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News News Feature

From Memphis to ‘Deadwood’: William Sanderson Tells His Own Tale

William Sanderson starts the interview out with a caution: “Don’t let me lie about anything.”

There was no thought on my part that he’d ever do such a thing, but now that he brings it up, I start to worry. After all, he’s an actor, a professional fabulist. It is indisputable that he’s got a long list of film and television projects, more than 130 to be found on imdb.com, so we can be fairly certain about that.

And it’s no exaggeration to itemize his best-known roles: the unctuous E.B. Farnum in the Deadwood series as well as the recently released HBO movie, Larry in the 1980s sitcom Newhart, toymaker J.F. Sebastian in the original Blade Runner, and Sheriff Bud Dearborne in True Blood.

Furthermore, Sanderson has just published his autobiography, Yes, I’m That Guy: The Rough and Tumble Life of a Character Actor, and he deserves the benefit of the doubt that he’s told the truth all the way through, from his upbringing in Memphis to his career in film and television. It has that veneer of veracity given that he’s pretty hard on himself, detailing the “rough and tumble” parts of his life that bring him no esteem. “This book is more about defects than virtues,” he admits.

But in both autobiography and interview, Sanderson comes across as humble — grateful for a career that brought him recognition and good notices, and for his marriage to Sharon who has been strong, capable, and loving.

“The book is about me going from Memphis, Army, college, law school, to New York to do the acting apprenticeship,” he says. “And then 36 years — I might be bragging — just surviving L.A., and we live in Pennsylvania now.”

Sanderson was into sports in school and sometimes was in the larger circle around Elvis Presley. One of his good friends in school was Charles Burson, who would go on to be Tennessee Attorney General and Vice President Al Gore’s chief of staff. But Sanderson was too shy to consider theater although he was fascinated by it, inspired by George Touliatos and later Barry Fuller who would direct him in Marat/Sade.

So he had a taste of acting in Memphis, but he knew if he was going to make a living, he had to go to New York to get on the stage. His was a tale of tending bars, going to auditions, and gradually getting some parts. He says he was “something of a go-to guy if you’re looking for a misfit, outcast, or downtrodden type.”

Throughout all this was trouble. In junior high, he hot-wired cars and went on joyrides. As a bartender, he’d sample too much of his own product and start fights. Later on, he’d be a customer at bars and get into more fights. He lost girlfriends, risked his jobs, imperiled his health. He admits he was lucky to have survived.

But he also developed his acting chops, playing to his strengths and landing more film work. In his book, he talks about the work he booked and the celebrities he met. Some he befriended, some were jerks, and some relationships were, as they say, complicated (looking at you, Tommy Lee Jones).

Around 2004, Sanderson landed his role in Deadwood. His Farnum was carefully crafted by series showrunner David Milch and given a brilliant treatment by another writer on the set, Regina Corrado. The movie, which premiered last Friday on HBO, brought back most of the cast and crew to more or less wrap the storyline up.

And now Sanderson will tell you that Deadwood “is probably my last hurrah.” Maybe. He did just have a role in a recent episode of American Gods. But he’s quit drinking and has found contentment in Pennsylvania with his wife and her family. And he carries with him an abiding love of Memphis: “That’s where you form your dreams.”

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter from the Editor: Bingeing Bad

Boy, how about that Breaking Bad finale? Wow. Poor Walt. Tough way to go, but that was some riveting television, right?

At least that’s what I was told by almost everyone I know. I didn’t watch the final season of Breaking Bad because I missed the boat on the earlier seasons and I couldn’t get motivated to catch up via marathon watching sessions.

It’s a classic First World problem: You missed the first season, or three, of Game of Thrones or Mad Men or Boardwalk Empire. All your friends are talking about the show, the critics are raving. Should you commit to catching up, or just blow it off? I’ve done both. I passed on The Wire and Breaking Bad; played catchup on Boardwalk Empire, Mad Men, and True Blood (which I now regret).

Some media critics and social anthropologists claim that the cable television mega-series has replaced movies and weekly network TV shows as the medium that best defines us. These programs take advantage of more relaxed cable standards for nudity, sex, violence, drug use, and profanity. What we used to have to go to the cineplex to see is now available on our own home flatscreens, complete with a handy remote to pause, slo-mo, reverse, and fast-forward the action.

These shows are what we talk about at work and with our friends. And if everybody else knows who Walter White is and you don’t, well, welcome to Loserville, Skippy.

And speaking of Loserville — and meth … A new study from the Government Accounting Office shows Tennessee is the second-leading state in the Union for meth lab busts, with 1,585 in 2012 — just behind Missouri and well ahead of third-place Indiana. But here’s where the study gets interesting: Do you know how many meth lab busts there were in Mississippi in 2012? Five. That’s right, five.

That’s because Mississippi passed a law making any medicine containing pseudoephedrine available by prescription only. Taking Sudafed and other such over-the-counter meds off the consumer shelves basically eliminated the problem of meth production in Mississippi. Busts dropped from 950 in 2009 to five last year. A similar decline in meth lab busts occurred in Oregon, the only other state in the country where this commonsense legislation has passed.

So why don’t Tennessee, Missouri, Indiana, and other heavy meth-use states pass laws that ban over-the-counter sales of pseudoephedrine meds? The answer will not shock you. It’s because Big Pharma is spending big bucks to convince our legislators to keep commercial pseudoephedrine meds available over the counter in the name of “customer convenience.” Not surprisingly, given who’s running Nashville these days, it’s a message that seems to resonate with our own intrepid lawmakers.

So it appears we may have more seasons of Breaking Bad ahead of us in Tennessee. Or is it Mad Men?

Bruce VanWyngarden

brucev@memphisflyer.com

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

-Game of Thrones vs True Blood- Round 1: Baby names

Just read an article saying that 146 babies in the US have been named Khaleesi, which means Queen in the made up Lame of Thrones universe.

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Impressive? Hardly, when compared to the HBO show True Blood! Enough classy fangbanger mom’s have named their baby Sookie to shoot it to the number 3 position on the top 10 searched baby names so far this year. Point: True Blood. AND to put the final nail in the coffin…how many people do you known named Bill?

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Boom!