Hollywood's Responsibility for
Smoking Deaths
By JOE ESZTERHAS
CLEVELAND — I've written 14
movies. My characters smoke in many of them, and they
look cool and glamorous doing it. Smoking was an
integral part of many of my screenplays because I was a
militant smoker. It was part of a bad-boy image I'd
cultivated for a long time — smoking, drinking,
partying, rock 'n' roll.
Smoking, I once believed, was
every person's right. Efforts to stop it were
politically correct, a Big Brother assault on personal
freedoms. Secondhand smoke was a nonexistent problem
invented by professional do-gooders. I put all these
views into my scripts.
In one of my movies, "Basic
Instinct," smoking is part of a sexual subtext. Sharon
Stone's character smokes; Michael Douglas's is trying to
quit. She seduces him with literal and figurative smoke
that she blows into his face. In the movie's most famous
and controversial scene, she even has a cigarette in her
hand.
I'm sure the tobacco companies
loved "Basic Instinct." One of them even launched a
brand of "Basic" cigarettes not long after the movie
became a worldwide hit, perhaps inspired by my
cigarette-friendly work. My movie made a lot of money;
so did their new cigarette.
Remembering all this, I find it
hard to forgive myself. I have been an accomplice to the
murders of untold numbers of human beings. I am
admitting this only because I have made a deal with God.
Spare me, I said, and I will try to stop others from
committing the same crimes I did.
Eighteen months ago I was
diagnosed with throat cancer, the result of a lifetime
of smoking. I am alive but maimed. Much of my larynx is
gone. I have some difficulty speaking; others have some
difficulty understanding me. I no longer have the
excruciating difficulty swallowing or breathing that I
experienced in the first months after my surgery.
I haven't smoked or drank for
18 months now, though I still take it day-to-day and
pray for help. I believe in prayer and exercise. I have
walked five miles a day for a year, without missing even
one day. Quitting smoking and drinking has taught me the
hardest lesson I've ever learned about my own weakness;
it has also given me the greatest affection and empathy
for those still addicted.
I have spent some time in the
past year and a half in cancer wards. I have seen people
gasp for air as a suctioning device cleaned their
tracheas. I have heard myself wheezing horribly, unable
to catch my breath, as a nurse begged me to breathe. I
have seen an 18-year-old with throat cancer who had
never smoked a single cigarette in his life. (His mother
was a chain smoker.) I have tried not to cry as my wife
fitted the trachea tube that I had coughed out back into
my throat. (Thankfully, I no longer need it.)
I don't think smoking is every
person's right anymore. I think smoking should be as
illegal as heroin. I'm no longer such a bad boy. I go to
church on Sunday. I'm desperate to see my four boys grow
up. I want to do everything I can to undo the damage I
have done with my own big-screen words and images.
So I say to my colleagues in
Hollywood: what we are doing by showing larger-than-life
movie stars smoking onscreen is glamorizing smoking.
What we are doing by glamorizing smoking is
unconscionable.
Hollywood films have long
championed civil rights and gay rights and commonly call
for an end to racism and intolerance. Hollywood films
espouse a belief in goodness and redemption. Yet we are
the advertising agency and sales force for an industry
that kills nearly 10,000 people daily.
A cigarette in the hands of a
Hollywood star onscreen is a gun aimed at a 12- or
14-year-old. (I was 12 when I started to smoke, a geeky
immigrant kid who wanted so very much to be cool.) The
gun will go off when that kid is an adult. We in
Hollywood know the gun will go off, yet we hide behind a
smoke screen of phrases like "creative freedom" and
"artistic expression." Those lofty words are lies
designed, at best, to obscure laziness. I know. I have
told those lies. The truth is that there are 1,000
better and more original ways to reveal a character's
personality.
Screenwriters know, too, that
some movie stars are more likely to play a part if they
can smoke — because they are so addicted to smoking that
they have difficulty stopping even during the shooting
of a scene. The screenwriter writing smoking scenes for
the smoking star is part of a vicious and deadly circle.
My hands are bloody; so are
Hollywood's. My cancer has caused me to attempt to
cleanse mine. I don't wish my fate upon anyone in
Hollywood, but I beg that Hollywood stop imposing it
upon millions of others.
Joe Eszterhas is a
screenwriter and the author of "American Rhapsody."
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