

I enrolled at UC Santa Cruz and immersed myself in film studies.Īfter Santa Cruz, I moved to Los Angeles in search of film work. The first time I smelled eucalyptus and redwoods, I knew I’d made the right (only) choice for my new life. Many concerts later, I left New York for California, a surfer bound for the Pacific Ocean, trading the Fillmore East for Winterland. My cultural education continued under the tutelage of an older cousin, who took me to see the Beatles at Shea Stadium. He also took me into Manhattan when I was 8 for the premiere of The Longest Day, and I’ve been in love with movies ever since (I still have the program!). My father and I used to go out and drive around, looking at period houses and neighborhoods with an eye to what comprised superior craftsmanship and architectural style at an early age, I was already “scouting locations” without being aware of it. I think those exercises went a long way toward helping me know what to do when I read a script and how to go about finding the locations that were called for. I particularly remember the song about Officer Krupke. I remember him sitting me down to listen to the soundtrack of West Side Story and bidding me to visualize the scenes. I, however, was probably born to be one … receiving early training from my father without either of us knowing the job of location manager existed. Constant changes, whether with the schedule, the script or casting issues … if you’re not equipped to deal with the inevitability of change, you don’t want to be a location manager! That was one of the things we had to be prepared for … that, and change. Often, we worked with directors who’d want to see 50, even 100 houses … before eventually picking one of the first ones we’d shown. One day in the scout van, Adam said, “I don’t want you to think I’m a pushover, picking locations so quickly … you’re just that good at finding the right ones.” With few exceptions, they picked the first locations we looked at. Fortunately, we had a spectacular production designer (Patrice Vermette) and director (Adam McKay) who picked locations at a success rate I’d never seen before. It fell on us, with a stellar supporting cast of location scouts, to find all these elements and pull them together efficiently. On Vice, we had the wonderful opportunity to find seven countries and six states for a story that spanned six decades, in and around the zone, with a production team that had little experience working in Los Angeles and a relatively short prep schedule.

My work partner, Leslie Thorson/LMGI, and I probably location managed more days in the city of Los Angeles on feature films than anyone. My final show was Vice, the biographical dramedy, starring Christian Bale as former US Vice President Dick Cheney, which finished in January 2018. Red Nation Celebration Institute to Receive Trailblazer Awardĭirector Cameron Crowe and I on the set for Aloha.Martin Scorsese Set to Receive Eva Monley Award.In conclusion, John Augustus' theory and practice were guided by more of a social work ideology and the belief that the family was the social setting for reform. It is noted that due to Augustus' experience with corruption by police officers, they were barred from being probation officers.

Focus areas of this article include a theory of rehabilitation during the period of probation before sentencing, female drunkards, bailing and reforming children, the case of the madam, and rescuing young prostitutes and placing them in families. The details of Augustus' work are described and the importance attributed to the family and the value of immediate employment to support the family are noted. Augustus sought for his first case a common, habitual drunkard, deemed beyond help. He states that it is possible to discern from these writings (and from what is unwritten) a coherent theory that guided his court interventions and specific tactics that he used for specific types of cases. This author provides a detailed description of the contents of Augustus' account of his life and work. As it is a description of what he did, this author has studied it and identified the underlying philosophy, principles of selection, and methods of supervision used by Augustus in his unpaid role of standing bail for and supervising the rehabilitation of certain offenders. John Augustus wrote A Report of the Labors of John Augustus for the Last Ten Years, in Aid of the Unfortunate, in 1852, in which he introduced the idea of the probation system in the United States.
