CAJUN NIGHTS AND THE CHARACTERS WITHIN:
THE MANY LIVES OF A TV SERIES THAT NEVER WAS
by D.J. Donaldson
LIFE #1
Cajun
Nights was my first novel featuring New Orleans medical examiner, Andy
Broussard, and his suicide/death investigator, Kit Franklyn. A
few weeks after the book was published, I got a call from my agent with
the surprising news that, “There’s been a flurry of movie and TV
interest in your book.” I’d never considered that such a thing was possible. So that was one of the best phone calls I ever had.
Subsequently,
a production company headed by the former director of programming at
CBS took an option on the series, planning to shape it into a TV show. As
perhaps some of you know, this phase of things is known as “development
hell”, because it takes a very long time to make anything happen. So a
year went by with no news. I figure, okay, the thing is dead. But, the producers renewed their option for another year, which meant I got paid again. It
wasn’t a lot of money, but with that check, I’d made more money from
the two option years than the advance I was given on the book by the
publisher.
So more time goes by with no news. Now,
I’m not even thinking about it anymore. Then, while I was attending a
scientific meeting in Dallas, I got a call from the agent in Hollywood
who was handling the dramatic rights. CBS had agreed to
pay for a pilot screenplay. I wasn’t sure what that meant, but if this
guy had tracked me down in Dallas just to tell me that, it must be a big
deal. And guess what… I got another check as an advance on the screenplay even though I wasn’t gonna write it. I was beginning to love the agent who created that contract.
They chose as a writer someone who’d had several movies produced. That
may seem like something not worth mentioning, but I’d read an article
once that said it was possible to have a career as a screenwriter and
never have anything produced. (Yeah, I don’t quite get
that either, but it sure seemed like the writer we had, was the better
kind.) With her experience and success, I was sure we’d get a great
screenplay.
A few months later, a package arrives in the mail. IT’S THE SCREENPLAY. I’m
so excited, I quickly skim the enclosed letter from the producers:
“Read this over and tell us three things you don’t like about it.” That’s ridiculous, I’m gonna love it. After all, it was written by a pro.
Well, I hated all of it. The writer didn’t seem to “get” the relationship between Andy and Kit. I couldn’t believe it. The
books show that non-romantic love is possible between an unrelated man
and woman of greatly differing ages. Though he can’t admit it, Broussard
loves Kit like the daughter he never had. Kit loves Broussard like a father, even though she has a father. How do I boil all the things I hate down to just three items? Somehow I manage and send my reply back.
As it turned out, the producers didn’t really care about any of my thoughts. Was I upset? Not really, because I figured they know TV, I don’t. And… surprise, when they gave the script to CBS, I got another check. Now I definitely love my agent.
The producers are sure the script will be approved and we’ll soon be shooting a pilot. They invite me to watch them film in New Orleans. They say they’ll even find a bit part for me. They
predict that the series will run for ten years. And they should know.
Their show, Cagney and Lacey, ran for seven seasons. Now I’m excited.
But… later, I get another call. CBS
didn’t like the script. And they didn’t want to see a rewrite with the
same story. The producers asked me if I had any ideas. The
screenplay was based on the second book in the series. When I got this
call I was sitting at my desk looking at the rough draft of book number
three. I pitched them the story and they said, “Send us a copy by overnight mail.” This was back before manuscripts could be sent by e-mail. (I know, I can hardly remember those days myself.)
So
another screenplay was written, which didn’t fare any better than the
first. Thus life #1 of my hoped-for TV series went to a quiet demise.
LIFE #2
A
few years later, while I was at the Kentucky book fair promoting book
number five in the series, a young blonde fellow bought a book. We spoke for a few minutes and he moved on. Later, back in Memphis, I get a call from this guy. He wants to option the series for TV. I tell him about my earlier experience with the other producers, who failed, but he’s unfazed. We strike a deal. There’s talk about John Goodman playing Broussard. John Goodman… he lives in New Orleans and he’d be a great fit. I love it.
Within
a few weeks the producer calls to say he’s on his way to Memphis and
could I meet him and John Goodman’s “best friend,” at the Peabody Hotel.
(The Peabody lobby is where William Faulkner and his mistress used to have drinks.) The
meeting takes place and I give the best friend a copy of the latest
book, which he assures us, will be in John Goodman’s hands within
twenty-four hours. That was the last time I ever heard from him or the
producer. So I guess the deal is off.
LIFE #3
In my primary occupation, I taught medical and dental students microscopic anatomy. One day I get a call from a former dental student. He’s now a part-time actor who’s been in a couple of notable films. He
says that he and a long-time Hollywood promoter have formed a
production company and are looking for material. He remembers that I
wrote a few novels and wonders what I’ve been doing since he last saw
me. I talk about my work and send him some books.
Very soon thereafter he calls me again and says he and his partner “are on fire over these forensic books.” They believe the series would make a great TV SERIES. He asks me who I’d like to play Broussard. I tell him I’ve always believed Wilford Brimley would be perfect. Incredibly, my former student says that his partner had lunch with Wilford just last week. He’s sure they can get him to sign on. With an actor of Wilford’s stature attached to the project, we’ll surely get a deal.
Was all this talk about Brimley just smoke? No. Because they actually got him on board. And
what’s even better, my former student and his partner were working with
another producer who had a development deal with the Sci-Fi network. They
planned to present my series to the network three weeks hence, focusing
on the real and apparent paranormal aspects of the first two books.
On presentation day at the Sci-Fi Network my student calls me just before they go in. I wait anxiously the rest of the day to hear how it went. Years later, I’m still waiting. The only contact I’ve had since presentation day is a big envelope from the producer who had the development deal. In
the envelope is a bunch of stuff I wrote for the presentation along
with a note from the producer that says, “Sorry we couldn’t have worked
longer on this together.”
LESSON LEARNED
Early
in the machinations of the first development deal, I used to caution
myself not to spend any time thinking about how great it would be if
every week I could watch my characters living and breathing on a TV
show. My thinking was that if I kept a tight rein on my expectations, it’d be much easier on my psyche if things didn’t work out.
But then I realized I was missing out on the excitement of the possibility. Why not let my mind run with it? Then, even if none of the deals came to fruition I would still have the pleasure of being part of a great endeavor. So that’s what I did. And
now, even though I never played that bit part in a pilot and I’ve never
seen John Goodman or Wilford Brimley bring Broussard to life, I sure
had a lot of fun along the way.
(By the way, if you’re a TV/film producer, the rights are available.)
Cajun Nights by D.J. Donaldson is the first novel in the incredibly popular Andy/Kit mystery series.
Young
and vibrant New Orleans criminal psychologist Kit Franklyn has just
been assigned her most challenging case yet—a collection of victims with
type O blood who drove an antiquated car, humming a nursery rhyme right
before committing murder and then suicide. Welcoming the help of her
jovial boss, chief medical examiner Andy Broussard, the two set out to
solve the case devising strictly scientific possibilities. Not once do
they consider the involvement of black magic until an ancient Cajun
sorcerer’s curse surfaces—“Beware the songs you loved in youth.”
Written in his unique style, Donaldson’s Cajun Nights combines
hard-hitting, action-packed prose with brilliant first-hand knowledge
of forensics and the sultry flavor of New Orleans. The result is a
gripping mystery involving murder and some occult flare in the creole
heartland.
Astor + Blue Editions is proud to release Cajun Nights (ISBN: 978-1941286-38-8; Fiction/Mystery & Suspense; $5.99 E-Book), the latest Broussard mystery by D.J. Donaldson.
D.J. Donaldson is a retired professor of Anatomy and Neurobiology. His
entire academic career was spent at the University of Tennessee, Health
Science Center, where he published dozens of papers on wound-healing
and where he taught microscopic anatomy to thousands of medical and
dental students.
He
is also the author of seven published forensic mysteries and five
medical thrillers. He lives in Memphis, Tennessee with his wife and two
West Highland terriers. In the spring of most years he simply cannot
stop buying new flowers and other plants for the couple’s prized
backyard garden.