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Andy Romanoff
Author
Stories I've Been Meaning to Tell You

Adult; Memoir; (Market)

Andy Romanoff's memoir is a story of wild living, hard choices, and unlikely outcomes. Filled with 80 years of stories told as fresh as today Romanoff takes you along for the ride as he makes a meaningful life for himself without turning his back on the person he'd been or the places he'd come from. "Stories I've Been Meaning to Tell You," is filled with tales of getting thrown out of five high schools; stealing cars and motorcycles; getting tossed in jail; finding his way into the sleazy end of the film business; being there for the birth of Gore Films; spending time with counterculture legends like Ken Kesey, the Hog Farm, and Nick Ray; then slowly learning about love, life, and death as he becomes a reluctant success. Come along for the ride as he shares a lifetime of stories, learning to accept success, friendship, and family along the way.
Reviews
Digital Cinema Society

Stories I’ve Been Meaning To Tell You.  Could these frank confessions of a misspent youth really be the same guy that rose to such prominence in the motion picture industry?

I thought I knew Andy Romanoff.  When we first met some twenty years ago, he was a high-ranking executive with Panavision and quite active in the early activities of the Digital Cinema Society where he remains a trusted advisor.  He is also a Member of the Motion Picture Academy and an associate member of the American Society of Cinematographers.  

I was vaguely aware of his background in the development of telescopic camera cranes and from reviewing his IMBD credits I see he was a Louma Crane Operator on such high profile features as Spielberg’s 1941, Coppola’s One from the Heart, and Friedkin’s To Live and Die In L.A.  Like myself, he has also some early credits as a Cinematographer that he probably wishes went unlisted, like the 1967 classic slasher gorefest, A Taste of Blood.  

I have followed Andy’s recent work as a fine art photographer, and as a motorcycle enthusiast myself, I particularly enjoy his collection of classic bike photography.  I’ve also grown to appreciate his journalistic travelogues covering his trips with another old friend and Panavision alumni, Bob Harvey.  The telling photography and wry commentary are quite revealing of the many seemingly ordinary places he has lovingly chosen to document.  

However, all my prior knowledge of Andy Romanoff little prepared me for his latest book, Stories I’ve Been Meaning To Tell You.  Could these frank confessions of a misspent youth really be the same guy that rose to such prominence in the motion picture industry?  The answer is yes!  I will leave some of the specifics for you to discover when you read the book, which I highly recommend, but just to give you a small taste…

Andy’s journey started in Chicago, where after losing his father at an early age, he fell in with a rowdy crew who stole cars, dealt and consumed numerous elicit drugs, spent time in jail, and eventually joined the counter culture traveling commune known as the Hog Farm, hanging with the likes of Ken Kesey and Wavy Gravy.  Andy’s book is far from just a shocking tell-all, it is the fascinating tapestry of prosaic storytelling that makes it captivating.  If you thought you knew Andy Romanoff, read this book to find out how little you really knew, and if you haven’t had the pleasure to know Andy, read this book for an insightful chronicle of a life fully lived. Lucky for us, the statute of limitations has passed and he is free to tell his tales.

To purchase a hard copy or ebook of Stories I’ve Been Meaning To Tell You, visit:  https://store.bookbaby.com/book/stories-ive-been-meaning-to-tell-you 

Rabbi John Rosove's blog

Rabbi John L. Rosove is Rabbi Emeritus of Temple Israel of Hollywood in Los Angeles where he served as Senior Rabbi from 1988 to 2019. He is a past National Chairman of the Association of Reform Zionists of America (ARZA) representing 1.5 million Reform Jews,

“Follow your heart; but be smart about it.” Andy Romanoff

05WednesdayApr 2023

My friend, Andy Romanoff, said these words to his daughter Zan when she became bat mitzvah. I never forgot them and repeated them to my own sons more than once.

I’ve known Andy for 30 years as a fellow parent of our youngest sons in our Nursery School, Day School, and congregation, and over that time I’ve not only grown exceptionally fond of him, but I cherish him as a dear friend. For anyone, however, who knows us both, they would say that we are as unlikely to be good friends as any two Jewish men are likely to be, though we share an early traumatic event in our lives, the death of our fathers when he was 7 and I was 9. Our lives diverged in dramatic ways since then. Mine went the rabbinic route and his went wild as a young man and then settled into a successful Hollywood cinematic career and family man.  

I write this blog not only to share my love and respect for this man, but to make a happy plug for his new book that he calls Stories I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You. It’s a wonderfully honest tell-all memoir vividly told and, at times, shockingly true stories reflecting his remarkable life that easily could have ended 60 years ago in a drug death or a prison term. As I read his stories and as I’ve come to know him, I’m reminded of the lyrics of “Gee Officer Krupke” from West Side Story:

”Gee, Officer Krupke, we’re very upset; / We never had the love that ev’ry child oughta get. / We ain’t no delinquents, / We’re misunderstood. / Deep down inside us there is good!”

After Andy’s father died at the tragically young age of 37 (4 days after I was born in December, 1949), no matter what his mother did to rein him in, Andy went wild, but he was always “deep down good.”

Born in Chicago in 1942, Andy left home at 17, ran around the country hitchhiking with big rigs, riding and stealing motorcycles and cars, robbing motels of their furniture to furnish his east Hollywood apartment, doing drugs (he was known as “Captain Gas” – i.e. Nitric Oxide), living on a commune, loving women and mechanical devices of all kinds, becoming a photographer, then a cinematographer, directing films and even working with Steven Spielberg on his film 1941. Spielberg respected Andy’s work but when he learned Andy was a heavy drug user, wouldn’t hire him again.

Professionally, Andy is credited with developing what is called the Louma Crane. He describes himself as “…the high priest of this new technology. Using the Louma we could move the camera almost anywhere, and most days I could make it do what it was supposed to do…the Louma changed how fast and far the camera could move in a scene.”

The Louma changed Andy’s life. A gifted photographer and cinematographer (see https://andy-romanoff.pixels.com/ for examples of his moving and beautiful images) he ran Panavision Remote Systems and later became the Executive Vice President of Technical Marketing and Strategy for Panavision Worldwide. 

Married eventually to the love of his life, Darcy Vebber, who ought to be credited with helping Andy bring that goodness inside Andy to the fore for all to see and experience, they are the parents of two terrific young adult children, Zan (Alexandra) and Jordan.

The Romanoffs traveled with me on a family journey to Israel years back and an adult journey visiting Jewish sites (mostly memorials to the victims of the Holocaust) in Central Europe. On this latter trip, Andy disappeared one day. I asked Darcy where he went and she said he was out photographing images of religious icons as part of his project that he called “1001 Buddhas” (you can see some of those images by going to the link above).

Andy writes in ways that are similar to the pictures he takes – cinematically; keenly aware of every word in a sentence, and of light, angles, and imagery in a photograph. His daughter Zan is a terrific writer too, and I close with snippets of her words about her father that he included in his book:

“My parents were honest with me when I was growing up; there was no sense that my dad’s past, which involves everything from stealing motorcycles and running away from home as a teenager to adult stints in various kinds of lockup, as well as work in strip clubs and on the sets of pornos, along with all of those drugs, was anything hidden, shameful or mysterious.

My father and I are temperamentally akin–volatile, driven, exacting; generous with people we love and difficult with people we don’t–but our biographies could hardly be more different. He was, for most of his life, the breathing incarnation of a bad boy; I have never been anything less than the perfect example of a very good girl…

I love his stories because they’re rich and funny and foreign to me; because they humanize a set of people living at a time that has largely been romanticized into toothless flower-power nostalgia, or a glorious, consequence-free drugged-out haze–but I am also aware, every time he tells them and every time I tell them, that we are marveling at adventures that nearly killed him, over and over and over again. My father’s stories are legendary, but they are not the whole of his life. And in fact, my life with him is only possible because he lived past those legendary days, and into these long, boring, beautiful ones…

“Follow your heart; but be smart about it.” Andy came to that wisdom the hard way.

News
05/01/2023
Andy Romanoff at the Beat Museum

An evening with Andy Romanoff, reading from his book, Stories I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You. Joining in conversation and reading from his own work is Andy’s pal since the old days, Wavy Gravy!

These are a young man’s wild stories told with an older man’s wisdom. It speaks to anyone with an interest in the ’60s and ’70s, subcultures (particularly bikers and hippies), and tells the stories of young men and women who hang out on street corners waiting for something to happen. Stories I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You chronicles Andy Romanoff’s screwed-up years, how he survived them, and how he went on to make a meaningful life for himself.

 

Andy Romanoff’s memoir chronicles his messed-up years and how he survived long enough to transition out of them. Filled with colorful storytelling, Romanoff takes you along for the ride as he makes a meaningful life for himself without turning his back on the person he’d been or the places he’d come from. “Stories I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You” is a wild ride filled with tales of getting thrown out of five high schools; stealing cars and motorcycles; getting tossed in jail; finding his way into the sleazy end of the film business; being there for the invention of Gore Films; spending time with counterculture legends like Ken Kesey, the Hog Farm, and Nick Ray; then slowly learning about love, life, and death as he becomes a reluctant success. Come along with him as he shares eighty years of stories, learning to accept success, friendship, and family while raising hell along the way.

02/24/2024
Andy Romanoff at the La Quinta Museum

Andy Romanoff in conversation with Sharla Fox, Museum Director at the La Quinta Museum. We talk about the importance of knowing nothing when you begin a project, the balance between intellect and intuition, and how differently my mind works when I'm writing and when I'm making pictures.

11/15/2023
Romanoff Reveals All

ASC associate member Andy Romanoff has published a memoir, Stories I've Been Meaning to Tell You, which details his misspent youth with the likes of counterculture icon Ken Kesey and "gore film" creator Herschell Gordon Lewis, and his later focus on motion-picture technology — including remote camera systems and work at Panavision. Romanoff's many collaborators over the years included directors Steven Spielberg, William Friedkin and Hal Ashby, and ASC greats William A. Fraker, Conrad L. Hall and Vilmos Zsigmond. The book is available at store.bookbaby.com.

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