IF
I STOP I'LL DIE: THE COMEDY AND TRAGEDY OF RICHARD PRYOR
(1991)
If
I Stop I'll Die is my personal tribute to Richard Pryor,
even though there are sections in the book where, in my
effort to be thorough and honest, it may not seem so. Co-author
Dennis A. Williams (also a writer) is my second son and
as much a fan of Pryor's as I. Originally, this book was
commissioned by an editor at a prominent publishing house
but subsequently was rejected by her successor. Years later,
when Thunder's Mouth Press expressed an interest in publishing
it (provided I update it) I was involved in other projects,
so I asked Dennis to collaborate with me.
Having
had great difficulty getting my interview with Bill Cosby
(April-May 1970) published, I was aware of the problems
inherent in writing about such artists. (I still have, "in
the can," days of interviews with Cos at Lake Tahoe
for Amistad 2. Cosby's lawyers decided against granting
permission to publish.)
So
gathering and evaluating Pryor's background put me on the
ground in his home town of Peoria, Ill., where I talked
with neighbors, teachers, and friends (or so they said);
in Hollywood, with lawyers and film people who'd worked
with him. Unlike Cosby, Pryor refused a face-to-face interview.
I was helped out here by a friend with whom I'd worked in
Los Angeles in the fifties, but who by that time had become
a hell-fired chief assistant at the film studio where Pryor
had become a star.
Dennis
and I worked well together. We were interviewed last year
[2002] for a television special on Pryor, which aired in
February 2003. |