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David Rosenfelt
I am a novelist with 37 dogs.
I have gotten to this dubious position with absolutely no planning,
and at no stage in my life could I have predicted it. But here I
am.
My childhood was relentlessly normal. The middle of three brothers,
loving parents, a middle-class home in Paterson, New Jersey. We
played sports, studied sporadically. laughed around the dinner table,
and generally had a good time. By comparison, "Ozzie and Harriet's"
clan seemed bizarre.
I graduated NYU, then decided to go into the movie business. I was
stunningly brilliant at a job interview with my uncle, who was President
of United Artists, and was immediately hired. It set me off on a
climb up the executive ladder, culminating in my becoming President
of Marketing for Tri-Star Pictures. The movie landscape is filled
with the movies I buried; for every "Rambo", "The
Natural" and "Rocky", there are countless disasters.
I did manage to find the time to marry and have two children, both
of whom are doing very well, and fortunately neither have inherited
my eccentricities.
A number of years ago, I left the movie marketing business, to the
sustained applause of hundreds of disgruntled producers and directors.
I decided to try my hand at writing. I wrote and sold a bunch of
feature films, none of which ever came close to being actually filmed,
and then a bunch of TV movies, some of which actually made it to
the small screen. It's safe to say that their impact on the American
cultural scene has been minimal.
About five years ago, my wife and I started the Tara Foundation,
named in honor of the greatest Golden Retriever the world has ever
known. We rescued almost 4,000 dogs, many of them Goldens, and found
them loving homes. Our own home quickly became a sanctuary for those
dogs that we rescued that were too old or sickly to be wanted by
others. They surround me as I write this. It's total lunacy, but
it works, and they are a happy, safe group.
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