http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-op-shepard26nov26,0,1216561.story?coll=la-opinion-rightrail
The scoop on Woodward and Bernstein
The Watergate reporters despised and often fought with each other,
but neither could have chased the stories they broke working alone.
By
Alicia C. Shepard
ALICIA C. SHEPARD, who teaches journalism at
THIS year marks the 30th anniversary of the movie "All
the President's Men," starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as
investigative reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, respectively. The
movie made Woodward and Bernstein forever famous and has become a classic. It
still runs on television, is played widely in journalism schools and often is
used as shorthand in high schools to teach about one of the most corrupt times
in
Although the movie is the result of Redford's determination to get it made as
the Watergate story unfolded, its authenticity and endurance have everything to
do with its director, Alan J. Pakula, who morphed
into a Sigmund Freud with notepad before any camera rolled. His detailed notes,
first made public in December 2005, were donated by his wife to the
In January 1975, five months after President Nixon had resigned,
Pakula flew to
Pakula didn't want facts alone. He wanted to
understand Woodward and Bernstein deeply so he could capture their true
characters and motivations for the movie. Ben Bradlee, editor of the Washington
Post during Watergate, told me that Pakula spent
"so much time with each of us. He knew all about my mother, brother -
everything." (Jason Robards, who played Bradlee,
is on screen only 10 minutes.)
During Watergate, no matter how well Bernstein reported the story, he was
pegged by Post editors as the "bad boy" of the duo - always late,
unreliable and quick to hype his leads. In her interview with Pakula, Ephron tried to rehabilitate her boyfriend's
reputation. She said Bernstein was driven to uncover the Watergate story
because he wanted to prove everyone at the Post wrong. He was not lazy, she
insisted. He just had a "psychosis" about being controlled by
authority figures.
The notes from Pakula's interview with Ephron
reveal a key to his understanding of Woodward and Bernstein. "Underneath
all the arguments and fights - way down, they hated each other," Pakula wrote. "The qualities that
each other had - the qualities that they needed [to report Watergate] - they
didn't like. Bob's sucking up to people. Carl knew he needed [that
quality] but despised it in Bob. Bob needed Carl because Carl was pushy. Bob
can formulate and Carl can draw conclusions."
One story that Ephron shared with Pakula concerned
how the two reporters sparred as they raced to complete the book "All the President's Men." Woodward, she told the
director, could be "so stubborn and bullheaded" and had "no
instinct for writing." When Ephron and Bernstein were in
Pakula's notes, dated
- Bob thought Carl was "hype, no follow-through. All talk. Bull---- artist. Irresponsible."
- Carl saw Bob as "a machine. He's a
reporter doll. Give him a story, any story, and he runs with it. A drone. No humor. No surprises. All
stability. White bread. Mr. Perfect. No
soul."
Pakula gradually realized that neither Woodward nor
Bernstein could have pulled off Watergate alone. Despite their stark
differences, they needed each another. Each had strengths that complemented the
other's.
"Bernstein could be right intuitively - but dangerous left to
himself," Pakula wrote in his notes.
"Woodward cautiously would have to go from one step literally to another.
And yet it was Bernstein's daring that was necessary."
But in his interview with Woodward, Pakula discovered
that the reporter could surprise: Other people's secrets fascinated and
obsessed him. Although Woodward was reluctant to talk about himself as a
reporter, he was determined to expose other people's secrets. The dichotomy
intrigued Pakula.
But as Pakula began to understand Woodward, he
wondered if the charming, handsome
Pakula wrote that
Throughout filming in 1975, if there was a question on how Woodward or
Bernstein might react,
Whenever they could, Woodward and Bernstein visited the sets. One
Bernstein recalled in a 1975 interview, now in Pakula's
archive, that "big crowds were outside. I got there just as Hoffman broke
from the building. It was one of the most incredible feelings that I've had in
my life because, you know, it had been a long time since we had started to work
on the story, and I didn't exactly know who I was or who he was -
existentially, it was sort of a total mind----. He had the mannerisms. You're
not used to seeing your actions. Yet I knew that he was right."
As Hoffman ran, Bernstein, already a celebrity, understood how much had
happened in the three years since five burglars broke into the Democratic Party
headquarters at the Watergate hotel.
"I'm not really like that anymore," Bernstein said in the interview.
"That happened a long time ago. Would I run like that again?"