WRITERS
W
riters write the story. Directors, producers, actors, and studio
executives may all have their input, but it is the writers put their pens to
paper, so to speak, to give the story its form. They create and write the
screenplays, without which there would be no actions to film, no words to
record, no emotions to convey; in short, no movie or television program.
Some writers sit alone in a room and write entire screenplays; others,
writing for television, may be responsible for creating the plot bible for
the entire season and writing or co-writing individual episodes; some
writers are hired to rewrite existing screenplays, which can vary from a
final polish to a complete overhaul. Others fill even narrower parameters,
like punching up existing jokes or writing new ones, or tailoring dialogue
to a particular actor's limitations. Some writers adapt their own literary
work for the screen; others are hired to adapt existing books.
Many writers specialize in a specific genre, like action/adventure,
drama, comedy, or medical- or legal-themed material. Some work solely
in television, and may further specialize in made-for-television movies,
dramatic series, or sitcoms. A very few writers, like David E. Kelly,
somehow manage to do it all.
Regardless of what, where, or why, all writers write.
Three writers of diverse background, experience, and expertise are
profiled in this chapter.
Job Overview
The writer creates characters and situations, invents dialogue and story
line, and rewrites and polishes the treatment or script for production.
JOB TITLE: WRITER/PRODUCER
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