* Favorite writers:
Irwin Shaw, Ingmar Bergman, and Ross Macdonald.
* Has a self-described obsession with height, and always wants to find out how tall actors and other famous people really are, going so far as to go into a pool with Sylvester Stallone to see how tall he was in bare feet.
* Doesn't drive; claims he can't concentrate that long.
* Major fan of the
New York Knicks.
* Wrote mostly serious, literary works until death of his first agent when he began writing thrillers starting with
Marathon Man.
* Researched
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid for eight years and used
Harry Longbaugh (a variant spelling of the Sundance Kid's real name) as his pseudonym for
No Way to Treat a Lady. After deciding he didn't want to write a cowboy novel, he turned the story into his first original screenplay and sold it for a record $400,000.
* Doesn't like “bloodbath action” movies and spoofed them in
Last Action Hero.
* Turned down
The Graduate (“didn't get the book”),
The Godfather (loved the book, but didn't want to glamorise the Mafia) and
Superman (a big comic fan, but he didn't want to write with a major movie star in the lead, as was the original plan, so they hired
Mario Puzo).
* Wrote early/unused scripts for
Papillon,
The Right Stuff and
The Da Vinci Code.
* Worked as uncredited
script doctor or consultant on
Twins,
A Fish Called Wanda,
Chaplin,
Malice,
Last Action Hero and
Fierce Creatures
* William Goldman was referred to in
Stephen King's 1986 novel
It. In that book he is said to be the only good writer to ever go to Hollywood and remain good. Goldman later wrote the screenplays for King's novels
Misery, Hearts in Atlantis, and
Dreamcatcher.
* Goldman wrote the famous line "Follow the money" for the screenplay of
All the President's Men. Most journalists attribute it to
Deep Throat, the informant in the
Watergate scandal, but it is not in
Bob Woodward’s notes nor in Woodward and
Carl Bernstein's book or articles.
* Goldman is often quoted in Hollywood for his dictum about the uncertainties of show business, "Nobody knows anything."
* Gave the
Oberlin College commencement address in May 1985, and said that whenever he is mistaken for
William Golding, a British author and
Nobel Prize for Literature winner best known for the novel
Lord of the Flies, Goldman smiles and graciously accepts compliments on Golding's writing.
* A widespread rumor was that
Good Will Hunting was actually written by William Goldman instead of its credited writers
Matt Damon and
Ben Affleck. In his book
Which Lie Did I Tell? Goldman dismisses this, claiming only to have advised them on their script.
*In the DVD commentary for
Fight Club, actor
Edward Norton refers to William Goldman as one "ranting and raving about their own obsolescence" in reference to Goldman's criticism of the quality of modern films, particularly those of
1999, the year Fight Club was released.