Thursday, September 28, 2017

HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL: “REAL CHARACTERS” #5 EMIL HOLMDAHL

The Hector Lassiter novels (ten of them, including HEAD GAMES) frequently incorporate real people.

All of that carries over into HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, coming Oct. 24, 2017 from First Second Books.


The range of “real characters” is prodigious, from the real-life personalities who dominate some of those books’ action, to those real people who are, well, fleeting, yet still influential.

Some are famous, some are even infamous. 

Some are little known to the wider public, yet they affected the course of history and the Lassiter series sometimes aims to give these historical ghosts their proper due.


To give a little bonus context to those “characters” who appear in HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, we’re delving into each, here and there, over successive Thursdays…




Emil spat. “It’s a bitch to outlive your world, ain’t it?”
“It surely is.”
Emil looked at me and then gave me a nasty smirk as he gestured at my cigarette. “Well, at least I’ve had the good sense to take care of myself. I won’t end up old and a cripple.” The “like you will” was implied.

—FROM HEAD GAMES:
THE NOVEL




A pure mercenary…

Some would have told you the old bastard was a blood-thirsty murderer.

Emil Holmdahl was a professional hell-raiser for pay who variously fought with Pancho Villa, and who later hunted Pancho for money.





Like I said, mercenary, to the bone.

He was also arrested and jailed for stealing the head of Pancho Villa after desecrating the Mexican Revolutionary’s grave.

Most of the photos we have of the man are of a piece:
Strikingly similar shots taken over the years of a straight-backed and aging brigand-for-hire, most often pictured full-figured and standing, sporting whatever clothes and weapons were of the bloody moment and vogue. Long face...long torso...disarmingly short legs, based on many shots.




But then, toward the end of his run, you get this disarming glimpse of a much older Holmdahl, seated, with two grinning little girls looming over either shoulder. Live long enough, and even mercenaries become grandpas.



As biographer Douglas V. Meed put it in his 2003 book about Holmdahl and the subject of Villa’s still missing noggin:

“Little was heard about the head until 1952, when the United States Secret Service located Emil Holmdahl living in retirement in Van Nuys, California. They questioned him about a horde of gold bars reputedly dug up in Mexico and illegally brought to the United States. The gold, the Secret Service said, was rumored to have been found buried in Mexico as a result of a map found on the skull of Pancho Villa. Nothing came of the investigation.”


The skull, the map, and Holmdahl, are all central to HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL.




Next time: MARLENE DIETRICH

THE HECTOR LASSITER SERIES, AS PUBLISHED BY BETIMES BOOKS:


ONE TRUE SENTENCE: Paperback/eBook

FOREVER'S JUST PRETEND: Paperback/eBook

TOROS & TORSOS: Paperback/eBook

THE GREAT PRETENDER: Paperback/eBook

ROLL THE CREDITS: Paperback/eBook

THE RUNNING KIND: Paperback/eBook

HEAD GAMES: Paperback/eBook



PRINT THE LEGEND: Paperback/eBook/audio

DEATH IN THE FACE: Paperback/eBook

THREE CHORDS & THE TRUTH: Paperback/eBook

Thursday, September 21, 2017

HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL: “REAL CHARACTERS” #4 CHARLETON HESTON

The Hector Lassiter novels (ten of them, including HEAD GAMES) frequently incorporate real people.

All of that carries over into HEAD GAMES, THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, coming Oct. 24, 2017 from First Second Books.


The range of “real characters” is prodigious, from the real-life personalities who dominate some of those books’ action, to those real people who are, well, fleeting, yet still influential.

Some are famous, some are even infamous. 

Some are little known to the wider public, yet they affected the course of history and the Lassiter series sometimes aims to give these historical ghosts their proper due.


To give a little bonus context to those “characters” who appear in HEAD GAMES: THE GRAPHIC NOVEL, we’re delving into each, here and there, over successive Thursdays…




Singer-songwriter Tom Russell penned a wonderful tune about love gone wrong using Orson Welles’ film TOUCH OF EVIL as a metaphor for souring love.

One of the lines from the song goes, “Not a technicolor love film, it’s a brutal document, it’s film noir/And it’s all played out on a borderline and the actors are tragically miscast.”

Most miscast of all in this Welles’ film noir classic whose set we visit in HEAD GAMES, was Charleton Heston, a supremely WASPY guy from Illinois with a British actor’s gravitas who somehow bewilderingly got himself cast as a Mexican Bordertown’s top cop.




Skin dyed swarthy and his already thinning blond hair dyed black, Chuck plays newly-wed Mexican cop Mike Vargas with earnest sincerity, depicting a kind of South-of-the-Border Eliot Ness.

That’s a metaphor all its own, in its way.

Because when it came to TOUCH OF EVIL, confusion was the name of the game, top to bottom.

After years of being ostracized by Hollywood—despite directing what is typically regarded as the greatest American film of all time, CITIZEN KANE—Orson ended up directing TOUCH OF EVIL as a result of utter confusion.



Actually, there are two stories regarding how Orson came to direct the film. 



The one more interesting to me, and embraced in HEAD GAMES, is that Heston would only agree to star in the film if Welles was made director…




Next time: EMIL HOLMDAHL



THE HECTOR LASSITER SERIES, AS PUBLISHED BY BETIMES BOOKS:


ONE TRUE SENTENCE: Paperback/eBook

FOREVER'S JUST PRETEND: Paperback/eBook

TOROS & TORSOS: Paperback/eBook

THE GREAT PRETENDER: Paperback/eBook

ROLL THE CREDITS: Paperback/eBook

THE RUNNING KIND: Paperback/eBook

HEAD GAMES: Paperback/eBook



PRINT THE LEGEND: Paperback/eBook/audio

DEATH IN THE FACE: Paperback/eBook

THREE CHORDS & THE TRUTH: Paperback/eBook