Black Mirror episode?
David Bowman
I know.
Lizzie Bassett
It's crazy. It's crazy. All of which to say, I really enjoyed it. I don't know if I ever want to watch it again. It's just bizarre and it's scary, especially as a parent, because it really does feel like the moral of this movie is, like, the time to make a good person is when they are a child. And if you miss that window, you're screwed. And it's a weird moral. And Willy Wonka is a sinister character, even at the end when he says that. I've been searching for my replacement, and the only one who can do it is a child, essentially, because they won't question me. And I was like, okay, I don't know what you're trying to say here. Anyway, that's my take, is I enjoyed it. It's weird. And that boat ride might give me nightmares.
David Bowman
All right, Aaron, we'll kick it to you. You've been knee deep in Roald Dahl for, I'm assuming, months at this point. So how did it feel rewatching this?
Aaron Tracy
So it's one of those movies that I think if you had asked me when the last time I saw it was, I probably would have said, I don't know, five, six years ago. But rewatching it ahead of this Podcast, I realized that I have not seen it since I was a little kid, but I must have watched it a lot when I was a little kid, because so much of it felt familiar. I mean, as I was making my show, I definitely watched a bunch of clips, and we include some clips on the show, but watching it from beginning to end, yeah, I don't think I've done that since I was a kid. I was blown away. I thought it was fantastic. It's so dark, so surprising. And I totally agree, by the way. Gene Wilder's performance is everything.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah.
Aaron Tracy
He gives the most confident, strangest performance that I can remember seeing.
Lizzie Bassett
No, please stop.
Aaron Tracy
Right, Exactly. We'll jump into it. I'm sure we'll talk about it later, but it is really a performance for the ages. It is. You know, I'm sure we'll talk a bunch about this, but it is not what Dahl envisioned, but it makes the movie for me.
David Bowman
Yeah. The 2005 version, as you discuss on your show, Aaron, is a much more faithful adaptation to the book. Maybe not from a Wonka perspective, but structurally and in terms of the focus and whatnot. And yet this version feels so much more alive to me, Even though the O5 version has the budget and Burton seems like a natural fit for the material, et cetera. This version is held together with Scotch tape and Popsicle sticks. But my review is five words, and it is, Gene Wilder is a star. And I actually think the casting across the board is pitch perfect in this movie. And even though I think you can feel that they didn't quite have the budget they needed to make this movie, more on that later. I had a smile on my face the entire time I was watching it. And maybe it's nostalgia. I watched it a lot as a kid as well. I hadn't seen it in a long time. But it has something to it, and I think I have a sense of what that is, and we'll get to it by the end. And I think, even though Aaron, as you mentioned, Dahl's feelings towards this film are, at best, complicated in a way, I think it actually captures the heart, the Dahlian, the dark Dahlian heart of what his books try to convey better than many of the other adaptations of his work. But let's get into it, because this one's gonna be pretty crazy.
Lizzie Bassett
I have one question that maybe you're going to answer, but one of the biggest questions I had while watching this movie was, where are we? Because I never recognized this as a kid, but, like, they're clearly in England. Or Europe somewhere. And it looks like. It does not look like America. Half of the people have British accents for no reason. But then you are supposed to still believe that this is sort of small town America somewhere. That is strange. It makes it kind of otherworldly and alie in a way that I think ultimately works, but was confusing as an adult watching this.
David Bowman
Well, Aaron, you can speak to this. I mean, the book is set in an unnamed town. Like the book is never specified as anywhere in particular is my understanding.
Aaron Tracy
But Wonka is, especially the way Gene Wilder portrays him, is completely American.
David Bowman
Yes.
Aaron Tracy
You know, I think a big theme of this movie, very much of the book also is that it's Dahl's critique of American commercialism. You know, Dahl came from post war England, which was completely austere, to the wild excesses of 1950s America. That's his, you know, biographical story. And he could not believe how spoiled Americans were. And so that's very much what this book is about. I mean, Charlie is this really impoverished English boy who is able to keep all of his appetites in check. He is the opposite of spoiled or materialistic. And he's the one who triumphs, right? He's the one who wins. All the other children who very much lose are selfish and self involved and incredibly spoiled. And they're completely wrecked by their American style appetites. So I think you're right that it's not completely clear that a decision was not made about where to set this. But because Wonka is so American and because of this larger theme of anti commercialism, for me it just. It very much feels like an indictment of America.
David Bowman
Yeah, let's get into it. Because Lizzie, to your question, I think that part of the reason it feels confused is very much by necessity where they had to shoot this movie.
Lizzie Bassett
That's what I figured.
David Bowman
And so let's dive into that too. So really quickly, the details. So Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is a. I would describe it as a fantasy comedy children's film directed by Mel Stewart. It's based on a screenplay credited to Roald Dahl based on his book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It was produced by David Wolper and Stan Margulies and it stars, as we've mentioned, Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka, Peter Ostrom as Charlie Bucket, Jack Albertson as Grandpa Joe, Denise Nickerson as Violet Beauregard, Julie Don Cole as Veruca Salt, Paris Temin as Mike TV Michael Bolner as Augustus Gloop, Rusty Goff as the lead Oompa Loompa and Many, many more. It was produced by Wolper Pictures, financed
Aaron Tracy
by Aaron the Quaker Oats Company.
David Bowman
The Quaker Oats Company.
Aaron Tracy
Insane.
Lizzie Bassett
Yep.
David Bowman
Distributed by Paramount Pictures, it was released in the United States on June 30th after premiering on June 28th, 1971. And as always, the IMDb logline reads, a poor but hopeful boy seeks of the five coveted golden tickets that will send him on a tour of Willy Wonka's mysterious chocolate factory. Now, a few sources. Obviously, the Secret world of Roald Dahl. Guys, go listen. It is a blast. I powered through it. In addition, Pure Imagination, the Making of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, Mel Stewart's book on the film, a memoir by David Wolper, Gene Wilder's memoir, I love this name so much. Kiss Me Like a Stranger. I Want it Now. A memoir of life on the set of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory by Julie Don Cole, who plays Veruca Salt. Pure Imagination, the story of Willy Wonka and the chocolate factory, the 2001 documentary and many more articles, retrospectives and interviews with those involved in the film. So the question is, how did a couple of not particularly well known Jewish creatives use American commercialism to bring to life a controversial critique of American commercialism by a powerful author with a history of antisemitic remarks and what went wrong? So let's dive in, guys. There's Aaron. I'm sure you are aware of this apocryphal story or this warning in Hollywood, never take pitches from your kids like it is a trap that executives fall into. Often is my kid had this idea or my kid thought this thing was really good. So now we're going to do it. And there's a famous example that I love. Adam Goodman, when he was the president of Paramount, got the idea for a movie called Monster Trucks, which I'm not sure if you guys ever saw it, but it's about trucks that actually are powered by monsters inside of them. From his four year old son, they made it into a movie. It didn't go well. He is no longer the president of Paramount Pictures. I have not seen the movie. It may be fun. Well, back in 1969, there's a 12 year old girl named Madeline and she falls in love with a book called Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It was published in 1964. And now Aaron, you've mentioned in your show that Dahl's work, although originally published, you know, in the early to mid-60s, struggled to find its footing initially. And I'm speaking specifically about his children's book Work. Perhaps you can speak briefly about the beat it took for him to find footing in the world of children's stories.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, it's a funny thing. I mean, when we think of Roald Dahl, I think everybody immediately thinks of the children's books. But he didn't start writing children's books until his mid-40s. So he lived this huge life before that, which included writing for adults. He wrote for the New Yorker, these sort of sophisticated, urbane New York kind of stories. He wrote for Playboy. He wrote, like, some hard R stories. And then he did listen to his agent's advice and start writing for children, but it didn't go well. His very first book was James and the Giant Peach, but it only sold a few thousand copies. Children's writers before Dahl did not write like Dahl. They were not writing these sort of dark stories that were. That were. You know, Dahl was writing, like, from the perspective of the children's id. You know, it's children against cruel adults. It's children against monsters. It recognized that the world is kind of a difficult, sometimes evil place. And no one thought that that could possibly work for children. But of course it does, right? Children want to be treated like adults. Children appreciate that someone can recognize that they're actually having big thoughts and that they're seeing that the world can be cruel. But it was just such a departure from what existed before it that it took five years before James and the Giant Peach became a hit. They actually took it over to England because Dahl had a sort of an inclination that British children might understand his books better. And he was right. They published James and the Giant Peach in England, and it sold out three printings in a row. And so then they republished it in America and it became a hit there. And his next book was Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which became just a Giant, giant hit.
Lizzie Bassett
That's so funny. I don't know why, but it makes complete sense that British children would understand this and American kids would not.
David Bowman
Well, and James and the Giant Peach, you know, just. If anybody hasn't read it in a while, features James parents were eaten by a raging rhinoceros. He's living with abusive ants who are killed eventually, right? They're run over by the peach. They're ravenous sharks, a giant bat, you know, but then there's a lot of lovely elements as well. It's complicated, which is what makes it great. And so Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a hit. It sells 10,000 copies in its first week in the United States. Madeline reads the book three times and she does a Veruca Salt, right? She goes up to her daddy and she says, daddy, make this book into a movie. Make it, do it. I want it now. We don't know if she actually said it that way, but she did say, daddy, make this into a movie. And fortunately for her, her dad wasn't in the nut business. He was in the movie business. His name was Mel Stewart, but he, like Dahl, wasn't into children's stories. He directed serious documentaries. So Mel Stewart was born in New York. Stuart Solomon, he's a Jewish man at this point. He's in his early 40s and he produced a bunch of great documentaries, 1964's Four Days in November, which was nominated for best Documentary feature. And he'd started to dip his toes into narrative feature films, but he's making movies that are distinctly for adults. The first is 1969's if It's Tuesday, this Must be Belle. This is the humorous adventures of a group of American tourists taking an 18 day guided bus tour of nine European countries. And then 1970s. I love my Wife. I have never seen this movie. It stars Elliott Gould. It follows a, quote, successful young surgeon who has so much in life that he becomes bored with his wife and family. And feeling empty, he goes through a series of brief meaningless affairs with attractive women. The point is that the book doesn't seem to be a natural fit for Stewart's sensibilities, or vice versa. But what's so interesting and what you get into so well in your podcast, Dar, is that the same could be said for Roald Dahl and his transition into making children's books. So let's do our first wind Back the Clock deep dive into the Man Behind Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Roald Dahl. Roald Dahl was born in 1916 in Wales to Norwegian immigrant parents. And he suffers a double tragedy early in his life. His older sister dies when he's three. And then as you discuss on your show, Eren, his father seems to kind of lose the will to live. And he does not fight the pneumonia that he's contracted. And he passes away within a few weeks of Dahl's sister. But his mom stays in the country because his father had believed an English education was the greatest thing that you could give your children. And then I do find it ironic that so much of his writing has to do with how miserable it is to be a child in the English school system in so many ways. And so he goes through his schooling and then he serves in the Royal Air Force. And Aaron, maybe you can give Us, like just the brief insane whirlwind from Royal Air Force. Brain trauma spy, Sex spy in Washington, D.C. playing cards with the President. Maybe we can hit some of these lily pads for us briefly and go listen to the show for more detail,
Lizzie Bassett
how closely tied are Sex Spy and Playing Cards with the President? Are those the same thing?
David Bowman
Let's get through it.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, they are intertwined. Yeah. So Dahl, you know, as I said before, he didn't start writing children's books until his mid-40s. So he lived all these different lives before that. And that's how I sort of organize my podcast, where each episode sort of takes us into one of these worlds. So, first, he was a businessman for Shell Oil. And I think you're right, his father's death was such an all encompassing, important childhood defining moment for him. He was constantly searching for what kind of man he was. Shell Oil businessman, didn't quite work out. But it did take him to Africa. And when he was in Africa, he would see all these planes flying overhead, and he thought that that maybe was the next adventure. That's what looks good to him. So he just. He got in a car and he drove hundreds of miles. And even though he had never been inside of, he volunteered for the Royal Air Force and he flew a bunch of missions. You know, this is early in World War II. And he got shot down over and over again. And one of the crashes was really, really bad. His face went hard into the console in front of him so badly that his nose sort of smacked back through his skull. He had to get major plastic surgery. He had to spend months in a hospital. And he started getting dizzy spells and becoming unconscious at random times. And so his superior said, you're done. You're grounded.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, you can't fly planes.
Aaron Tracy
You cannot fly anymore.
David Bowman
He was also 6 foot 6 in these open cockpit planes.
Aaron Tracy
Right, exactly.
David Bowman
Sticking out like Kareem Abdul Jabbar. Like, this is.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, exactly. Like an NBA player in a convertible. Yeah. So imagine that, like his head was above the windshield. So he was just being pounded by the air and debris and bugs. It was. Yeah, totally not. Not, I guess, a huge surprise that he would crash so much. But his superiors saw something in him. He was. He was 6 foot 6. He was really, really handsome. He was a great storyteller. He was incredibly charming. And so they wanted to find something else for him, so they sent him to Washington, D.C. to join a group called the Irregulars, which was a sort of secret spy Group for MI6, whose job it was to find a Way to get America to come into the war on Britain's side. Right, to join the war. And they would try everything. They would sabotage, they would create propaganda. The group was totally fascinating. It was all of these young 20 somethings, all of whom were incredibly handsome and happened to be great writers. Dahl was in it, so was Noel Coward, the playwright. So was Ian Fleming, who created James Bond. So was David Ogilvy, who would go on to invent modern advertising and be the inspiration for Don Draper on Mad Men. So you gotta sort of think about like Don Draper, James Bond and Roald Dahl sitting at a Georgetown bar late at night, coming up with like sabotage ideas. And there's a bunch of great ideas they had. And then, I mean, I can get into Dahl's seductions if you want.
David Bowman
But yeah, let's talk about it briefly because it's so incongruous with, I think, his children's work. But one of the things that Dahl, as you highlight on your show, was so good at was women. He had a way with women. He seemed to understand women. And you point out in your show that he writes female characters very well and he often has lead female protagonists. And it's not in a token way. Maybe that's from being raised without a father and having a strong maternal presence in his life with his sisters as well. But yeah, please dive in. Cause it's fascinating.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, I think you're exactly right. Dahl was surrounded by women. It was his mother and his sisters who raised him. And so part of his job in the Irregulars was to seduce women who were married to powerful men who were not yet on the Allied side in order to sort of try to convince their husbands, a whisper in their husband's ear, to get on the Allied side. So there's a whole litany of powerful women that Dahl supposedly seduced. We know for sure, people like Gloria Vanderbilt and several others. The most famous is probably Clare Boothe Luce, who was married to Henry Luce. Henry Luce was probably the most powerful man in media at the time. He owned Time magazine and Life magazine and so many others. And they were often printing anti British pieces, which Churchill could not have asked because he's desperate to get America, FDR specifically, to come into the war on Britain's side. Clare Bouffelus, in her own right, was also incredibly influential. She was a major journalist for places like Vanity Fair. She was a huge playwright. She wrote the Broadway play the Women, which was then adapted twice for the movies. Yeah, that was her only play.
Lizzie Bassett
Wow.
Aaron Tracy
And then she decided to run for Congress and became a really rare woman in Congress. So she was incredibly powerful. She was 13 years older than Dawson. But Dahl dated her, they had a long term affair. And the idea was. Yeah, to convince her husband and to convince her that this was a good idea to enter the war.
Lizzie Bassett
Okay. I'm thrilled that her legacy was not just had an oopsie affair with a spy called Roald Dahl.
David Bowman
No, she was like a deeply influential person.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, absolutely.
David Bowman
Yeah.
Lizzie Bassett
That's so interesting. It's also immediately, as soon as you said he was 6 foot 6, I was like, and we're sure this is not just a Jacob Elordi, he's so tall situation, but it sounds like.
David Bowman
No, he seems like he was quite the charmer on top of it. And then he, you know, he meets his match. And Patricia Neal, the actress who was younger than him and who was very much on the rise when they met, you know, I think she was 26, Aaron, if I'm remembering your show correctly. Yeah. And she's not interested in him. She's the first woman, you know, it seems that he's run into who he can't woo. And eventually, you know, she had had a very messy affair with Gary Cooper. And when that fell apart, he was the love of her life. She, you know, would say. And she describes sex with him as an act of God, basically.
Lizzie Bassett
And with Gary Cooper.
David Bowman
With Gary Cooper, yeah. Who was years older than her. And when that fails, doll eventually wears her down and she realizes, I want to have kids and doll would produce good looking kids. So. Okay. And they get married and so begins a relationship that I think without that relationship and the tragedy that follows, you do not get Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and his children's books in a lot of senses. But let's save that for a moment. Cause I want to get back into our film timeline. And we will return to Mr. Dahl in a second because I want to tease it out across the episodes. So Mel Stewart has been working with a producer named David Wolper, who is big in the documentary space. And Mel Stewart is the artist. And David Wolper is a salesman through and through. So it's literally in his blood. His father is Irving Wolper, who actually worked with Donald Trump. And here is a quote from the Art of the Deal who described Irving as, quote, one of the greatest bullshit artists I've ever met. I mean, it's a high compliment from.
Aaron Tracy
Wow. I did not know that.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah. Yeah. Wow.
David Bowman
So David Wolper, like his father, was interested in sales of all kind. And the entertainment industry. He'd started a TV distribution company called Flamingo Films. So after he started Flamingo Films, Wolper shut it down. Ended up working at a bank. And when he was there, he started working on Divorce Hearing, which was kind of a predecessor, or as he described it, a predecessor to Jerry Springer and, like, not great reality tv. And then he ran into somebody on the street that he bought Russian cartoons from. So this is the wild west, right, of distribution. Anybody can start up their own little distribution outfit. And this guy says, look, you like those Russian cartoons? I got some Russian space footage. You want some of that? And so he makes a movie called Race for Space. Stewart had worked on it, but he didn't like it. And he told Wolper, you know, he didn't like it. And Wolper thought, well, this guy's smart. So he hired him and they started working together. A decade later, Mel Stewart tells Madeline, okay, I'm gonna read Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He does. It's not quite his style, but he likes it. And he decides, I want to make it, but I want to make it in a more realistic fashion than the book. So, Aaron, you talk about this on your show in like the last episode especially, but Willy Wonka is very much a cipher. He's this enigma in the book. It's hard to parse. It's hard to even figure out who he is. He seems like he darts in and out of view. He's never really described in great detail. And I think Stewart wants to ground this story much more than the heightened version that will exist later in Tim Burton's world. This podcast is sponsored by Drip Drop. I love running. I love talking, as you guys know. And Drip Drop helps me keep my legs and my voice and maybe even my mind fresh. Drip Drop is a proven fast hydration that helps your body and mind work better. They use science based formulas for rapid hydration so you can feel results fast while getting three times the electrolytes of leading sports drinks. And it's trusted by over 90% of top college and pro sports teams. Drip Drop also just dropped zero sugar plus a breakthrough formula with an advanced blend of six key electrolytes, 15 essential vitamins and nutrients, and no sugar or artificial sweeteners. There are 16 original flavors and eight zero sugar plus options. I like to mix it up on the daily so I never get bored. Right now, Drip Drop is offering podcast listeners 20% off your first order. Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code. Wrong. That's dripdrop.com promo code wrong for 20% off. Stock up now@dripdrop.com and use promo code wrong. This podcast is sponsored by chime. Guys, it's 2026 and we don't need to pay for the infrastructure of traditional banking anymore. More I'm talking about overdraft and monthly fees. Chime is the fee free banking built for you. They have thousands of fee free ATMs. Why pay to get your own money and Chime offers you real human support 24. 7 they're rated five stars for USA today for customer service. Plus you get savings that grows faster with a 3.75% APY that is nine times the national average. The truth is I work from home. It makes sense for me to save money and bank from home to Chime is not just smarter banking. It is the most rewarding way to bank. Join the millions who are already banking fee free today. Head to chime.com wrong that is chime.com wrong it takes only a few minutes to sign up.
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David Bowman
Chime.com discount this podcast is supported by Stamps.com guys. My favorite part about making this podcast is that I get to work from home. Specifically the closet where I'm recording this right now and I record every episode. And with stamps.com, i don't have to leave the closet to go to the post office. With stamps.com, i can ship from my computer or phone, always from my closet. 24. 7. No lines, no low supplies, open all the time. I can print postage on demand. Yes, I still own a printer. It's perfect for my business. For almost 30 years, millions of customers have relied on stamps.com to make mailing shipping faster and simple. The mantra used to be work smart, not hard. It should be work from your closet, not from the post office, which is what I do right now. You can try stamps.com risk free for 60 days. Go to stamps.com and use code wrong to get 60 days risk free. 60 days gives you plenty of time to see exactly how much time and money you're saving on every shipment. That's stamps.com code wrong. That's stamps.com code WRONG. So Stewart saw a business opportunity here as well. Basically, outside of Disney, the market for family films was slim. And this is very much true. So at the time, there are very few non Disney children's family films being released. This is the late 60s, early 70s, in fact. One exception was written by Ian Fleming and Roald Dahl. Aaron, which one would that be?
Aaron Tracy
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Bang.
David Bowman
That's right. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang book was written by Ian Fleming, and then Roald Dahl would write the screenplay. So Disney was entering the Dark Ages. Walt passed away in 1966. And so Mel Stewart has this opportunity. There's a bit of a vacuum. They consider making it as an animated film, but Stewart doesn't want to do that. He wants it to be realistic and grounded, and he doesn't want it just to be for kids. He also wants it to appeal to adults. So he tells Wolper about the idea. And as you talk about on your show. So. Well, Aaron Wolper, Wolper sees an opportunity for synergy. So David Wolper is working on a TV special about endangered species called say Goodbye, which would be nominated for another Oscar, Best documentary feature. And they had a sponsor, Quaker Oats. So Ken Mason, the director of advertising at Quaker Oats, was actually very against Saturday morning cartoons and wanted to sponsor more serious fare for children. Hence something like say Goodbye. And this is kind of at the height of. Of advertising targeting children through television. And all of a sudden, there's a lot of pushback on these ads. There's all of these conferences about food and nutrition and health, and people are saying maybe these cereals products are not actually as good for children as we have been saying before. And so there's an opportunity here for Mason and Quaker Oats to attempt a different form of advertising than traditional television advertising. And so Ken Mason, who once defended Cap' N Crunch by saying, a banana has more sugar than a serving of my sweetened cereal, which I don't know if that's true.
Lizzie Bassett
Seems like it's not.
Aaron Tracy
I don't think that's true.
David Bowman
Syncs up with David Wolper, and he produces this documentary, say Goodbye. And Wolper says, all right, you guys are interested in making a chocolate bar? What about Charlie and the Chocolate Factory? And we do a little product tie in. We don't know how the conversation went, but here's how Wolper described it. While it was highly unusual for a cereal company to finance a feature film.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah.
David Bowman
Quaker Oats decided to name their candy The Wonka Bar and bought the rights to the name from the author. So there are obviously a lot of product tie ins nowadays with movies. And there would begin to be in the 1980s, I mean, some big examples like Reese's Pieces and E.T. although obviously Reese's did not finance that film. BMW and GoldenEye, which we covered. GoldenEye has an incredible amount of sponsorship in it. Or AOL. I did not know this, Lizzie. They paid to have the title of youf've Got Mail be you've Got Mail. Wow. Now, we should be clear. We don't actually know the details of the deal between AOL and the studio. It's entirely possible that no money exchanged hands, that in exchange for the product placement, AOL provided promotion through its online properties. But we do know that you've Got Mail was originally called you have Mail and AOL was involved in shaping that film. The point is that all of these deals pale in comparison to the Quaker Oats, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory deal deal in which Quaker Oats is the sole financier responsible for providing the entire budget for the movie. And Aaron, as you mentioned, this is so unusual because the book is a critique of, to a certain extent, American capitalism and also advertising to children in a lot of ways.
Lizzie Bassett
And Quaker Oats is like, what better way than to advertise our chocolate bar? Two children.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, we should stop and just really sort of dive into how is it insane this is that a serial company funded a studio movie. You're right. Everything you said is right. That makes no sense. That did not happen before. And you mentioned earlier that Dahl hated this movie. I mean, Dahl hated this movie. Let's just say it flat out. He wrote the screenplay, but he was incredibly unhappy with it. And like I said, I love this movie. And so I disagree with Dahl about it, but I am very much on Dahl's side here because Dahl wrote Charlie and the Chocolate Factory because Quaker Oats came on to fund the movie and they wanted to make a Wonka bar, as you said, they completely shifted the focus and they called it Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. So that's not just a title change. That really is a gigantic change. I mean, I think I can talk a little bit about what I noticed the other day about the structure of the movie, which is so incredibly weird. But I think it really does shift focus to Willy Wonka starting at the end of Act 1. And that is not what Dahl wanted. That is not the story he wrote. That is not the message he was trying to get across. It undermined his themes. So I'm on his side here, that they sort of screwed up his version of the story.
David Bowman
Well, let's talk a little bit about how he got involved and then maybe how he got edged out. So I think one of the reasons this thing actually happened, Wolper definitely had not read the entire book and maybe had not read any the of of it when he pitched the idea to Quaker. So Stewart had read the book, he told Wolper about it, and it seems like Wolper just thought, chocolate Factory, Quaker, great, let's stick it together. It doesn't matter.
Lizzie Bassett
By the way, it may be worth mentioning because I didn't realize this. Some of the brands that Quaker was behind in the 60s and 70s in terms of the types of cereals. Because they did life, right? They did life and they have Cap' n Crunch and Cap' N Crunch. Yeah, something called Quaker, but yeah, like some of the biggest, sugariest, like, character driven cereals, right?
David Bowman
Mm, yep. Very mascot driven, brand driven. Very much aimed at children. Again, as we'll discuss later, Ken Mason of Quaker actually seems to have had decently mixed feelings about this and was hoping to do something a little bit more substantive for children in terms of the entertainment that was being provided, which is actually kind of like Dahl. He did not like television. Dahl does not like television. If you read Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which I did, and you get to the Mic TV section, you can see when the Oompa Loompas do their poem about Mike tv, you can see Dahl's thoughts on television very clearly. So it seems like, though, Aaron, at first, this is actually going to be a great situation for Dahl because unlike a traditional studio setup, it's being financed by a private corporation. And so therefore, it seems unlikely that they're going to get the level of notes that you'll get through. Like a studio executive, for example. Right. In theory, Dahl should have more control in this situation. And you could surmise or imagine a version of it like that. So Wolper calls Dahl's agent and he negotiates a deal to buy the rights to the book for $200,000. And the agent has one condition. Dahl has to write the screenplay. At this point, that actually seems like not a big deal because as you discussed in your show, Aaron Dahl had written not only Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, but yout Only Live Twice, the James Bond film. He'd also written for Alfred Hitchcock on his anthology series. And we're years removed from his failed attempt to adapt his story about Gremlins with Walt Disney, which had been his kind of rude introduct to Hollywood. So it's a deal. Ken Mason calls Wolper back. Quaker Oats is interested, and Wolper proposes the plan that would go into action. Quaker Oats is going to put up the money. They're going to make it for 2 to 3 million dollars, and then afterwards we'll shop it around for distribution. And Wolper's like, this is going to give us the best financial results, which really just means Wolper the best financial results. He will be paid no matter what. There is no risk involved in this. Now, as you mentioned, Aaron, the title change seems to to have come from Quaker. That's the general consensus we will get to. Mel Stewart actually offers a different reason later on, but I think it makes perfect sense that they're going to be promoting the Wonka bar. It needs to be called Willy Wonka. We need Wonka in the title. And it can't be called Charlie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. That doesn't make any sense. Right. So By August of 1969, the New York Times had reported that Wolper and Quaker Oats are going to produce this children's story. They also note that Wolpert also took out an option on James and the Giant Peach that would not obviously come to pass. Now, the movie was already being described as a musical, which Mel Stewart wasn't really nuts about. So he actually wanted to have the characters chanting poems and basically rapping instead of singing songs, which would have been really interesting.
Lizzie Bassett
Arguably what some of the children in this movie do anyway, because they did not catch the greatest singers.
David Bowman
They didn't cast singers. No, it's not Sabrina Carpenter in here. No. But Wolper seems to be the driving force behind wanting this to be a musical because he's using musicals to sell Quaker Oats on the idea. He's saying the wizard of Oz, the Sound of Music, Oliver, just a few Years before, in 1968, I love Oliver. These had made a ton of money. And so Stewart gives in, but he's like, it's not a musical. It's a movie with music. And David Wolper had a really good idea of who he wanted to come in to write the music. Lizzie, Aaron, Any guesses? He features prominently in 2025's Blue Moon.
Lizzie Bassett
Richard Rodgers.
David Bowman
Richard Rodgers of Rodgers and Hammerstein. Oklahoma. The King and I, Sound of Music. He says no. Then Henry Mancini, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Pink Panther. He also said no. He said he was busy. And finally, Wolper calls his friends Anthony New and Leslie Bricus, who are not also Rands in this conversation. These are two of the biggest composer lyricists of the era. And Newley was very much a performer as well. So Newley's an actor, comedian, singer, composer. He'd had a string of hits in the UK in the late 50s and early 60s. Lizzie. We talked about Anthony Newley briefly in our episode on Dr. Dolittle, which he acted in and was abused by Rex
Lizzie Bassett
Harrison in that movie, as was everyone on that set.
David Bowman
Goodbye, Mr. Chips. Screwed. And again, they had some doll overlap. So Newley and Bricus had done the Bond song for Goldfinger, and you'd only live twice.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, Goldfinger's my favorite Bond song of all time. Shirley Bassey.
David Bowman
Yeah, that's Newly and Bricus. Wow. So they'd won a Grammy in 1963. And the point is, they're not some sort of consolation prize. These are two of the greatest living musical men you know, in the world right now. And so Wolper says, write a few songs for the movie. And they say, sure. And they sent them Roald Dahl's first draft as a guide. And let's talk about this first draft. So. So, Aaron, Roald Dahl tried to make it as a screenwriter for a long time. Can you tell us a little bit about the high that he started on entering Hollywood and how quickly he fell off?
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, you're right. And I think that those two things are very much tied together. It's not a coincidence. When Dahl was just 26, he wrote a story called the Gremlins, which you referenced, which was kind of a propaganda piece about American and British cooperation. And it got passed around D.C. and it got into the hands of Eleanor Ruby Roosevelt. And she flipped for it. She absolutely loved it. It was basically a children's story. And she gave it to her grandkids. She would read it to her grandkids and she wanted to meet the author. So she invited 26 year old Roald Dahl, who by the way was a British spy at this point, to the White House to hang out with them. And it went well. Just like you mentioned, dolls like Zelig or Forrest Gump. I mean, Dahl just charmed everyone everywhere he went. Eleanor and Franklin invited him up to Hyde park to spend weekends, which was just like huge for a 26 year old spy. Like, making friends with a White House intern would have been giant. But Roald, and this is just the way his life went, was becoming friends with the first family. And so it was such an exciting book. That Eleanor fell in love with that either she or someone in her circle got it to Walt Disney and Walt Disney fell in love with it. And Walt Disney was absolutely at the peak of his powers. I mean, all the big movies we can name, Dumbo and Pinocchio and Bambi, they had all been made in just like the handful of years before this. He loves the book as much as Eleanor does. And he flies 26 year old Roald Dahl to Los Angeles, puts him up at the Beverly Hills Hotel, hires a driver for him, throws a giant party for him that Charlie Chaplin attends and
David Bowman
everyone attends, where he's welcomed by Charlie Chaplin. Is Charlie dressed as a gremlin? I can't remember. I know a lot of people are dressed as grandma. Yeah.
Aaron Tracy
Their guests are dressed like gremlins. Yeah. I mean, can you imagine for doll to just like walk into that?
David Bowman
He just met the president who then set him up with Walt Disney. It doesn't make any sense.
Aaron Tracy
It's insane. And they start a writer's room and Disney sort of shows Dahl the ropes. This is how Hollywood works. This is how we are going to adapt your story. And he hires a director and he hires, you know, animators and kind of a whole crew and they get going. And Disney even puts out ads for the Gremlins, the movie before they finish the screenplay. But Dahl is just not at a point yet where he can compromise. He has a very strong vision for what his story is and he doesn't want it corrupted. He doesn't want it changed at all. But of course, movie making, screenplay writing is all about collaboration. That's what Hollywood is. So for that reason and for other reasons, the film falls apart. And what I talk about a little bit on the podcast is Dahl could have. We might not have ever heard of Dahl because so many writers like him, novelists, prose writers, went to Hollywood and just, just failed. Right? Like people like Fitzgerald and Faulkner and Aldous Huxley and so many others. Fitzgerald drank himself to death in Hollywood. And that, that absolutely could have been Dahl because he just had one disappointment after the next. His next movie he wrote. It ended up actually going into production with Gregory Peck starring, but it was called O Death, where is Thy Sting? A ling a ling. And the is because after a few days of filming, the head of the studio canceled the whole production, didn't like what he saw and canceled it. So it's like Dahl was just having so many disappointments in Hollywood, but then he hooked up with Albert Broccoli, the producers of James Bond, and he was given the opportunity to write the fifth installment of the James Bond series, which was as much of a guarantee as exists in Hollywood. You know, the first four were giant, giant. Dahl was also a spy for MI6, so he was able to bring his own experiences to the project. He was actually friends with Ian Fleming, who created James Bond. So it was, like, the perfect situation for him. And it became a giant, giant hit.
Lizzie Bassett
Was it, like, public knowledge that he had been part of MI6 at this point, or is that something that came out later?
Aaron Tracy
He definitely did not talk about it much. He didn't boast about it. So I think most people probably thought that he was just part of the British Embassy working in New York. And Detective. He didn't go around advertising it.
Lizzie Bassett
Got it.
Aaron Tracy
But certainly the producers of James Bond knew and were very happy for him to bring his own experiences to the project.
David Bowman
And then, of course, Dahl cannot help himself but put down the project or put down James Bond right throughout this process as well. He needs everybody to understand that this is beneath him, even as it is his first success within Hollywood and within screenwriting. And eventually, when he gets into children's books, he feels the need to assert that actually writing children's books is the most difficult thing any writer can do. And look at all the great authors who have completely failed at this endeavor. And what I am doing is threading the needle in a way that, you know, almost no one else can do. There's a really interesting, delicate ego to Dahl. And it's also interesting to imagine he's failing at screenwriting. He's struggling at writing these short stories. He writes a play that doesn't land at all. And at the same time, his wife, Patricia Neal, is, you know, nominated for an Oscar, and she wins for Hud opposite Paul Newman. And it's just she's the breadwinner, and she's having multiple children, and she. And there are some really interesting elements to this marriage. Again, we don't have time to get into here. Listen to the Secret World of Roald Dahl. But at this point, I think what we can say about Dahl as a screenwriter is he does not take notes very well. Like, he very much likes to work by himself. He doesn't like to work in a writer's room necessarily. And I think what happens with Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and we don't need to dive into this too deeply, is this is a book that he had been writing for quite some time. There's, like, an unnamed first draft from as early as 1961, basically. And the story went through a lot of different variations. And in fact, as you mentioned on your show, Erin, in the earliest versions, Charlie's black, actually, and the story would have had a very different tenor, would have been something completely different. And then, obviously, at the behest of his agent and others, you know, he changes Charlie to white. You know, at first, there are 10 children and 10 golden tickets, and the Oompa Loompas change in various ways. He revises and revises. And we eventually get to the version that we more or less recognize now with five golden tickets and Charlie Bucket and Willy Wonka and whatnot. So the point is, when he writes this script, he sends it in to Wolper and Stewart, and they basically say, look, this is just a transcription of the book. And I think the problem is that Dahl had been staring at this book for so long and he'd already figured everything out in the novel form, that he's not going to bring something new. At this point, there's very little showing. There's a lot of telling. There's a lot of time in Charlie's home. Aaron, you mentioned how earlier, how we pivot to Wonka very quickly in the movie, you know, once we get to the factory. And that's, I think, very much intentionally,
Lizzie Bassett
not fast enough, some would argue.
David Bowman
But the other thing is, like, with this book, there is no main conflict, right? The book does not actually have a main conflict. It is effectively. It is a tour. Children are picked off one by one. And then in kind of just a weird happenstance turn, Charlie is announced as the, quote, winner at the very end. You know, it just kind of plods along, and that's what happens. And it's very fun as a child, but it's not a movie. And it was also very expensive. He'd written these extremely elaborate chocolate factory scenes. And they have 2 to 3 million dollars of Quaker Oats money. So they fly Dahl to Los Angeles and they do a bunch of script meetings. And recaps of these meetings are mixed. You know, Stewart says Dahl was very professional. Wolper says he won't change anything. I'm inclined to believe Wolper. They send Dahl back to England. He starts working on the second draft, and they just start capturing. They do not have a shootable script, but they start casting. So they start as early as January of 1970, and they were considering a very different Willy Wonka. So they gathered in the Plaza Hotel in New York with a list of potential names. And one of those names was American actor Joel Gray.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, that makes a Lot of sense.
David Bowman
So do you guys remember Joel Gray? He won Best Supporting Actor for Cabaret.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, cabaret.
David Bowman
Yeah. In 1973. And so he was already known for this role from 1967, from the Broadway production.
Lizzie Bassett
Right.
David Bowman
In a lot of ways, he actually really fit the doll version of Wonka. He's five foot five. He is small, like Wonka's very short in the book. It may have been very faithful, but as Stewart put it, you don't want a short, pointy, bearded guy as a cinematic leading man. And this, I think, speaks to Mel Stewart and his collaborators seeing Wonka as the lead of the movie, not Charlie as the lead of the movie. And Stewart did have a practical concern. He was worried that with Joel Grey, one of the kids might have a growth spurt and end up taller than Grey while she. Which Lizzy. That happened on the Sound of Music, if you remember.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, it did.
David Bowman
The children started growing at different rates. And all of a sudden, the heights started getting really wonky between all of them.
Lizzie Bassett
I mean, I understand what they're trying to do here. And it feels like it's kind of all coming from a marketing place of they're trying to push Wonka with this. I will say I don't think Joel Gray is a bad choice for Willy Wonka at all. Obviously, I love Gene Wilder. I think he is Willy Wonka. But Joel Gray is wonderful and has a very sinister quality to him, or can. So I think he would work pretty well to.
David Bowman
That's true. Well, it sounds like a lot of people wanted the part. Anthony Newley, who was working on the music, pushed for it hard. His agent, Sue Mengers, who also represented Barbra Streisand, calls Wolper up and she goes, I want Newley as Wonka. I want him to sing two songs. And here's the quote from Wolper. If I gave the role to Newley, she carefully suggested, or maybe I interpreted, that she would get me a date with Barbra Streisand. So I hung up the phone and never thought about it again. End quote.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, I don't know if you want that date.
David Bowman
Well, Anthony Newley also rallied hard for the Candyman role. And also Sam. Sammy Davis Jr. Apparently rallied for that role really hard. Both were turned down.
Lizzie Bassett
Doesn't he go on to record Candyman?
David Bowman
Yeah, he does. He records it later, it becomes a hit for Sammy Davis Jr. Later. Yes.
Lizzie Bassett
Cause I was gonna say, I know the song. I didn't. That was one of the moments in this movie where I was like, this is from this movie. I did not put those two together because I remember Sammy Davis Jr's version of it so well.
David Bowman
Fred Astaire is often mentioned as someone who was being considered for Wonka. Basically. Wolper and Stewart said they did not know about his interest until afterwards. He would have been too old. He was in his 70s and probably too expensive. And a couple of other names that are interesting include Peter Sellers, who would end up having a brief or at least romantic relationship with Roald Dahl's daughter Tessa Dahl in the 1970s.
Aaron Tracy
So that's unusual when she's 18 and he's 50.
David Bowman
Yeah, exactly. Ugh.
Lizzie Bassett
Why do they have to do this? I love Peter Sellers.
David Bowman
God, Spike Milligan and all six members of Monty Python. And reportedly, Spike Milligan is who Dahl wanted for the. So they're a week into auditions, as the story goes, Gene Wilder walks in. Now, I assumed growing up that Wilder was already a huge star because I also grew up with Young Frankenstein, Blazing Saddles, Silver Streak, you know, Stir Crazy, Richard Pryor stuff.
Lizzie Bassett
No, he's all the 70s.
David Bowman
Exactly. I did not realize this. This is after Willy Wonka. Those were all after Willy Wonka. So this is technically after the Producers, which came out in 67.
Aaron Tracy
I think the Producers did something for
David Bowman
him, but that had flown.
Aaron Tracy
Oh, really?
David Bowman
It was kind of buried.
Lizzie Bassett
It's not a big hit.
David Bowman
It was not a big hit. And so let's talk briefly about Wilder. So he was born Jerome Silberman in June of 1933. And he was a very accomplished theater actor before he transitioned into film and tv. So his first big role was, if you guys remember, he plays one of the hostages in Bonnie and Clyde. In Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde, he's in the backseat. He was actually. He's 34. He's four and seven years older than Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway in that movie, which is crazy because he's got such a baby face.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah.
David Bowman
So he's nominated for Best supporting actor in 1969 for the Producers, even though that movie did not. It wasn't, like, a huge breakout hit, which obviously was one of his many collaborations with Mel Brooks. And you mentioned this on your show, Aaron. Fun fact. Brooks's wife, Ann Bancroft, was very good friends with Roald Dahl's wife, Patricia Neal. And Aaron, which movie did Patricia Neal turn down after suffering a stroke? That went to Ann Bancroft right around the.
Aaron Tracy
The Graduate.
David Bowman
That's right.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah. Mrs. Robinson.
David Bowman
That's right. So the point is, when Wilder auditioned, he was known, but he wasn't a household name, and it didn't matter. Stewart thought he was perfect. He read from the book with just the right inflection. He had, quote, a sardonic, demonic edge that Stewart was looking for. And according to Stewart, the minute Wilder walks into the room, he turns to Wolper and says, that's Willy Wonka. And David Wolper, ever the deal maker, says, shut up. We can't let him know how much we want him. We gotta get him from. And Stewart says, totally. And then when the audition's done, he chases Wilder down the hallway, cuts him off at the elevator, and says, you are going to do this picture. No two ways about it. You are Willy Wonka. But the only problem is Wilder isn't sure he wants to. And this is a story that I had heard before, and I'm sure you guys have heard before. Lizzie, have you heard this story before about what Gene Wilder's one condition was for taking on this role. Are you familiar?
Lizzie Bassett
No. I don't know. I don't know.
David Bowman
Aaron, would you like to share? I'm sure you heard this one through your research.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, and I think I even. I put the clip in my podcast, actually. He said that he would only do the role if he could have that amazing entrance where he walks out of his chocolate factory with a cane, and you don't quite know if he's very feeble or if he's got an injury or what's going on with him. And then the cane gets stuck in a crack and he somersaults and jumps up and shows that he's actually kind of a trickster. And from then on, you have no idea what to make of him. It is a completely brilliant entry.
David Bowman
So he says, this is my stipulation. And Mel Stewart says, you're not gonna do the movie if you can't do that. And he says, no. And he says, okay, well, fine. Deal. So they get wilder. He's paid $150,000, according to Stewart, to play the part and then to cast the kids. Stewart apparently turned to the illustrations and descriptions from the book. And what's interesting is Charlie's Hat, for example, is not in the later publication that I read as a kid. The later illustrations. But if you go back to the Shindelman illustration, it is a part of the costume, you know, that Shindelman had done originally. So they hire multiple casting directors to read kids across the world. You've got Marion Doherty in New York. You've got Bodie Baker in London, and Renata Neukkel in Munich. And given Quaker Oats roots in Ravenna, Ohio, it's perhaps fitting that they'd find Charlie Bucket in Cleveland. So they considered hundreds of actors from children's theaters across the country, including the children's theater at the Cleveland Playhouse, where Joel Gray and Margaret Hamilton, the Wicked Witch of the Witch, got their starts. Oh, wow. So she asked the playhouse to suggest actors who would be a good fit for Charlie, and they suggested Peter Ostrom. His dad was the general counsel of Ohio Bell Telephone Shout out to kids with dads who are lawyers. That's me and David. Yeah, and David. According to Stewart, Peter was the pride of the children's branch of the Cleveland Playhouse. He'd been acting for three years, and he auditions in early summer of 1970. He's 12 years old. They fly him to New York for a screen test. He reads from the book, and they don't have any of the songs written yet. So he sings, my country tis of thee. And they say, peter, Peter, your acting is great. Your singing is terrible.
Lizzie Bassett
And so he is 100% tone deaf. Which, like, I don't care. Cause he's very cute, he's very charming. But my God, when he started singing.
David Bowman
Yeah. He has a quote here where he basically says, don't worry, we're not gonna use your singing voice anyway. And they just reduced his singing part across the production. Like, every time he opened his mouth, they're like, well, no, we can lose that song. Let's just move on. And they just kept what they needed. Him. Here's where it gets a little dark. So just before he goes off to summer camp, they say, look, Peter, we like you for characters. There's one problem. Charlie's really skinny. We're gonna need you to lose some weight. So he went to summer camp. Quote, riding horses and hiking and climbing and doing all the things you do at summer camp. Trying not to eat because I wanted to lose more weight.
Aaron Tracy
Ugh, bummer.
David Bowman
And this ties in to a really a gnarly thread in all of Dahl's writing that I'm sure we're all aware of, which is there is very much a fatphobia through all of Dahl's work. And I think at the end we'll get to some of the ways in which his work has been revised and you could argue, censored and specifically that, yeah, you should never ask a 12 year old to lose weight for a movie. Obviously.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, it's awful.
Lizzie Bassett
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David Bowman
Acast Powers the world's best podcasts. Here's a show that we recommend.
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Hello hello, it's Brooke Devard from Naked Beauty. Join me each week for unfiltered discussion about beauty trends, self care, drama, journeys, wellness tips and the products we absolutely love and cannot get enough of. If you are a skincare obsessive and you spend 20 plus minutes on your skincare routine, this podcast is for you. Or if you're a newbie at the beginning of your skincare journey, you'll love this podcast as well. Because we go so much deeper than beauty. I talk to incredible and inspiring people from across industries about their relationship with beauty. You'll also hear from skincare experts. We break down lots of myths in the beauty beauty industry. If this sounds like your thing, search for naked beauty on your podcast app and listen along. I hope you'll join us.
David Bowman
Peter Ostrom was officially cast in mid August of 1970. He had 10 days notice to move to Munich for five months of shooting for Veruck Assault. Mel Stewart wanted to cast someone that was like the quote, spoiled children of Beverly Hills. But they wanted her to be English. Enter Julie Dawn Cole. She's 12 years old. Like Peter, she's great. She's so good. She's attending a performing arts school in London. Casting agents come to her school. They line all the girls up. No, no, you. No, no, you. She comes in, she meets Stuart and Margulies. She hasn't read any of the doll books, so she has a school bus driver drive her around town from bookstore to bookstore until they can find a copy of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. And during the audition, Stuart just kept saying, be nastier, be brattier. And she nailed it. And in later interviews, cast members would say that of all the actors, she was the least like her in real life. Oh, wow. She was extremely sweet. And she did not have a doting father. Her dad had actually left when she was six years old and she never saw him again. They spoke on the phone one time before he died. Some tragic stories around these kids. Couple more notes on casting. Denise Nickerson, thrilled to get the part of Violet Beauregard because she'd get to work with other kids. She'd been acting since she was 2 in a commercial in Florida, but she'd only done at this point, like Broadway and tv, and she was only acting across adults. And she just thought, this is gonna be great. Until they shoved her into a giant blueberry Styrofoam costume.
Lizzie Bassett
She's also, she's great.
David Bowman
Paris, who plays Mike TV, was 11 years old and he was apparently the most difficult child on set.
Lizzie Bassett
That tracks.
David Bowman
So let's play this video clip of Gene Wilder talking about working with the children on set. And let's see if we can guess who he's talking about here. How do you like working with the younger generation? Who do you mean by the younger generation? You mean the kids, the little tiny ones?
Aaron Tracy
Yes.
David Bowman
Four of them are fantastic. The other one I'm gonna shoot in the head tomorrow. Oh, no. I think based on our research, we can assume that that was Paris. Julie. Don Cole later said, many years later, he admitted he was a bit of a troublemaker during the production. Again, he was very young. Michael Bollner played Augustus Gloop. He lived in Munich, not far from the studio, and his mother just saw an ad in the paper and brought him in to audition. And he didn't really speak a lot of English, which Stuart did not care. The kids are all fantastic. There's one actress they really wanted for one of the parent roles that they didn't get. That is an interesting what if? Which is Mike, TV's mother. And that actress was Jean Stapleton. And she had an offer for a TV series at the same time. And Mel Stewart was saying, don't do tv. TV always falls apart. Do a movie. It's a sure thing. Lizzie Aaron, any guesses as to what TV show that was that she decided to go with?
Aaron Tracy
All in the Family.
David Bowman
That's right. Edith Bunker. All in the Family. Jack Albertson. They snagged for Grandpa Joe. He'd actually just won an Oscar, Best actor in a supporting role for the subject was Roses in 1968, starring Patricia Neal.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, wow.
David Bowman
Yeah, I've not seen it. He's really good in this movie. I think he's very well cast. So Stuart and Margulies cast the movie and Wolper is scouting. He needs a location that's big enough for the factory in the chocolate river, but it needs to be way cheap compared to Hollywood, so they can't use Hollywood. So In April of 1970, he goes to Europe. He goes to Ireland. He checks out the Guinness Bridge Brewery looks the part. Lots of tubes, doesn't work for technical reasons. He checks out Spain. They had a bankrupt chocolate factory that looked perfect, but the ownership was under legal dispute, so he skips that. He hits up breweries in Germany. None of them are quite right. And then he goes to Italy and he meets with one of my favorites on the show, Dino De Laurentiis, who is saying, you have to come to Italy. Everybody does an offensive Italian accent when they talk about Dino De Laurentius. I'll refrain. And he's pushing him. Come shoot at Chinichita Studios. You know, it's Hollywood on the Tiber. Ben Hur, Cleopatra, they all shot here and Wolper believes that Laurentiis has a financial incentive to try to bring him over here. It's also possible that Laurentiis was trying to get him to shoot at Dinochitta Studios, which was Dino De Laurenti's like knockoff Chinichita, 25km down the road from Chinacita. We can't be sure, but regardless, we gotta share this story. They go to dinner and Laurentiis shows up with three or four beautiful Italian starlets. He's really wining and dining Wolper. And they're eating at a restaurant that De Laurentiis insists has the best steak in the the world. And Wolper orders a steak, medium rare. They bring it out and it's well done. And Laurenti says, how is it? And Wolper says, you know, it's a little too well done. And De Laurentiis picks up the steak, throws it into the street, screams at the waiter and tells them to bring him another one. They bring out the next one and Wolpert is so scared that when DeLorenti says, How is it? He just says, it's the greatest steak I've ever had. And then he says, Italy is a no. So they choose the Bavaria Film Studios in the Munich. And they're using the Munich gasworks as an exterior. Actually, Alfred Hitchcock, his first film, the Pleasure Garden, was shot at Bavaria Film Studios in Munich. And along with scenes from the Sound of Music, paths of the Great Escape. So construction begins in mid June. Shooting scheduled to begin at the end of August. Art director Harper Gough comes in. He is basically drawing from Dahl's original words and the illustrations by illustrator Joseph Schindelman, which you can post on our Patreon. And he's very experienced. He knows how to stretch a dollar. I mean, he had worked on Errol Flynn's Captain Bl, Warner Brothers, Casablanca. But his best work was known at Disney. Some Disney historians described him as the second imagineer. Walt Disney being the first. He did a lot of the early concept work for Disney's Mickey Mouse Park, AKA Disneyland, specifically Main Street USA and the Jungle Cruise. And he's actually credited with convincing Walt Disney to make 20,000 leagues under the Sea as a live action film. He designed the Nautilus for that movie. He did another submarine, the Proteus, in the 1966 film Fantastic Voyage. And both of those movies won Oscars for art direction and special effects. Now, another key crew member was construction manager Hendrik Winans. And we should talk a little bit about the Candy world. A lot of people say it was not edible, including the Chocolate River. But the Chocolate river almost was edible. So the original plan was to mix 150,000 gallons of water with powder that's used to make chocolate ice cream. What might be the problem with that? Sticky, stinky. When you leave it out, it produces bubbles and it starts smelling like the Bog of Eternal Stench from Labyrinth. So they added chemicals, chemicals like salt conditioner and the special chemical that was used to control the foaming element in shampoos, which made it cold, dirty, and not edible. Now another rumor online. They say that the flower teacup that Wonka sips from in Bites is made from wax, not candy. That's actually not true. The original version was wax. And then when Stewart saw how Gene had to spit it out during rehearsal, they replaced it with one made from sugar. And we should also mention special effects technician Logan Frase, who brought all of these designs to life. Life. But let's get back to the script because we don't have a script. And there's a new problem, which is really an old problem that anybody involved in this movie should have seen from the first time they read the book. Aaron, the Oompa Loompas, how were they originally described in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory?
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, they were African Pygmies.
David Bowman
That's right. They were described basically as very small black people. And there was a suggestion by a number of black actors that read the script made to Mel Stewart that this suggested a plantation like scenario where Willy Wonka was engaged in slave labor.
Aaron Tracy
Definitely.
David Bowman
So Mel Stewart says he only cared about Mr. Wonka's chocolate being made by a group of mysterious candy making elves. So in our research, it is suggested that Mel Stewart pitched green hair and orange faces, which seemed to assuage the concerns of the actors who had come forward. Now this is interesting. So Aaron Stuart also claims that this is partly where the title change came from. He claims that there were really three reasons why he wanted to change the name to Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. The first reason you already pointed out, which is that the story now really revolves around Willy Wonka. After we get through act one, Willy's the one who goes through the change. The second reason was that he didn't want audiences to be confused with the shorthand that they would use if they were gonna recommend the movie to a, a friend. It would be much easier to say I saw Willy Wonka as opposed to I saw Charlie on top of this. One of the other issues that some of the black actors who had read the script raised with him was that Charlie could be used as a pejorative term when speaking of an oppressive white man. And so it reinforced this idea in the book that Willy Wonka is engaging in slave labor. I don't doubt that all of these things are true, but my guess is, is that ultimately this was a Quaker Oats decision at the end of the day and that it happened much earlier in the process than this laid into the scripting. Yeah, I don't buy it. I only mention it because Stewart said it. But let's dive into the script. So Dahl agrees to change the Oompa Loompas. And Aaron, as you know, the next publication of the book, I believe the 1973 version, the description of the Oompa Loompas has changed and they are just knee high and given very little description beyond that insofar as the color of their skin, et cetera. But in the meantime, Dahl is writing, and Stuart and Wolper and Margulies know they're in trouble because Dahl is not changing his script beyond the Oompa Loompas. They need another writer. They want it to be bigger, they want it to be funnier. They want to add a worldwide search for the golden tickets. So this is a big part of the movie that's not a big part of the book. So they hired Robert Kaufman, who had just written the totally kid friendly Elliott Gould second romp I Love My Wife, that Mel Stewart had just directed.
Lizzie Bassett
Kids love it.
David Bowman
Now, to be fair, he was an Oscar nominee, 1967's Divorce American Style. And he came up with some great scenes, including Stewart's favorite scene that didn't make it into the movie. And I want to read it to you guys. So there's this craze for Wonka bars, and an English explorer climbs a holy mountain to beg a guru to tell him the meaning of life. Here's the description. There is snow and ice everywhere as the explorer with torn clothes enters a cave and kneels at the feet of a guru. The explorer says, oh, great guru, I've been climbing for days. My party is lost. I'm hungry, freezing and exhausted. But I need to know what is the meaning of life? And the guru says, you have Wonka bar. And explorer says, yes, yes, I do. It's my last bit of food. You can have it. But please tell me, what's the meaning of life? The guru opens the Wonka bar and discovers there is no golden ticket. In disgust, he throws it on the floor of the cave. The explorer says, now, O Guru, tell me what is The Meaning of Life. And the guru says, life is a disappointment.
Aaron Tracy
That's great.
David Bowman
It's a really good scene. So Dahl turns in his second draft in June. To be clear, Dahl does not know that they are engaging with another writer. Dahl believes he is the only writer on this project. Two months before shooting is about to begin, Stewart says that this draft is an improvement, but it still needs work. So Dahl goes back to start on a third draft. And in the meantime, Wolper, Stewart and Margulies bring on another writer. This time they hired 30 year old David Seltzer, who had never written a screenplay before. I think that they got him because he was free. So he'd worked for David Wolper writing for the Oscar winning documentary, the Hellstrom Chronicle. And he'd also rewritten Arthur Schlesinger's script for the Unfinished Journey of Robert Kennedy, another documentary, and he wanted to write a real screenplay. And he was very creative. He'd written some wacky dialogue that was actually fictional for some of these documentaries. And so Wolper calls Seltzer and lays it out. Look, we don't have a script. This is not working with Roaldahl. I'm sure he's basically revealing. He cannot afford somebody big to come in and rewrite this. And if this fails, he will have failed at bringing Roaldahl's book to life. He will have failed at transitioning into narrative film. So he says, seltzer, can you write this movie? And Seltzer says, yes, I'm your man. And Wolper says, great, here's the deal. I can't pay you. I can't give you credit. I can't even reveal that you are doing this. But if you do it, I promise I will produce your first screen. And Seltzer says, fine, I'll do it. He starts working on the script in secret. And the way that they're doing this is that Seltzer would come up with concepts and then they would pitch them to Dahl as if it was their ideas. Like Stewart and Wolpert being like, hey, we came up with this idea. And they would pitch it to Dahl, and then they would try to get Dahl to add it into the script. But this is only going to get them so far. So they finally, after Dahl submits his third draft, they fly Seltzer to Munich to polish Dahl's work.
Aaron Tracy
Work.
David Bowman
They lock him in a hotel room. And Seltzer described it as a baptism by fire. The hardest, most frightening work I've probably ever had to do in my life. And by the way, he's doing it on a German typewriter. There is no final draft. There is no copy find and replace. Like, he is taking existing pages and rewriting them by hand. So let's talk about some of the changes. So the Everlasting Gobstopper test, that becomes the final turn of the movie. That was Seltzer. Wow. So that was obviously not part of Doll. He beefed up the part with Mr. Slugworth. Made him a double agent and a villain, which was obviously not Doll. He added the scene where Grandpa Joe and Charlie disobey Wonka by drinking the Fizzy Lifting drinks. And he changed Farouka Salt's punishment. So in the book, Right, it's squirrels with walnuts and the squirrels throw her down a tube. They can't do a hundred squirrels doing that. They would do it in the Burton version. So he changes it to geese laying the golden eggs. I assumed he also did the teacher in the classroom. That was Roald Dahl. That's not in the book either.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, okay.
David Bowman
Seltzer has said it's not really mine. It's Roald Dahl's. I did some patchwork on it.
Lizzie Bassett
Those are some pretty massive patches, though. I mean, he provided the things that literally.
Aaron Tracy
Those are big structural changes.
Lizzie Bassett
Yes, I would agree. They are good ones.
David Bowman
Those are the things, candidly, that make it a movie.
Lizzie Bassett
Yes, exactly.
David Bowman
They give it some conflict. They give it some narrative tension. Yeah, I think very smart ideas. And they were not easily won. So the script is not done, but they have to start shooting. Principal photography begins on August 31, 1970. The budget is $2.9 million. They cannot go over. There's no studio backstopping this. This is Quaker Oats. Quaker Oats is not going to just give them another million dollars. They also had a Quaker Oats representative on set, which I just like to imagine is the guy on the Quaker Oats logo on set at all times. According to Julie Don Cole, one of the ways that they kept costs down was by paying the child actor 60 British pounds per filming week. Per week. This was $10 more per week than Jerry Maron, child actor, had gotten on the wizard of Oz.
Aaron Tracy
Oh, wow.
David Bowman
Decades earlier.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah.
David Bowman
So the children recorded demos of their songs with composer Walter Scharf. And these were obviously played back during filming for lip syncing. The songs may have been done, but the script was not done. They are on set and David Seltzer is writing while they're in production. He is writing on set. And so he's writing out of order because they're not shooting chronologically at the beginning of the day. They'd say, okay, here's what we're shooting today, or here's what we're shooting this week. And he would start working on those pages so early on, this meant he had to write new dialogue to get in and out of the musical numbers that they had already recorded. So because they had written Pure Imagination and the Candyman before the movie was written, he then had to come up with, what's the scene that's gonna lead into this and how are we gonna get out of it and everything. Case. And then Roald Dahl finds out that he's being rewritten during production. Aaron, how do you think Roald responded to finding out that he was being rewritten? Not only was he being rewritten, he was being rewritten by a 30 year old without a single screenplay credit to his name.
Aaron Tracy
I don't think he liked it very much.
David Bowman
So he calls up the production. This may have been when Seltzer was on set. And he says, I know you're rewriting me. I am disturbed by this fact. I want you to come to my house on the outskirts of London and bring the script for with you. So that weekend, Mel Stewart flies to London, drives to Doll's house and hands him the script. And Dahl asks him to wait there while he reads it. Let's bear in mind roald Dahl is 6 foot, 6 inches tall. Also worth mentioning that David Wolper says it was David Seltzer who went to Dahl's house with the script. But that would have been very unusual.
Aaron Tracy
No, In Hollywood, usually the rewriter never meets the original.
David Bowman
No. Oh, no. Like never the twain shall meet. There is a final draft, is dropped in an anonymous box somewhere, you know what I mean? And then it's given away. It's like spy work.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah.
David Bowman
So a couple hours later, according to Stewart, Dahl came down the stairs, he handed the script back to me and said that he agreed with the changes. I went back to Munich and that was that. It's really interesting. So Wolper says that Dahl was really upset, but he did, didn't fight the changes. And I wonder, Aaron, if even though he was dissatisfied with the movie, I wonder if he recognized that these changes were kind of necessary to give it the dramatic structure it needed to be to be a movie.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, that might be right.
David Bowman
I'm just curious what you think, because you know Dahl better than I do.
Aaron Tracy
I think that there's also a chance that he was just done with Hollywood.
David Bowman
Sure.
Aaron Tracy
At this point. Remember he was fully writing his children's books and was becoming a giant, you know, incredibly successful. Way more successful than he ever was in Hollywood. So I think there's a chance he was just like, you know what? I got other fish to fry. I'm doing my thing here. You guys just go make this movie.
David Bowman
I also wonder if he was feeling still somewhat optimistic about the film because of how it was looking. And so one thing that everybody on this production says is that basically, art director Harper Goff was working magic with no money. When you think about the Chocolate Room and how much they made this for, it's actually a really impressive accomplishment. Like, this is a set with flowing water and a boat and edible scenery filling up an entire soundstage or studio space, made for almost nothing. Everybody thought it was incredible. In fact, Julie, Don Cole says that their first reaction when they walk in to see the Chocolate Room is the one that's used in the movie. And it was real. They hadn't seen it before, and they filmed them coming in to see it for the first time. And somebody that actually agreed is Roald Dahl. He did not like the screenplay, but he actually was really impressed with the production design. And I want to play a brief clip. And this shows doll on set. He did visit the production while they were filming. In a book, one can imagine these different rooms just as large as one wants to. There's a limit to how big and marvelous you can make them. But within those limits, he's. Well, he's almost gone beyond them. I should. He's built the most marvelous and enormous sets filled with every kind of ingenious gadget and beauty as well. I think he's a very, very clever man. I actually think that's pretty high praise coming from Dahl. Speaking of Harper Goff.
Aaron Tracy
It is. But also, let's remember Dahl was a good businessman.
David Bowman
That's true.
Aaron Tracy
And he knew that if he was saying terrible things about the movie before it came out, that it would hurt the business. Right. And so not only might it detract from the title, but also he's gonna get royalties since it's his name on the screenplay. So years later, he's gonna do nothing but trash the movie. But right now, in the marketing phase, yeah, he knows how to play his role.
Lizzie Bassett
And also, production design doesn't infringe on his sort of creative arts, the same way that the screenwriting changes do. So that maybe this was a bit easier for him to be like, yes, beautiful. Great job.
David Bowman
Well, and also hard. Harper Goff was treating the text as Pretty faithful. Something sacred to be followed, right? As opposed to Stuart. Regardless, it seems like Gough and his sets, you know, and his production design was kind of like universally appreciated right off the bat. Whereas Mel Stewart, the director was a bit more of an acquired taste. Now, over the years, he became known for having a bad temper. Director David Vassar would later describe this temper as legendary. Here's the quote in the most retold of Mel Stewart stories. He was on location in Africa with a small documentary unit when he wandered into Queen Quicksand. While he was slowly sinking, so the tale goes, his crew discussed the merits of pulling him out or letting him slowly slide under the mud with the sand up to his neck. They threw him a rope. I think that this was a difficult production for everybody, given the budget, but I would imagine it was not made easier by having a director who was a perfectionist and did not seem to have a lot of warmth for his actors. Julie Don Cole later said he had little tolerance for mediocrity. There were many hurt feelings when a performance wasn't up to the caliber he desired. She said she had memories of him screaming God damn it. Across the set. And it seems to Mel Stewart's, you know, maybe not credit, but to give him some defense. He was under an incredible amount of pressure, and he knew that there was only one chance to get this right. So they were falling immediately behind schedule. They did not have the staff or the infrastructure to light the enormous chocolate room. So every time they changed the perspective of the camera, it took a reset that was just eating and eating up so much time. They were trying to shoot with a boat, which is always a nightmare because it just keeps moving and you can never get your camera. And he did a lot of takes. He was more like Stanley Kubrick than he was Clint Eastwood. Rusty Goff said it took 60 to 70 takes to capture the scene in the TV room where the Oompa Loompas are doing cartwheels and headstands. It took 40 takes for when Augustus Gloop falls into the river.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, my God.
David Bowman
It took 20 takes for Mike, TV's dad, to perfect the line, not till you're 12, son. Which is a line that doesn't even need to be in the movie, really, if it's going to cost you too much.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, that's exhausting.
David Bowman
And this set, unfortunately, was not a safe set because it was being made so cheaply. So the white substance spewed by the Wonka mobile was fire extinguisher fluid. It gave everybody a rash. Most of the Chocolate river was dangerously shallow. It was just two feet deep. So they actually dug a hole where Michael Bolner would jump in as Augustus Gloop. But if he missed it, it would have been like jumping into a shallow pool.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, my God.
David Bowman
Julie. Don Cole had split ends that the hairdresser didn't like, so they'd burn them off every morning. Which is why, if you watch carefully, her hair actually gets shorter throughout the movie.
Aaron Tracy
The 70s, man. It was a different time. Filmmaking that would not fly today.
David Bowman
No. Well, and also not being shot in the United States, I think away from the prying eyes of any studio or osha. You know, Peter Ostrom references Nickerson, who plays Violet Beauregard said it was very scary and sometimes painful to get rolled around in the big blueberry contraption. There's basically an inflatable version and then there's a Styrofoam version for rolling her around. And it took her so long to get into the Styrofoam one that she couldn't break for lunch because it would take her too long to get back into it. So during lunch they would have a. A grip feed her through a straw and then they would have to roll her a quarter turn every 15 minutes to keep the blood flowing evenly throughout her body. And she said the worst part actually wasn't that. It's that she had to pick her nose on screen, which she didn't want to do because she had a big crush on Peter Ostrom, her co star, and she thought it was going to gross him out, which was very sweet. And then Julie Don Cole said that they actually became very close friends, she and Nickerson, but there was some tension because they both had crushes on Peter Ostrom while they were in. Now, let's talk about the scariest scene, which is the tunnel scene, which is so weird. Lizzie, can you describe some of the imagery that we see on the walls during this scene?
Lizzie Bassett
I don't even know. It's just. It's horrifying. It's dark. The colors are really dark. It's very like mkultra y where there's just sort of things flashing at different times. You do see, you know, Slugworth's terrifying face. You see like a chicken at one point.
Aaron Tracy
Or did you see a chicken get its head cut off?
Lizzie Bassett
A chicken's head being chopped off? Yeah, that's the one. It's not for kids.
David Bowman
Yeah. So what's interesting is that specifically that millipede shot was actually the suggestion of writer Waylon Greene. Are you Guys familiar with his credits, Waylon Green, writer of the Wild Bunch and Sorcerer. So he had worked on the Helstrom Chronicle with Mel Stewart, and when Mel Stewart called him, he's like, I need some grotesque imagery to make this nightmare sequence. He said, what about. He actually pitched a centipede going across a person's face, and that's actually Waylon Green's face with the millipede going across it. Some of the kids actually thought Gene Wilder had gone insane while shooting that scene. His performance was so convincing.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, the images are nothing compared to what Gene Wilder is doing. He's so scary in that scene.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, that's the thing. I actually remember him more in that than I do the images.
David Bowman
You really think maybe we're going to hell right now with this guy? And it's a big difference, I think, between him and the Depp performance as well. But we should mention, too, that the Oompa Loompas, I think, had a really hard time on this project as well. This was an international. Rusty Goff later said there were basically five little people working in the business in London at the time. So they expanded their search to Munich and Malta and Turkey. And So they had 10 actors whose age ranges were from their 20s to their 70s. And the lead role went to English actor Rusty Gough. And Stewart hired him because he'd performed Shakespeare, but he'd never been in a movie before. This was his first film. They had to learn these dance numbers, which, again, some of these actors are 70 years old. This is very physically demanding. And there's also a language barrier. They don't all speak English, so Stewart's directing them with hand signals. Signals. And they have to lip sync English words for all of these songs. So I just want to really emphasize, like, the difficulty that they were pulling off here. Howdy, howdy ho, and welcome to Fantasy Fan.
Lizzie Bassett
Fellas.
David Bowman
I'm Hayden, producer of the Fantasy Fangirls podcast and your resident lover of all things Sanderson. And I'm Stephen, your bookish Internet goofball,
Aaron Tracy
but you can call me the Smash Daddy.
David Bowman
And we are currently doing deep diving Brandon Sanderson's fantasy epic Mistborn. But here's the catch. Steven here has not read Mistborn before. That's right.
Aaron Tracy
Hey. Hey. So each week, you'll get my unfiltered
David Bowman
raw reactions to every single chapter. And along the way, we'll do character deep dives, magic explainers, and Steven will even try to guess what's next. Spoiler alert. He'll be wrong. News flash.
Aaron Tracy
I'm never wrong.
David Bowman
Episodes come out every Wednesday and you can find fantasy fanfellas wherever you get your podcast.
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David Bowman
ACAST Powers the World's Best Podcasts Here's a show that we recommend
Lizzie Bassett
as we all live through the chaos of another Donald Trump presidency, it can be easy to lose sight of his most troubling legacy. The U.S. supreme Court has reshaped the country's legal landscape on abortion, guns, religion and more. In Slate's new season of Slow Burn, we're taking on Trump's first Supreme Court pick.
Aaron Tracy
He is the most unpredictable vote on this court.
Lizzie Bassett
Slow Burn Becoming Justice Gorsuch out now Wherever you get your podcasts,
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ACAST helps
David Bowman
creators launch, grow and monetize their podcasts every everywhere acast.com. So the production is heading into its final stretch and the problem that Stewart has is that the ending of the movie that Dahl has written isn't great. The ending of the movie is Grandpa Joe saying yippee. That's the last line of the movie in Roald Dahl's script and Mel Stewart head hates it. So he calls for David Seltzer and the production says, David Seltzer has gone home. He says, what? David Seltzer had been working 20 hour days for a month, so he left the production and went to a log cabin near a lake in Maine. He was about to go fly fishing and the phone rings. And by phone I mean there is one payphone and if it rings, whoever's near it is supposed to answer and then take a message for whoever it's for. He goes and answers the phone and it's the worst call ever. It's Mel Stewart calling from Munich, hearing, here's Stewart. What are you doing, Seltzer? I'm on vacation. I know you're on vacation, but I'll tell you what I'm here and there are dozens of people and we're spending a lot of money and we can't finish the film. And I want the end line of this picture, Seltzer. Well, when do you want it? Now. I want it now. Like in the song, I want it now. I want it now. Apparently, Stewart gave Seltzer five minutes. Seltzer came back and he said, mel, this is really lame, but how about this? They go up into their spacecraft looking down on the chocolate factory, and Willy Wonka is telling Charlie all the wonderful things he's going to have. And he looks at him very seriously and he says, but, Charlie, do you know what happened to the man who got everything he always wanted? And Charlie fearfully says, what? And he says, he lived happily ever after. And there's a long pause and David Seltzer goes, mel, are you there? And Stuart just goes, fantastic. That's it. And that's how you got the end of the movie. It's something that David Seltzer came up with in five minutes. And I'm so curious if you guys have any interpretation. I have no idea what to think of those last lines of this movie. I find them weirdly confusing. Is it intended to be sinister? Is it intended to be reassuring? You know what I'm saying? I'm just not sure what to take.
Lizzie Bassett
It played very sinister to me, I'll be honest, because it's such a weird tonal shift for him to take at that point. And the way that Gene Wilder plays it also feels like manically sincere. I don't know. Eren, what did you think?
Aaron Tracy
I mean, I think it sort of reinforces the idea that they think of this as a fairy tale. And so that's sort of a classic way to end a fairy tale, right? Live happily ever after, but with a little bit of undermining, which, yeah, so I think works well.
David Bowman
So they go into post production, and to be clear, they have not shot all of the Search for the Golden Ticket scenes. They've really just shot the Munich portions of this movie. They start editing the movie. David Seltzer comes back on to write some more of those Search for the Golden Ticket scenes. And there are two scenes that Stewart loved that audiences didn't. One of them stayed in the movie. And this is the Argentinian man who cheats and finds the fifth ticket, Right? This is not in the book. In the book, there is a Russian character very early on, briefly mentioned, who apparently falsified finding ticket. The photograph. Do you guys know who the photograph is? Of when they play it on the news. This Argentinian man in the movie, I did not know this. That is Martin Bormann, who was Hitler's aide in his final days, who had escaped to Paraguay, according to legend. And they thought it would be a funny joke that, like, what if a secret Nazi found the golden ticket? Nobody understood it. Nobody ever understood it. Nope. Stuart was like, nobody understood it at. And the scene that did get cut that Stuart loved was the scene with the guru on the holy mountain. So they shot that scene and they played the test screening and nobody laughed. And Stuart was stunned. He thought this joke was amazing. So he invites a psychologist friend to the next screening to help him understand. And do you guys have any guesses as to why the psychologist believes nobody was laughing at that joke? No, he said, you don't understand, Mel. For a great many people, life is a disappointment and that it maybe just was too close to home for odds. So Stuart cut the scene. So they hire a special effects company to come in to do the final Wonkavator shot in the air. And when they did this, it didn't include Grandpa Joe because the FX team thought that in the footage they had been sent, Jack Albertson was a crew member making adjustments on the set and not a character in the movie. So they had to redo the miniature with Jack Albertson inside of it. They also did them with the fizzy lifting drinks as well, that, you know, compensation position. So David Wolper has a movie in the can and he goes to Paramount and they get a seven year license on this movie. Revenue's first going to go to Quaker Oats until they recoup the budget, then the profits are split 50, 50. The Wonka Bar is just Quaker Oats. And maybe this is part of the problem. Nobody seems to have a full stake in this movie. So like a lot of the children in Roaldahl's books, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was kind of left to fend for itself. Paramount didn't have a strategy for selling it. According to Stewart says that they vetoed an offer from Radio City Music hall to showcase the film and give it a single city run, which may have built buzz that would have been like, you know, modern in modern film, maybe platforming a movie. And instead they just opt for general distribution. And Willy Wonka's Lost in a crowd of summer films. So it premieres in Chicago on June 28, 1971, and it's dominated across the summer by Love Story. Anybody remember Ryan o' Neil Gras?
Aaron Tracy
I like that movie.
David Bowman
And there's a bunch of genre films that beat it out to, like, the original Willard. The Andromeda Strain, the Omega Man, Klute.
Lizzie Bassett
Oh, yeah.
David Bowman
Now, maybe, like Dahl's stories, it would do better in the UK. So it premieres in London in December of 1971. And Princess Margaret attended, quote, in aid of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, which wasn't a great look because a lot of people said, this movie is so cruel to children.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah.
David Bowman
So according to Mel Stewart, Willy Wonka was an enormous flop. It was number 53 on the box office chart for 1971. It grossed roughly 4 million doll domestically. It played for only three days in one theater in Munich, which sold out one night, thanks to Michael Bolner's family and friends. Aw. The reviews didn't help. Variety called it an okay musical fantasy. The New York Times said children have so few good films to claim as their own. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is not one of them. Gene Siskel gave it two stars, but Roger Ebert loved it. Four stars. He said it's delightful, funny, scary, exciting, and most of all, a genuine work of imagination.
Aaron Tracy
That's great.
David Bowman
Well, the newspapers didn't care. They misspelled Willie and the Wonka Bar. Aaron, what is one of the reasons that the Wonka Bar flopped?
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, I'm sort of forgetting. But didn't they screw it up so that it melted in the package before it was opened?
David Bowman
Yes. Unlike Willy Wonka making ice cream that never melts. They made a chocolate bar that always melts, and it flopped. The Wonka Bar was a flop. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was a flop. Gene Wilder was convinced he was only going to be in flops. He'd been in a string of them. So he left for California to do Woody Allen's Everything youg Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask, hoping that it would resurrect his career. Dahl would later disown the movie in many ways. And James and the Giant Peach would never be made with David Wolper. And in a weird twist of fate, it would eventually be. What studio that would make James and the Giant Peach?
Lizzie Bassett
Is it Disney?
David Bowman
It's Disney. That's right. Now. Wilder was nominated for a Golden Globe for his performance as Willy Wonka, and his career turned around swiftly. Willy Wonka was nominated for an odd song score by Leslie Brickus and Anthony Newley. It lost to Fiddler on the Roof.
Lizzie Bassett
Okay, wow.
David Bowman
But for whatever reason.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, it's an amazing score for whatever
David Bowman
Reason the movie stuck around. And especially after being released on vhs, it became a cult hit. I think some people think, you know, it was when Wilder became a superstar that people started going back to his earlier work. Some people think that it was an audience that grew into this type of material that was meant to be somewhat edgy for children. I talked about this recently, Aaron. With movies like Labyrinth and the Dark Crystal, even something like Goonies or Temple of Doom, there was kind of a darkness to a lot of the children's stuff made in the 80s and especially in the 90s that was. I think that wouldn't quite have fit the 70s in quite the same way. But I think part of it is that over time we've actually grown to appreciate the movie for what it is and for its lack of polish and not hold it against the movie. So I would imagine if a movie's coming out in theaters and you go see it and it feels a little janky and it doesn't feel as big or imaginative as the book that you've read read, it might feel like a disappointment. Whereas if you stumbled across this movie on TV or on VHS and you just see Gene Wilder's unhinged performance and it's clear that they just threw themselves headlong into this without actually having the resources to make it. That maybe that would be endearing as opposed to a turnoff. But I'm really curious what you guys think.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, I mean, I don't know. I don't think it needs all those caveats. I think it's just actually a really good movie. I think Gene Wilder, yes, he gives one of the all time great performances. It's just so complicated. I love how much it feels like he's about to break the fourth wall. Like he's almost gonna talk directly to the audience into camera, but never quite does. And so you're kind of on edge every time he opens his mouth. I also think the structure makes absolutely no sense. I mean, it's so weird that it starts off as Charlie's movie. And it's like any great myth of the hero where he's gonna go on an adventure and triumph. But as soon as Act 1, we are now in Willy Wonka's point of view. And it's Willy Wonka who actually does the changing. Charlie doesn't change at all. When Charlie wins at the end by giving the gobstopper to Willy Wonka and showing that he's not gonna betray him. That's something Charlie would have done in the first five minutes of the movie. It's Willy Wonka who becomes a better man through the course of the movie, which is a really kind of cool, strange structure that I can't remember seeing before. So no, I also, I love Slugworth. I loved all of those little interludes of seeing each part find the golden ticket. I thought those were terrific. Yeah, the movie has so much going for it. I guess I'm not shocked that it wasn't a hit when it came out just because it was so probably unexpected, the darkness and specifically Wilder's performance. But yeah, it doesn't surprise me at all that it's become a classic.
Lizzie Bassett
Yeah, I think that this movie does what the best and most enduring quote unquote kids movies do, which is that it's very entertaining to watch as a kid. I think that the weird structure, to your point, Aaron, actually helps with that. There's something about this that is very sort of childlike. The journey that you're going on and you get to know Charlie, you get to like him and as a kid, then you're kind of along for the ride once he shows up at the factory, which I think is very enjoyable as a kid. But then this movie is an entirely different movie for adults. And so it's one of those movies where kids will watch it, they will be entertained, they enjoy it, and then adults will also watch it and be horrified, be laughing, be confused, be entertained. It is genuinely something that I think everyone of every age can take something out of this movie that's very hard to do. And I think a lot of the times, as we've seen on this podcast, those movies that achieve that don't necessarily do that well at the box office. Some of them do, but especially when they're darker and they're like kind of hard to pin down in that way. I feel like they end up having much longer legs.
David Bowman
Yeah, well, unfortunately, Quaker Oats did not participate in the long term financial success of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate faction. So in 1977, David Wolper sold his company to Warner Brothers and he convinced Quaker Oats to sell its 50% stake in the movie for $500,000. I'm guessing that Warner Brothers didn't just want 50% of that movie. I'm guessing if they were going to buy Wolpers Company, they wanted everything outright. Warner Brothers then turned around and made a fortune on the VHS of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. In fact, on its 25th anniversary, they re released it in theaters and then they did a new release of the home video vhs and at that point, now I should mention Ken Mason, who had been the Quaker Oats representative who Wolper was working it with at the time. It doesn't seem like he minded. He'd quit Quaker Oats after a brief stint as president and COO in the mid-1970s, and he did spend his later years writing passionately about the effects of advertising, corporations and television on children in kind of an odd Dalian turn. Now, some of the child actors continued working, but they all eventually left the movie industry. And I will say, despite candidly, what seemed like very unsafe conditions on this set, it doesn't seem like anyone was hurt. And they all speak fond of their adult co stars and their experiences on this movie. Roald Dahl died in 1990. This was a few years after giving an interview that revealed a virulent anti Semitic streak. If you want to learn more about that, please listen to Aaron's incredible coverage in, I believe, the seventh episode of his podcast, the Secret World of Roald Dahl. It's a really complicated history and I think especially then in the eighth and ninth episodes when you discuss the fans dilemma and how do we engage with work created by people who have moral failings or beliefs, things that we do not agree with. It's a really wonderful conversation and I felt very illuminating as we talk on this podcast about directors and who have problematic histories and whatnot.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, thanks. I'm so glad.
David Bowman
Yeah. Roaldahl's works were purchased by Netflix in 2021 for a reported $1 billion. And at that time, his family did issue an apology for his anti Semitic remarks that remains online that you can go see. And of course, most recently, his works have been adapted by, I think, perhaps most successfully West Anderson, who seems to be an oddly perfect fit for the Dahlian sensibilities and seems to be able to give it a quick witted life. So Gene Wilder gives, I think, Willy Wonka the energy that he needs to exist as a character. And I feel that that's completely absent from Johnny Depp's interpretation of the character in 2005, even though Burton seems like an obvious fit and Wes Anderson seems like a great mix of the two, with he's an incredibly heightened visual stylist, but he also has that kind of energy and warmth that you need to bring Dahl's kind of dry British sensib to life. Yeah. Now let's end with Gene wilder, because in 2002 he said, I don't want my gravestone to say Willy wonka lies here, Dr. Frankenstein. I wouldn't mind Now, Gene Wilder did die in 2016, and as one of his biographers put it, every single obituary highlighted Willy Wonka. And I did pull up the New York Times obituary, which did say star of Willy Wonka and Young Frankenstein. And so I just do think it's funny that you do not get to choose the thing that you are remembered for. And in a sense, like roles that who resisted children's stories for so long. And Mel Stewart, who resisted making a children's movie. Gene Wilder 2 was trapped in the legacy of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. So, Aaron, we end with a segment called what Went Right, where we pick at least, you know, one thing from the movie that, for us in particular went right when so much often goes wrong. And, Lizzie, perhaps you would like to go first. What Went Right on Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory?
Lizzie Bassett
I'm gonna say what went right here is the unsung hero of the screenplay. It sounds like David Seltzer. You know, the changes that you said that he made are pretty major structural changes to this that make it have some kind of story arc. Without that, it really doesn't. I mean, that's amazing. I didn't know that those changes were not original to Roald Dahl. So I have to give it to him. He was in an impossible position, and he seems to have done a pretty incredible job.
David Bowman
I agree. I think he made subtle yet crucial changes, and those are the hardest. And, Aaron, you're a screenwriter. You can speak to this. I mean, I think it's really hard not to try to reconceptualize something from the ground up sort of structurally. And to be able to go in surgically and say, I'm just gonna add this, this, and this, and that's gonna give it a completely new valence is very impressive.
Aaron Tracy
And to do that while they're shooting. So it's $30,000 an hour or whatever, and he's gotta just come up with all of these solutions on the fly. Yeah, that's an.
David Bowman
Aaron, how about you?
Aaron Tracy
I'm gonna give it to Mel Stewart. I was kind of shocked after watching the movie, looking up the director. And I had never seen another of his movies. I've almost never heard of another of his movies, which is bizarre because this is actually a really good directing job. This is a hard directing job. The movie goes through so many different tones. It easily could have fallen apart. It could have fallen into horror. It could have fallen into fantasy. It could have fallen into just a saccharine king. But he's balancing all of Those different kinds of tones, which is, you know, really, really, really difficult. So I'm curious about Mel Stewart. I don't quite understand. I mean, the movie, you know, obviously was a flop, and so that's probably why he, you know, didn't work again, you know, outside of the documentary world. But I was really surprised that he hasn't directed a handful of my other favorite movies.
David Bowman
I wonder how much he wanted to direct narrative film in the sense that it seems like he would get frustrated with the pace and with working with actors based on the stories that I read. And it seems like with documentary, there's a lot more. A lot of the documentaries he did were working with existing footage and then adding in talking heads, you know what I mean, and narration and whatnot. And so I wonder if there was just a level of control with documentary that was preferable to him creatively. I agree, you know, obviously, with that flop and it's made outside the studio system, I'm sure that Hollywood wasn't, you know, knocking down his door trying to get him to direct, but you would imagine that he could have gotten another movie made. But I agree he did an amazing job with the movie. I'm gonna give mine. Well, so somebody should give theirs to Gene Wilder.
Lizzie Bassett
We can all give ours to Gene Wilder.
David Bowman
Okay, we'll all give it to Gene Wilder. I'll give mine to Bricuss and Newly. Because that damn song. Pure Imagination. I could have sung that melody ever since I was a kid.
Lizzie Bassett
And the Candyman.
David Bowman
The Candyman, yeah. They wrote some great music. And this movie, it's odd that it has such good music in a sense, outside of, again, the traditional Hollywood system. So I'll give it to them. That brings us to the end of our coverage of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Aaron, I just really want to reiterate what a pleasure it was to listen to your show.
Aaron Tracy
Thank you.
David Bowman
And what a treat it was to have you on as an expert on Roald Dahl and all of this material. It's so illuminating, and it's such an interesting story. Please plug your show, tell the folks where they can find it and anything else that you have going on that they should check out.
Aaron Tracy
Yeah, it's called the Secret World of Roald Dahl. And it's on Apple, it's on Spotify, it's. Wherever you're listening to this, you can listen to it. We just aired our ninth episode, but we've got another one coming up. And then we've got some bonus episodes and hope to do a whole nother season. So probably not about Roald Dahl, but another interesting profile of someone who has a bit of a secret life. And yeah, I just want to thank you guys so much for having me on. This is a great show. I'm a giant movie buff and I love these sort of very completist, very research heavy episodes that you guys do.
Lizzie Bassett
Thank you so much. And thank you so much for being here. This was really fascinating. And now you've got me thinking about who else could you cover in another wonderful season of the Secret World?
Aaron Tracy
Send me ideas.
Lizzie Bassett
I feel like you've got one and you'll have to tell us off, Mike. And then we'll know and then you'll all have to wait until season two comes out.
Aaron Tracy
I got a few ideas.
Lizzie Bassett
All right. Thank you so much, guys.
David Bowman
If you're enjoying this podcast, there's a few easy ways to support us. Lizzie, can you tell the fine folks at home how they can keep this chocolate factory churning?
Lizzie Bassett
I sure can. You can tell a friend or family member about this show. You can leave us a rating or review on whatever podcatcher you are listening to this on. You can give us a shout out or you can follow us on social mediatwentwrongpod on Instagram and TikTok. You can subscribe to this show in both Spotify and Apple. And if you do that, you will get one bonus episode every month. At least one. Honestly, it's probably more than that at this point. We did a whole bunch for the Oscars and we really enjoyed it. So we're gonna keep doing a minimum of one one bonus episode every month behind the paywall for you subscribers. And then if you want to go the extra mile, you can subscribe to us on Patreon. And there you get everything I just mentioned. Plus you get access to newsletters, polls, extra credit, the fan community, and an ad free feed of the show. And if you want to really turn it up to 11, you can, for $50 a month, become a full stop patron and get a shout out at the end of every episode. Episode. Just like one of these.
David Bowman
So since we've done a lot of songs recently and Impressions and David opened this episode with an amazing Oompa Loompa song, I thought we could mix things up a little bit. I'll read everybody's names and then I have selected Candy from Willy Wonka's Factory for the heroes of every one of the movies that we've covered thus far this year. All right, so the full stop shoutouts go to Adrienne Pang Korea Angeline Renee Cook Beatrix Earhart Ben Shindleman Blaze Ambrose Brian Donahue Brittney Morris Brooke Cameron Smith C Grace B Chris Leal, Chris Zaka David Frisco, Lanti Darren and Dale Conkling Don Scheibel M. Zodia Evan Downey, Felicia G. Film It Yourself Frankenstein, Galen and Miguel the Broken Glass Kids the cast and crew of Win a Trip to Bragg Downtown Grace Potter Half Greyhound James McAvoy Jason Frankel JJ Rapido Jory Hillpiper Jose Emiliano Salto Del Giorgio Karina Canaba Kate Elrington Kathleen olson Amy Olgeschlager McCoy Lazy Freddy Lena LJ Lydia Howes Mark Bertha Mariposas Humans Matthew Jacobson Michael McGrath Nate the Knife Rosemary Sarah Southward Rural Juror Sadie Just Sadie Scott Oshida, Soman Chainani Steve Winterbauer Suzanne Johnson the Provost family where the O's sound like O's and Tom Kristen okay, so here are the candy shoutouts for Lawrence of Arabia as he crosses the Nefud ice cream that never melts. For Sarah in the Labyrinth, Fizzy lifting drinks so she can always see her way out. For Derek in American History X stick jaw for talkative parents so he'll just shut up a bit. For Akira Kurosawa's crew, hot ice creams for cold days when shooting the Seven Samurai climax in the rain. For Forrest Gump, Everlasting Gobstoppers for his runs across the country. For Rick in Casablanca Square suites that look round because it is possible to be two things at once. For Sean Connery in the League of Extraordinary Gentleman, Magic Hand Fudge. When you hold it in your hand, you taste it in your mouth and this way his hands will be occupied. For Bob Evans and the Cotton Club, a machine with white powder spraying out of it because you get it for miles and into the spider verse, rainbow drops. Suck them and you can spit in six different colors, one for each spider person. For Seth Rogen in the Interview, exploding sweets for your enemies. For the cast of Game of Thrones, cavity filling caramels so you don't die of death Disease in Westeros. For Florence Pugh in Don't Worry, Darling, Lickable wallpaper. And for Leonard Shelby, chewing gum that never loses its flavor. You endlessly searching gumshoe detective. Lizzie, can you tell the folks at home what we have coming next week?
Lizzie Bassett
Well, we have a really uplifting happy movie that we're covering next week, very much in the same genre as today's children's movie. And and that is, of course, Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver. But this is very important. We are going to have a bonus episode airing on Friday that will be covering the stalking case that happened to Jodie Foster, kind of as a result of Taxi Driver. It will be an important precursor to listen to that before you listen to the main episode. So come back to this feed on Friday for a special out of Frame episode on that case featuring Chris do you want to reveal our guests, the
David Bowman
hosts of the incredibly popular Red Handed podcast who joined us all the way from across the pond and shed a lot of light into this unusual situation?
Lizzie Bassett
That's right. We have Hannah McGuire and Saruti Bala on the show. They were wonderful. So please come back on Friday. Listen to that out of Frame episode first and then on Monday we will be back with Taxi Driver. See you then. My bye.
Aaron Tracy
To support what Went Wrong and gain access to bonus episodes, subscribe on Patreon, Apple or Spotify for $5 a month. Patreon subscriptions also come with an ad free RSS feed. You can also visit our website what WentWrongPod.com for more info. What Went Wrong is a sad boom podcast presented by Lizzie Bassett and Chris Winterbauer. Post production and music by David Bowman. This episode was researched by Laura woods and Ed, edited by Karen Krupsaw.
Date: April 13, 2026
Hosts: Lizzie Bassett & Chris Winterbauer
Guest: Aaron Tracy (host of "The Secret World of Roald Dahl")
This episode dissects the famously tumultuous production of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971), from its unexpected corporate origins to casting, rewrites, production struggles, and legacy. Special guest Aaron Tracy, creator of "The Secret World of Roald Dahl," joins to provide deep insights into Dahl’s complicated relationship with the film and share fascinating details about the author’s life. The episode blends nostalgia, industry critique, behind-the-scenes drama, and thoughtful consideration of the movie’s enduring appeal.
On Gene Wilder’s impact:
On the child actors’ pay and conditions:
On the Chocolate Room reveal:
The ending, per David Seltzer (written in 5 min):
The hosts maintain a lively, irreverent, and deeply researched style, balancing film historian rigor with personal anecdotes and pop-culture savvy. Aaron Tracy enriches the discussion with his encyclopedic grasp of Dahl and Hollywood, offering both historical context and compelling stories.
Whether you’re a lifelong Wonka lover, Roald Dahl fan, or cinema history buff, this episode offers a deep look at why movie magic is nearly impossible—and why Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory remains delightfully and terrifyingly unique. It explores not only what went wrong in the making, but what, against the odds, went spectacularly right.
Next Week: The show will pivot to Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver, preceded by a bonus episode detailing the Jodie Foster stalking case.