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Episode 40: Shaping Real Life into Story: a Documentary Editor’s View  Jean Kawahara

Episode 40: Shaping Real Life into Story: a Documentary Editor’s View Jean Kawahara

Jean Kawahara is a documentary editor as well as a writer, and she had great insights into the process of shaping real life events into a story. How do you wrangle thousands of hours of footage into a compelling, small package--on deadline? How do you find, create or support drama? What do you look for when you're looking for story? We talked about forms for crafting story: contests, chronology, rhythm  and the need for omission. We discussed stakes and consequences and how to set them up, the importance of avoiding repeat beats, and the fact that directors and writers often miss perceive which are actually the strongest scenes. We got into the dangers of the desire to explain to your audience what’s going on in your story and the attention span of the modern audience. Jean gave advice about avoiding the fine work before you nail down the broad structure, so you don't get attached to one way of seeing the story unfold. And we looked at endings: how to find and craft an authentic ending out of the ongoing flow of life...

Links Discussed:

Michael Moore, the documentary filmmaker

T-Rex, documentary film

Book in a Year


On Directing by David Mamet

Sergei M. Eisenstein

Claudia Rankings keynote speech at AWP

On James Patterson's publishing collaborative work


Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff


How Champions Think: In Sports and in Life by Bob Rotella; Bob Cullen


The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance by W. Timothy Gallwey; Pete Carroll

Adrienne Rich’s Poetry Became Political, but It Remained Rooted in Material Fact by Wayne Koestenbaum

Hamilton, the musical


Mo' Meta Blues The World According to Questlove by Ahmir Thompson; Ben Greenman; Questlove

Stories We Tell, Directed by  Sarah Polley

The Literature of War: Who gets to tell the story?

Jean Kawahara

Jean Kawahara

 

Jean Kawahara’s independent film credits include the feature documentaries, T-Rex;
City of Borders; Yank Tanks; Of Civil Wrongs and Rights: The Fred Korematsu Story
and the narrative feature, Nail Polish. She was the consulting editor on the
documentary, Semper Fi: Always Faithful, which won the best editing award at the 2011
Tribeca Film Festival and was short-listed for the 2012 Academy Awards. Kawahara co-
edited the New York Times documentary short series, Robotica and several segments
of the YouTube documentary series, American Hipster. She is currently editing a feature
documentary about the first solar powered airplane to fly around the world.
T-Rex premiered at the SXSW Film Festival, won the Audience Award at the San
Francisco Film Festival and will air on PBS’ Independent Lens in August 2016. City of
Borders garnered the Teddy Audience Award at the Berlin Film Festival and aired on
various PBS stations. Yank Tanks was voted Best Documentary at the 2002 Los
Angeles Latino International Film Festival. Of Civil Wrongs and Rights won an Emmy for
Best Editing and Directing at the 2001 National Academy of Television Arts and
Sciences News and Documentary Emmy Awards. The film was also short-listed for the
2001 Academy awards and aired nation-wide on the PBS program P.O.V.
Kawahara edited short films that played at the Sundance Film Festival and received
awards for her commercial work, including a Golden Lion at the Cannes Film Festival
and a Clio.
Kawahara began her career in the San Francisco broadcast television industry as a
writer/producer for a news and entertainment show produced by KPIX in San Francisco.
She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Humanities from UC Berkeley and a Master’s degree in
Ethnic Studies from San Francisco State University.

 

Story Makers is a podcast that features in-depth conversations with accomplished writers, filmmakers and industry experts about story craft, technique, habit and survival--everything you need to know to stay inspired, connect to your creativity, find others’ wonderful stories and your own success.

The hosts:

Elizabeth Stark is a published, agented novelist and distributed filmmaker who teaches and mentors writers at BookWritingWorld.com.

Angie Powers is a distributed filmmaker and published short story writer with an MFA in creative writing and a certificate in screenwriting from UCLA who teaches story structure at BookWritingWorld.com.

Episode 39: The Artist’s Ability: Shaping a Memoir, Shaping a Creative Life, a conversation with author Joyce Scott

Episode 39: The Artist’s Ability: Shaping a Memoir, Shaping a Creative Life, a conversation with author Joyce Scott

Joyce has an amazing, important story to tell about an artist, Joyce’s twin sister Judy, who had so much against her--undiagnosed deafness, Down’s Syndrome in a time when differences were institutionalized, and years away from her family--only to find her artistic “voice” when in their middle age Joyce gained guardianship of Judy and brought her to California and to Creative Growth. Judy became a world-famous artist--and Joyce became a lyrical, honest writer who tells this tale in her new memoir, Entwined: Sisters and Secrets in the Silent World of Artist Judith Scott. We talk about editing and shaping a memoir: what gets cut and what gets kept. We dig into ways of accessing your material, including journaling, wine drinking, storytelling, research early morning writing habits, live writing as things are happening, and note taking or recording your voice while you're walking, or running, or doing anything repetitive. We discuss the importance of writing groups and how to start them, thinking in terms of fiction versus thinking in terms of nonfiction, creating composite characters and how to write dialog for nonfiction. We look at the impact Judy's increasing fame did and did not have on her and how that might be a model for all of us who create--and indeed of the need to create art under any circumstances. Other topics touched on: the crankiness caused by not writing, the entitlement of the artist and her self regard, the ways that people with a variety of abilities can live and create together, the importance of making mistakes, and the principles of simplicity.


Entwined

Links Discussed:

Donna Levin

The Story Makers Show - Meredith Maren episode

The Girls Who Went Away – on Amazon and Indiebound

Anne Lamott

Failed It on Amazon and Indiebound

The Larche Community in France

Facebook: Judith Scott artist and Joyce Scott

Web site: JudithandJoyce.com

Entwined by Joyce Scott on Amazon and Indiebound

 

 

Joyce Scott

Joyce Scott

Joyce Scott, MA,  is the twin sister of Judith Scott. As an RN and developmental specialist she has worked for many years with children with Down Syndrome and other special needs. A long-time resident of Berkeley, California, Joyce has dedicated her life to helping mothers and children. She is also a poet, writer and clinical hypnotherapist.

As an advocate for people with disabilities, she has spoken at international conferences and events in Ireland, England, France and Asia. She has appeared on television in Europe and the United States and spoken at museum and gallery openings, including the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.In 2011 Joyce attended the opening of a major exhibition of Judith's work in London., during which she appeared on a popular BBC arts program, and participated as guest speaker on several public discussion forums.  She then went on to the opening of another exhibition in Paris, and again served on a public discussion panel.

Joyce serves on the advisory board of Creative Growth, the first art center in  the world for  artists with disabilities. She is a founding director of Birthways, a referral and educational service for pregnant women and new mothers.  She is also founder of the Bali Children's Project, a non-profit dedicated to providing educational and art opportunities for  young people in rural Bali.  She is currently engaged in establishing a studio and workshop for artists with disabilities in the mountains of Bali.

Story Makers is a podcast that features in-depth conversations with accomplished writers, filmmakers and industry experts about story craft, technique, habit and survival--everything you need to know to stay inspired, connect to your creativity, find others’ wonderful stories and your own success.

The hosts:

Elizabeth Stark is a published, agented novelist and distributed filmmaker who teaches and mentors writers at BookWritingWorld.com.

Angie Powers is a distributed filmmaker and published short story writer with an MFA in creative writing and a certificate in screenwriting from UCLA who teaches story structure at BookWritingWorld.com.