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August 28, 2008
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First Success: Gigi Levangie Grazer's Rescue Me
February 11, 2008
by Kelly Nickell Gigi Levangie Grazer, a screenwriter whose original screenplay Stepmom became a movie starring Julia Roberts and Susan Sarandon, is celebrating the release of her first novel Rescue Me (Simon & Schuster). Grazer talks to Writer's Digest about her inspiration, plans for her next project and her various writing habits and rituals. Writer's Digest: What is your book about?
WD: Where and how do you write? Any writing rituals?
As for writing rituals, I make a live sacrifice of a young goat every Tuesday morning, preferably before dawn. Okay, not really. My writing ritual now is to write five days a week, from 9 a.m. on, broken up by my baby's incessant need to be fed. Go figure. Seriously, I view writing very much as a regular job. That means, five days a week, starting in the morning and ending four to five hours after that. Consistency is my savior. WD: What advice can you offer new writers?
The best advice I can give anyone, if they're interested (or desperate) enough to ask, is to never give up. Let me repeat that: Never give up. Perseverance is key. WD: Do you have one essential writing rule?
WD: As a writer, who are your biggest influences?
By the way, the fact that they have fantastic physiques has nothing to do with my borderline-obsessional interest. Nothing. Really. My biggest writing influences have been Roald Dahl, Harper Lee, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Dickens, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Shakespeare, Annie LaMott, Truman Capote, my tenth grade writing teacher, Harry Majors...the list is endless and disconnected and makes no empirical sense. I'd like to add that the people, ordinary and extraordinary, I've crossed paths with throughout my life are also strong influences on my writing. Every person is a book. WD: What did you learn from writing this book?
WD: What was your biggest surprise about working with a publishing house as opposed to a movie or television studio?
WD: How does writing a novel differ from writing a screenplay? Which do you find more challenging?
And the publisher is free to not publish, of course. The challenge in writing a novel comes from that freedomwriting a novel is akin to performing a high-wire act. There is no one to save youthere is no one to blame. There is just you. WD: Why did you pursue this particular idea as a novel rather than a screenplay? Any plans to make it a screenplay?
And I found that, although I enjoyed screenwriting, I missed something: independence. I liken it to being a long-distance runner as opposed to a team playerI am somewhat of a loner in my day-to-day existence, and writing a novel fit in with that comfortable little picture of myself. It made me feel true to the chubby eight-year-old living inside of methe one who would stay indoors on beautiful Southern California mornings reading Bronte after Dahl after Kipling... I am planning to adapt my novel into a screenplay. The director Carl Franklin is attached, as well as his producing partner Jesse Beaton. We are currently in talks with a major movie star for the lead role. WD: What's next?
The one thing these concepts have in common is that they deal with class structure, an obsession of mine. Anyone who was ever born on the wrong side of the tracks will empathize. WD: Is there anything else you would like to add?
It basically means, don't move any faster than you absolutely have to. Don't be in a rush. Don't put false deadlines on your work. Just do the one thing: Keep moving forward. It's so much more than others will do.
Gigi Levangie Grazer is a screenwriter whose original screenplay Stepmom became a movie starring Julia Roberts and Susan Sarandon. |