Sendak happy with ‘Wild Things’ film adaptation

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NEW YORK – About the hoopla surrounding the film adaptation of “Where the Wild Things Are,” Maurice Sendak is characteristically gruff.

“I kind of want it over,” he said. “I’m not used to this invasion.”

But that speaks more to the 81-year-old author’s fondness for privacy and quiet than his feelings about

Spike Jonze’s film, co-written by David Eggers. In a recent phone interview from his home in Ridgefield, Conn., Sendak said he considers both Eggers and Jonze to be good friends, and believes the director has done a “spectacular” job with his most famous work.

The movie is a long time coming. Sendak originally co-founded a production company in the mid-’90s. Two directors earlier tried their hand at adapting the book, but their visions didn’t impress. And it took Jonze years to finish his “Wild Things,” a process all the more arduous because of widely reported arguments with the studio, Warner Bros., which wanted a lighter approach.

“The people I dislike, I’ve never gotten to meet, so I can’t say anything bad about them,” says Sendak. “And they’re all in Hollywood, where they belong.”

The beloved illustrator has always had a complicated relationship with “Wild Things.” When it was published in 1963, Sendak, a son of Jewish immigrants, was an up-and-coming children’s book author. His life was irrevocably changed by the success of the book.

It won the prestigious Caldecott Medal and has since sold more than 10 million copies. The story of Max, a misbehaving boy clad in a white wolf suit who’s sent to his room that soon grows into a forest, resonated with children – an impact all the more remarkable because it was done in just 10 sentences.

But as much as it elevated Sendak, it also overshadowed much of what he’s done since. He’s not only written other classic children’s books like “In the Night Kitchen” and “Higglety Pigglety Pop!” but also collaborated on operas (Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” with director Frank Corsaro, “Brundibar” with playwright Tony Kushner), illustrated adult books (Herman Melville’s “Pierre”) and co-founded the Night Kitchen Theatre.

Sendak says he no longer feels tied to “Wild Things.”

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