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Interview: Israel Horowitz

If I hadn't been a writer, I'd be in jail

November 20, 2014 13:42
Moving: Israel Horowitz struggled to contain his father's violent mood swings when growing up

ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

3 min read

When Israel Horovitz was 13, he submitted a novel titled Steinberg, Sex and the Saint to Simon & Schuster. The manuscript was rejected with a letter - penned by someone who didn't know the aspiring author's age - praising its "wonderful childlike quality". That was "the unkindest cut", says Horovitz, laughing down the line from a hotel in Orlando, Florida.

Undeterred by this early setback, the son of a Massachusetts truck driver went on to become one of modern theatre's most prolific and performed playwrights. Asked whether writing was a compulsion, Horovitz says no; he saw it "as a way out of town". "I think if I had been unable to be a writer, if I had been unable to express myself that way, I might have been in jail right now. But thank the Lord I found that at a really early age."

We are talking because, having had "more than 70 plays produced around the planet", Horovitz has now turned one of them - the popular, Paris-based chamber piece My Old Lady - into a film, placing him in the director's chair (in cinema, at least) for the first time. "I needed to do something to scare me".

My Old Lady was conceived as a love letter to France. However, there wasn't much of the city in the play and he saw an opportunity to put this right on screen. The result is a blackly-comic drama in which family secrets burst into the open after an American deadbeat (Kevin Kline) inherits a Paris apartment from the father he blames for his problems, only to discover he must pay a monthly sum to the old lady (Dame Maggie Smith) living there with her daughter (Kristen Scott-Thomas), until she dies.