Archive for the ‘Interview’ Category

Interview with Arthur Phillips

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

arthur-phillips-480

Arthur Phillips was born in Minneapolis and educated at Harvard. He has been a child actor, a jazz musician, a speechwriter, and a five-time Jeopardy! champion.

His first novel, Prague, was named a New York Times Notable Book, and received The Los Angeles Times/Art Seidenbaum Award for best first novel. His second novel, The Egyptologist, was an international bestseller, and was on more than a dozen “Best of 2004” lists. Angelica, his third novel, made The Washington Post best fiction list of 2007 and led that paper to call him “One of the best writers in America.” The Song Is You was a New York Times Notable Book, on the Post’s best of 2009 list, and inspired Kirkus to write, “Phillips still looks like the best American novelist to have emerged in the present decade.”

His fifth book, The Tragedy of Arthur, was published to critical acclaim, including being named a New York Times Notable Book. He lives in New York with his wife and two sons.

Where did The Tragedy of Arthur begin?

I have started novels from many of those places: a setting, a plot twist, a character.  But in this case, it started from what I can only call a dare.  I simply wondered one day, what would I have to learn to be able to write a Shakespeare play?  A peculiar thought, I’ll admit, but one that got under my skin in the most irritating way.  I was halfway through writing a different novel and most of the time I was itching to start work on this ill-defined forgery scheme…

Can you tell us about being a five-time Jeopardy champion?

Trivia has always stuck to me.  I know a very small amount about a lot of things, and a lot about… nothing.  Turns out that, plus quick thumb-muscle reflexes and a willingness to risk public humiliation makes for a successful gameshow career.  I was on in 1996, not long after my wife and I got married and she was beginning to despair about my earning potential.

What books are on your nightstand?

Last great book I completed: Cards of Identity by Nigel Dennis. Currently reading Shakespeare and the Jews by James Shapiro, author of Contested Will and 1599.  Next up: the new Ron Rash novel The Cove.

What is the best advice you have ever received?

I don’t know about the best ever, but I read this today and liked it.  I’ll say it’s the best advice I’ve received today:

” Look at getting published the same way that career criminals look at getting arrested. Sure, there is validation in it. And people will know what you did, why, and how. But the crime is the fun part and getting away with it is even better.”– http://www.fictioncircus.com/

What advice would you give to beginning writers?

Since we’re tapping into their wisdom today, I liked this, too:

“Getting rejected by magazines you don’t read or editors you don’t know isn’t real rejection. It is just unsuccessful adultery.”– http://www.fictioncircus.com/

What are you looking forward to doing while you are in Paris?

I lived for two of my happiest years in Paris, writing my second novel here, so I am likely to indulge in some serious nostalgia, walking, gazing, sighing, recalling.  That and seeing old friends at old favorite restaurants.

What’s next?

I’ve been working on television scripts at the moment, trying to find my feet in a new medium.  Then…back to novels.

story-08-tragedy-81200

Interview with Phoebe Marshall-Raimbeau

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

phoebe2010

Phoebe Marshall-Raimbeau is the Director of the English-language Library in Angers (ELLIA). The library is the largest English-language library in western France, containing more than 32,000 books and material. Popular activities include film nights, readings, story-time for children, book clubs, a garden club, and French conversation groups.

Originally from New York, Phoebe has lived in France for nearly 30 years. Her family’s ties with France go back much further. Her mother lived in Paris in the 1950’s and worked as a house model for Chanel. Though this was before Phoebe was born, her mother’s experiences instilled a love of all things French.

ela

What took you to Angers?

My work. In 1993 I had been working at Brentano’s bookstore in Paris for about 10 years as a bookbuyer and I heard that The American Library in Paris was wanting to open up a branch in Angers. My husband, an “Angevin pure souche”, and I were ready to move out of big city Paris and taste the calmer waters of a provincial town.

What keeps you there?

The sheer beauty of the area : a sanctuary of peace and a source of endless inspiration. A wonderful town to raise kids, good schools, easy to get around but a bubbling cultural life when needed. The city of Angers is a great supporter of the arts.

Can you tell us a little about your position as the director of the English-language Library in Angers?

Librarianship is an incredibly exciting profession today. The profession goes far beyond books. I’ve been Director for the past 19 years and have witnessed a great shift in the tasks at hand. I look at fundraising, budgets, collection development, the impact of the ebook age (looming over us! The library has acquired 3 ereaders to circulate), providing efficient service, supporting the staff, helping the board move forward with retreats, meetings, and clarity in our mission. We  build, basically on a daily basis, the community of people who use – and hopefully come to love – the library.  I am particularly working on developing new programs for the “rentrée” 2011…just around the bend. To mention a few : setting up debating in English in French high school students; running a program using music and theater and films in English for a pilot project in middle schools; and setting up a writer’s residency for an American writer to come to our area. Networking with other non-profits is essential in much of what we do. Our over 70 volunteers provide an extraordinary source of manpower.

Angers

What are some of the challenges you face in your role there?

Making sure that the library is “the place to be” for all ages, nationalities and needs. This means listening very carefully to what is happening in the world and with those around us…and readapting one’s vision accordingly, sometimes on a daily basis. Keeping up with technology is daunting at times but keeps me on my toes.

What are some of the rewards?

Never knowing what the day will bring… constantly meeting incredibly interesting people.

How has technology changed the role of the the library?

After we burned the bra in the women’s liberation movement, we were able to burn the card catalog when we automated the collection. This moved librarians from the dark ages to a very complex period of multi-tasking. I personnally have no sentimentality at all for the clerical work of the past, we now spend our time much more creatively. Technology – used correctly – permits the library to stay in the eye of the public through websites, emails (we send out our monthly announcements to over 3000 addresses), Twitter, Facebook…however we must be careful about the quality of the information.

What is the best advice that you have received?

You learn by doing…

And  “You use a glass mirror to see your face, you use works of art to see your soul.”

~ George Bernard Shaw.

far-from-the-madding-crowd

What books are on your nightstand?

A mix of books in both French and English: “Les Passions Intellectuelles – Désirs de Gloire” by Elisabeth Badinter, “Far from the Madding Crowd” by Thomas Hardy, “Princesse de Clèves” by Madame de la Fayette, “Mosses from the Old Manse” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Shelley’s Prometheus Unbound” edited by Vida Scudder and “Nothing like the Sun – A Novel about William Shakespeare” by Anthony Burgess.

Phoebe's mother, who worked as a model for Chanel

Phoebe's mother, who worked as a model for Chanel

A Night at the Movies with Judith Merians

Monday, May 30th, 2011

195Poster

Judith Merians serves as a consultant to independent film producers in structuring their film projects, securing film financing and distribution, and developing film production companies.  She has been teaching a course on The Business of the Film Industry at the University of California at Los Angeles Film School for 16 years.  She also teaches in the producing division of the Filmakademie Baden Wurttenburg, Germany, lectures on story and screenplay at The American School in Paris, runs private screenwriting and producing workshops in Paris, France, and leadership conferences in the US and Europe.

Judith has been an entertainment attorney and business executive for 27 years working in the major Hollywood studios and has been integrally involved in the production of hundreds of films.  She has taught and been published in several countries. She leads a educational film series at the Library and has shown us new ways to appreciate the work of Tennessee Williams as a part of our centenary celebration of the playwright. Today she talks about Paris, her love of film and why the work of Tennessee Williams is relevant today.

judith merians

What brought you to Paris?

I visited for years and then when I quit the corporate world I did what was top on the list for “when I had the time” and that was a month in Paris.  That quickly turned into half my time in Paris and half in California.  A perfect life!

What keeps you coming back?

I have made wonderful friends here, I present conferences in Paris and in Germany so I can still use my knowledge, I play boules in the Luxembourg Gardens with the guys, I love the culture, food, the beautiful city, and the sensibility that life is meant to be enjoyed.  I worked very hard for many years and now what better place is there to pick and choose how to find pleasure every day?

The Library is celebrating the centenary of Tennessee William’s birth. Why is his work relevant to audiences today?

Tennessee Williams was an exquisite poet in his playwriting and short stories. That’s reason enough to read and listen to his words. Also he wrote on timeless and universal themes frequently having to do with love lost or never found, seeking the solace and comfort of others, people lost and lonely or who simply don’t fit in, sexual passion (how better to describe that than the way he did  when Stanley tells Stella that “we turned on the colored lights”?).  He did this with great compassion for the hurt and damaged and made one see their humanity no matter how monstrous they could be.

psycho0

What can screenplay writers learn from watching Psycho?

How to tell a story without words. Hitchcock clearly understood the language of visual story-telling.  If the sound were turned off in Psycho the audience would still understand the entire film.  Hitchcock had a storyboard created for all his films and shot each frame accordingly.  The actors could make choices as long as they stayed in frame.  He also understood suspense and how to hook and audience.  What better way than the shower scene in Psycho?  One knows there’s a lunatic afoot and is breathless to see what will happen next.  The audience is involved, not on the outside looking in, but shouting to the screen “don’t go there!”

What is your favorite movie? Why?

My all time favorite is 8 1/2 because Fellini had the most fertile mind and the ability to create visualizations of dream worlds and unconscious processes.  I’ve seen this film at least 2 dozen times and I still find images within images that I had never noticed before and which created a multilayered landscape of story telling that the conscious mind might not even grasp but is affected by in the viewing.

I also very much admire The Godfather since the story is told neatly, clearly, with rich characters and lots of texture that created the world of the crime families.  The acting and the cinematography were splendid. The opening of that film is a classic of how to open a story – who is the protagonist and what does he want and need to learn, who is the antagonist and how is he on a collision course with the protagonist,  who are the other major characters, what is their world like.  All of this is portrayed richly and engagingly in the first 30 minutes of The Godfather.  I watched that and said “take me on this ride, I can’t wait to see where this train is going.”

What is the best advice you have ever received?

Just do Monday.  When I was contemplating going to law school with a 2 year old and a 4 year old at home, along with a disgruntled husband, I talked to a woman who was doing her medical residency about my fear of conquering 3 years of demanding schooling along with all the other demands I had in my life.  She looked at me and said “I don’t understand you.  When I went to medical school I just thought to myself ‘how do I do Monday?’ Then I just did Monday and I just did Tuesday, and then 4 years were up.  So just do Monday.”  It worked and I graduated Cum Laude.  I have used that advice ever since and have taught my students to think that way, too.

What advice would you give to someone who wants to become a screenwriter?

Firstly, know yourself.  Can you be content sitting alone and writing, facing rejection and rewrites and the long, long process of creating a screenplay someone might want to buy?  Then try to determine if you have the talent to write well, the imagination, the story sense.  Take classes and read books on screenwriting.  Write every day and see all kinds of films and analyze why they work and why they don’t work.  It is such a competitive field that if one doesn’t have the right stuff and isn’t ready for the long haul, it’s best to move on to something else.

What’s next?

I’ve been running workshops in Los Angeles on career development.  I’ve recently become a certified hypnotherapist with the intention of using the techniques to improve people’s careers.  For example, most people are afraid of public speaking, or many don’t interview well, and hypnosis can really improve their performances, along with constructive suggestions and practice.  I am considering doing one-on-one career coach which is something I can do anywhere in the world via phone, skype, email, or in person.

Join us on 7 June at 19h30 for A Night at the Movies with Judith Merians!

Film_Strip7473