The Small World of the Low Down
An inside look at the making of Low Down by Jeva Lange 鈥15
After writing and co-producing the 2014 biopic on the life of musician Joe Albany, Low Down, Topper Lilien 鈥80 is no longer surprised by coincidences.
Directed by Jeff Preiss, Low Down serendipitously stars three former Bennington students: Peter Dinklage 鈥91, Tim Daly 鈥79 and Juliet Tondowski 鈥09. Topper鈥檚 former writing partner, Carroll Cartwright 鈥80, went to Columbia Film School in the same class as Albert Berger, who produced the film. And the Bennington coincidences don鈥檛 end there: Topper鈥檚 daughter, current student Willa Lilien 鈥16, just so happened to be assigned the exact same room in Franklin that Topper was given when he started college back in 1977.
When Topper told Bennington in a telephone interview that, 鈥淚t seems like Low Down was meant to happen,鈥 it comes across as an enormous understatement. Low Down certainly did have to happen; even early reviews of the film picked up on its urgency when it premiered at Sundance last January. Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan wrote that 鈥Low Down has the feeling of a film that was meant to be.鈥 Similarly, the New Republic called Low Down 鈥渁 knockout鈥 that is 鈥渓ifted up by its cast.鈥 The film won an award for cinematography at Sundance, and leading lady Elle Fanning received a prize for best actress at the prestigious Karlovy Vary film festival in the Czech Republic.
Although he now considers himself a screenwriter, for many years Topper had never thought of himself as a writer of anything but music: for a decade he worked as a musician, and was even offered a staff songwriting job down in Nashville. Topper and his wife were seriously considering making the move to Tennessee when, 鈥渏ust for fun,鈥 Topper returned to Bennington for a summer writing workshop.
鈥淚 studied with Mary Robison, who was unbelievable, a great teacher. It was a great experience,鈥 Topper said. 鈥淚 wrote a story with Robison called 鈥楳r. Fixit鈥 and she just fell in love with it.鈥
Jeanne McCulloch, an editor from the Paris Review, was also at Bennington for the workshop. Someone鈥攎aybe Robison鈥攑assed on Topper鈥檚 鈥淢r. Fixit鈥 to McCulloch who, unbeknownst to him, entered it in a Paris Review contest. The story didn鈥檛 win鈥攂ut it did get published. And not too much later, people were asking for the screenplay.
Working with Cartwright (who has since become the screenwriter of the acclaimed film, What Maisie Knew), Topper finished the 鈥淢r. Fixit鈥 script and turned down the music job in Nashville, locating instead to L.A. With that, he was officially in the movie business.
In a different corner of Los Angeles, the wheel of fate was turning. Jeff Preiss, a successful commercial director, introduced himself to a woman named Amy Albany, who was working craft services on his set.
鈥淎my is very striking looking, she does not look like she鈥檚 from this era, she looked like she was from the 鈥40s, L.A. noir鈥擨 mean she鈥檚 very attractive, wonderful. Anyway, Jeff shot this movie called Let鈥檚 Get Lost, a documentary that Bruce Weber did about Chet Baker. So he鈥檚 like, enthralled.鈥
Priess walked up to Amy and, out of curiosity, asked who she was.
鈥淎nd Amy, if you see the movie, had a very tough childhood,鈥 Topper explained. 鈥淪o she鈥檚 stand-offish. She doesn鈥檛 really trust people easily. So finally she goes, 鈥業 am Amy Albany.鈥欌
Priess then asked, 鈥淲hy are you playing Chet Baker?鈥 to which Amy replied, 鈥淲ell, you know, my dad.鈥
鈥淲ho鈥檚 your dad?鈥
鈥淵ou won鈥檛 know him.鈥
鈥淭ry me,鈥 Preiss said.
鈥淛oe Albany.鈥
Preiss鈥檚 jaw dropped. 鈥淥h my God鈥擩oe Albany, I love him!鈥
It was the beginning of a long-lasting friendship: from then on, whenever Preiss was directing a commercial, he would seek Amy out to hear more stories about the influential bebop pianist Joe Albany and his friends, Chet Baker, Terry Southern, and 鈥渁ll the crazy junkie stuff that was going on in Hollywood in the 鈥70s.鈥 One day, Preiss asked if Amy would write it all down.
Amy was resistant; did anyone really care about her father? Preiss, frustrated, finally said, 鈥淪o don鈥檛 write them down, I don鈥檛 care.鈥
That was all the challenge she needed. Amy began leaving Preiss notes in his trailer鈥攏otes detailing the stories she had kept pent up for so long. Soon enough, Preiss was in the possession of hundreds.
鈥淟ater,鈥 Topper said, 鈥淛eff [Preiss] was talking to some people about Amy at a barbeque and this one woman says, 鈥極h, can I look at the letters, I鈥檓 in publishing.鈥 It was Jeanne McCulloch. So what happened was, Jeff gave Jeanne the letters and she called Amy and said, 鈥楾hese are amazing,鈥 and put them all on the floor of her office and they fashioned them into a book.鈥
Since the writing seminar at Bennington, McCulloch had left the Paris Review to work at Tin House, a literary magazine based in Portland, Oregon, and Brooklyn. At the time, Tin House had just launched a book imprint, and Amy Albany鈥檚 Low Down was their first publication.
鈥淎nd Jeanne McCulloch was the very woman who got me started writing,鈥 Topper said.
Around this time, Topper paid a visit to his friend and producer, Albert Berger. Berger had been friends with Topper鈥檚 former Bennington writing partner, Carroll Cartwright, at the Columbia Film School.
鈥淭he weirdness of it is, then I end up in Berger鈥檚 office, and I see this book on his shelf,鈥 Topper said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 Low Down. And I鈥檓 sitting there talking to Albert about something else and I grab the book and I just start flipping through it. And I go, 鈥楢lbert, this is amazing, what is this?鈥 and he goes, 鈥極h, we have the option for it but we can鈥檛 figure out how to make it into a movie.鈥 And I said, 鈥業 want to do it.鈥欌
The producers were able to wrangle up the money for the film, even casting Mark Ruffalo as Joe Albany, but a grant from the State of California expired and suddenly Topper, Berger, and Preiss were strapped and Ruffalo was out.
It seems like Low Down was meant to happen
鈥淭hey were going to lose it and I thought, 鈥極h no, this is pathetic, I can鈥檛 believe it, after all these years," Topper said. 鈥淚 called up Albert and the director. This is not usually what a screenwriter does, but I said, 鈥榣isten, can I just email everyone I know, call people, whatever, just let me see if I can find the money to get this movie going?鈥 And they said yes.鈥
Topper sent out between fifty and sixty emails and only got two replies. One of those was from Tim Daly 鈥79. Daly and Topper had worked on a script together in the 鈥90s, and kept in touch over the years.
鈥淭im said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 have that kind of money, are you crazy?鈥欌 Topper said. 鈥淎nd I said, 鈥楴o, I know you don鈥檛,鈥 but Tim does all this work in politics, I thought he might know someone. But he said, 鈥楴o, I don鈥檛 know anyone.鈥 Then the next day he called me and he said, 鈥業 think I do know someone.鈥欌
And just like that, the movie was back on.
In October 2014, the film premiered in New York City. In their review, The New York Times admired Low Down鈥檚 appreciation for the 鈥渋n-between moments of closeness that aren鈥檛 always seen or heard.鈥
鈥淸奥丑别苍 Low Down begins], it鈥檚 like you parachuted in behind enemy lines, you鈥檙e just in this world,鈥 Topper said. 鈥淭he movie starts, and you鈥檙e in it. There鈥檚 no hand-holding. It鈥檚 just, here you are, take it or leave it.鈥
That鈥檚 exactly what happens: in the theater, the lights go down. Elle Fanning says, 鈥淚 often thought my father was born of music, some wayward melody that took the form of a man鈥︹ And then the story begins.
Jeva Lange 鈥15 studies literature. She has written for Vice, The New York Daily News, and The Atlantic among other publications.