By Mary Case
1. What did you do before you decided to create Moondance?
EE - I was a writer, cartoonist, sculptor, artist, screenwriter & playwright,
as well as a theatrical director/producer for about 20 years. I got the
screenwriting bug when working as a technical advisor (on Lakota Sioux
arts & culture) for Kevin Costner & producer, Jim Wilson, on location
in South Dakota during the filming of Dances With Wolves, in 1989. Before
that, I was an interior designer for international, high-end building projects
(hotels, resorts, marinas, estates, palaces in Saudi Arabia, habitat in
Antarctica, Lunar & Mars habitat design for NASA). I also worked as
events coordinator for several international film festivals & environmental
conferences, such as Earth Day, political fund-raising, and Native American
issues.
2. What was your inspiration for Moondance?
EE - Frustration with the Hollywood system. I knew there must be
many talented screenwriters "out there", like me, who might be unable to get
a read, due to the subject matter of their screenplays (non-violent/dramatic/woman-oriented);
their non-L.A. locations; their age (over 30 or 40+); their gender (female);
their lack of produced credits, and lack of insider contacts or a relative/friend
in The Biz. I wanted to offer those women an opportunity to have their
work read by a peer, rather than a typical young, male reader. I also wanted
to give them the chance to get their work to prodcos after winning the
Moondance.
3. What is the overall philosophy & mission of Moondance?
EE - Our work on reaching out toward film-makers and writers everywhere
in the world is primary and ongoing. Writers and film-makers from all
six continents,
and from a wide diversity of ethnic and linguistic groups are an integral
part of our mission and goals. We seek to inspire and invigorate this
creative potential to perceive, conceptualize, and produce their
works for the benefit
of the world society. We are dedicated to preserving their accumulated
accomplishments and visions as expressed through the art of film and
writings.
Moondance also promises to raise awareness of the invaluable contributions
of women to the entertainment community. Equity for women in the film
industry does not mean stifling some voices so that others may be heard;
it does
not demand the compromising of personal standards to achieve success.
Equity creates new standards which accommodate and nurture differences.
Equity
fosters the individual voice, investing women with confidence in their
own authority. Equity unleashes the creative potential. We see the equal
treatment of all women and the equal respect for all responses they explore
as essential to their and our ultimate goals.
Moondance promotes, encourages, educates and rewards non-violent conflict
resolution in the arts & film. Our much-coveted Columbine Awards are
given to the film-makers &/or writers who best depict alternatives
to violence as a method of dealing with conflicts, whether personal, local,
national or international.
The long-term vision of the Moondance International Film Festival is
to preserve and revitalize our intangible heritage, cultivate creative
diversity,
develop an intercultural dialogue, and stimulate this creative resource.
Our mission is to present a vibrant and growing collection of films and
writings, which is an ideal means for communication across perceived
boundaries of race, culture, age and gender. These works document the
complexity and
depth of men's & women's experiences that will become widely accessible
within the world film industry and to the public, and will encourage and
inspire others to write and to make films.
4. What does Elizabeth English like to do besides film and script development
and women’s issues?
EE - I enjoy writing poetry, screenplays, song lyrics, libretti & short
stories, cartooning, and reading, as well as doing in-depth research on
a variety of subjects, such as mythology and traditional tales. I'm now
involved in researching & writing the definitive world encyclopedia
of mermaid art & lore, and have just completed the section on mermaid
myths of the British Isles. I've recently finished my musical animation
feature screenplay adapted from the epic poem, Song of Hiawatha, by Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow. I've recently completed a pilot for a sitcom series
for television & am marketing it. I also like to ride & drive Arabian
horses. For money, I do interior design work & feng shui consultations.
For leisure, if I ever had time for it, I would like to be relaxing on
the beach of a quiet Greek island, watching dolphins frolic in the sparkling
sea. Or just being with my 3 wonderful sons & 3 lovely grandchildren.
5. What do you think turns a good story into a great script and a greater
film?
EE - Depth of characterization, great dialog, and uniqueness of story
concept, well-told & moving, emotionally engaging elements. For films, add great
cinematography & wonderful production values & the director's ability
to visualize the script & translate it to a memorable film.
6. What do you particularly find the most fascinating in a script or a
film?
EE - I'm fascinated by the way writers and filmmakers can take an idea,
message, concept, historical fact or personal experience, and translate
it into
a visual work that can reach, and move, movie audiences, and, for a few
hours, take them into another world, and maybe even change their perceptions
about life and other people.
7. How should a screenplay writer best pursue the marketplace? It sometimes
seems so hopeless.
EE - #1: Learn to write a great screenplay. #2: Never give up. That's
my motto. Perseverence. But a screenwriter absolutely must learn his
or her
craft.
Study with the pros, read all the books, attend seminars, read great
screenplays, watch great films & study them, not as a movie buff, but as a writer.
Figure out what makes them work, and then use that in your own work. Once
you have a really great screenplay or two or three, then you can begin
marketing it/them.
Make connections, schmooze everybody, network, get to know who can help
you get "in" with the next person who may help you. Take seminars
in moving your careers ahead, such as at the Flash Forward Institute. Get
your work out there, via entries in film festivals & competitions and
via online resources, such as Zoetrope.com, WordPlayer.com, WritersScriptNetwork.com,
and TV Writers.com. Attend film festivals & parties. Join e-list groups
of screenwriters & filmmakers. Get an agent or manager. But you still
have to market your stuff without relying on an agent to do it for you.
Win a film festival or competition.
Another possibility is to do it yourself: either do a storyboard of the
screenplay for presentation at a pitch or produce a short film or trailer
of your script to send out to producers.
8. What do you think are the most important steps in screenplay development?
EE
1. Three words: edit, edit, edit. Seriously. Making sure it's the
best, most unique & sellable screenplay or potential film
in the world.
2. Make contacts with anyone in the film industry, anywhere in the world.
3. Win screenplay competitions.
4. Deal only with good, honest, reputable people who care about your screenplay
story, not just the money.
5. Be open to making changes in the script.
6. Never stop learning & growing as a writer. Take classes, read books
on the subject, attend film festivals & conferences.
7. Constantly do re-writes & polishes, as you learn & grow.
8. Update that 10 year-old script, as far as dialog & society or
world events change things, and as you improve as a screenwriter.
9. Be a person with whom producers & directors know they can work.
Friendliness, openness to others' suggestions & positive attitude
make all the difference!
10. Get an agent &/or manager.
9. What projects have you written yourself and how is the marketing going
on those?
EE - I have 10 feature screenplays, 3 short screenplays, 2 animated
musical screenplays, several stageplays, and 5 treatments I'm marketing,
with
the help of my agent, Terry Porter, of Agape productions, a packaging
agency.
I'm writing, on assignment, a feature screenplay for a Greek director
in Athens.
One of my stageplays has won finalist status in the prestigious Alexander
Onassis competition, which is the international theatrical equivalent
of an Oscar® nomination. A short screenplay won the Greek Film Centre's
2001 competition and will be directed by Vangelis Maderakis in the spring
of 2002. Another short screenplay is in early development with a friend
from Dances With Wolves, stills photographer, Ben Glass, who will direct.
My musical animation feature is with Disney composer, Andy Brick, prior
to being submitted to studios. Another short screenplay was a finalist
at the AFI Women Director's Workshops 2001.
10. Do you want to produce and if so, where do you plan to seek the project
you want to develop?
EE - Yes, I want to co-produce films, but I prefer to direct. I also
like to do production design/art director work. If I were to produce
or co-produce
a film, other than one of my own, I would look to the winners & finalists
of Moondance, first.
11. What’s the most exciting thing that’s happened to
you in the development of Moondance International Film Festival?
EE - Seeing the Moondance writers & filmmakers go on to great successes
after the festival. The most pleasant experience I had was at the first
Moondance in 2000, standing in the center of the Moondance labyrinth,
watching happy festival participants dancing along the labyrinth paths
and being
inspired & encouraged by others. That was one of the main goals of
Moondance, and seeing it achieved was what made me so happy.
12. What’s the most disappointing thing that’s happened
to you in the development of the Moondance International Film Festival?
EE - Lack of financial sponsors, frankly. But I'm positive this will
soon be remedied, once we have our non-profit status in place, which
should
be
very soon. I had mistakenly imagined that interested individuals & corporate
sponsors would come out of the woodwork, without thoughts of their own
financial benefits, to offer support for a great cause and organization
working toward equity for women in film, for non-violent conflict resolution
in films & TV, and with absolute top-quality films & screenplays.
13. What’s the funniest thing that’s happened to you in the
history of Moondance International Film Festival?
EE - It's not funny, but is poignant & made me laugh, joyfully. The
very first morning of the first Moondance, I stood alone at 8 AM in the
quiet
foyer of the host hotel, wondering if anyone at all had shown up for
my festival. I slowly opened the double doors to the private dining room,
where I feared I would only see a dozen empty breakfast tables. It was
a "Stella Dallas" moment, I'll tell ya. But when the doors
opened, there were 50 Moondancers seated at those tables, eating and
laughing and
getting to know each other, and another 100 showed up later for the workshops,
then over 1500 people came to the film screenings.
14. What’s next for Elizabeth English?
EE - Making the Moondance International Film Festival even more of
a successful event for our participants and sponsors. I am now in
the process
of forming
a Moondance Foundation, which will administer the film festival events & judging,
co-produce films by Moondancers, subsidize screenwriters & filmmakers
of any age or gender and young (18 & under) filmmakers, educate & promote
writers & filmmakers, produce puppetry theatre, promote non-violent
conflict resolution in film, publish the Moondance magazine, publish
a Moondance Catalog with items made by indigenous families around the
world,
and start a traveling Moondance film festival of selected screenings,
internationally.
Another priority goal is to see films produced from my screenplays!
15. What advice would you offer the emerging screenwriter or filmmaker?
EE - Learn & practice your craft. Don't ever accept mediocrity In
your writing or directing. Never give up. Learn from the best. Cooperate,
rather than
compete. Believe in yourself, no matter what your circumstances are.
Know & never
doubt that you will achieve success, and it will come to you.
15. What’s the best advice anyone has ever given you?
EE - Be open to whatever honorable life path is presented to you.
Be grateful for life, for love and for your innate talents. Write & film
what you know. Leave the world a better place than you found it.
11. When thinking back on the films and scripts that have passed through
your hands in the last three years of Moondance, do you see them in snippets,
loglines, scenes, or whole films?
EE - Whole films. I see the best screenplays as films, too.
12. What do you think makes a film memorable?
EE - An engaging, unique, unforgettable story; directed, produced & acted
well.
13. What do you think readers are really looking for?
EE - A script that they can promote to the next level. A money-script.
14. What do you think the next trend in moviemaking will be?
EE - Less violent conflict-resolution, more positive depictions of
women & girls,
more films with women actors over 40, and more films written, directed
and produced by women.
15. Is there anything else you would like to say to emerging writers, producers,
and film makers?
EE - Now it’s your turn! You can settle for someone else’s
vision of the world, or you can bravely embark upon a journey of your
own. Moondance
is about inspiration, encouragement, collaboration, stimulating self-confidence,
learning new ways of perception and creative expression, and cultivating
a whole new concept of success for women in the international film industry.
There is purposely no elite-ism at Moondance; everyone associated with
the film festival is both a student and a teacher. We seek to support
and nurture dreams and to motivate creative artists to follow that dream,
no
matter the prevailing circumstances. Writers & filmmakers often
perceive the world differently, and their reactions to these perceptions,
expressed
in the art of film, writing and music can invigorate and spark the
creative imaginations of others in the world, especially that of
our children
and the future generations.
Women filmmakers and women writers are vocal and active participants in
the social forces that shape our culture. They portray women as three-dimensional,
complex human beings and thus defy the demeaning and pervasive stereotypes
perpetuated by the mainstream media. Moondance is dedicated to promoting
visibility for women in the international film community and in Hollywood
and their impact on the film industry. We see this as a means to disrupt
and correct the misogynous, fantastical, passive, destructive and denigrating
visual representation of females that has, historically, been rendered
by men in media and has for so long and so plentifully pervaded our visual
culture.
Moondance now encourages men writers and filmmakers to submit their
work to Moondance, but in order to win or be a finalist, or to have
their
films screened at the film festival, we require that their work depict
women & girls
in a positive manner. The annual Moondance International Film Festival,
which takes place in January each year, is for the benefit of both women & men,
and all are encouraged to attend and participate.
Mary
Case passed away December 26, 2002. She will always be fondly remembered
by her many friends and colleagues.
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