Excerpt of Interview with Lew Hunter
Lew is one of the successful Nebraska authors included in my upcoming book with working title Successful Living Nebraska Authors.
Lew and Pamela’s hospitality
welcomes new talent into their Victorian home to aspiring screenwriters. Lew’s
best selling book at the center of his teaching style continues as a textbook for
screenwriting classes at UCLA and internationally. Lew himself has traveled to
many countries teaching his method. Lew's students hold innumerable national
and international awards. Lew defines his book and technique as a ‘how to’
approach.
Pamela’s work as host to
their guests at their Superior Victorian homes glues the experience for
participants into a complete package.
Lew Hunter’s career in media
began in the mid 1950’s while still attending Nebraska
Wesleyan College
in Lincoln , NE. His resume’ in TV and film from writing
for television, screenwriting, producing, directing and other publications pale
next to the man’s zest for life and the Lew who is Lew.
In early correspondence
through email and over the telephone, I warned Lew that I don’t interview as
most other interviewers he may be used to. I work on the premise that no work
is without the person behind it, inside of it and who puts it out in front of
the world.
With a few pre-interview chats
and research of Lew’s website, Lew Hunter’s Screenwriting 434, and
reading an article by Leo Adam Biga, I sent four questions to Lew and Pamela.
We agreed to a telephone interview to take place on May 3, 2012 at 3:00 pm
based on four questions.
Lew, you seem to have a strong sense of hospitality
and friendship. Where does that come from?
I figured out a way to answer
this question by repeating to you the Ten Commandments of Screenwriting by Tom
Shadyec, a big comedy director with Evan Almighty and The Nutty Professor with
Eddy Murphy. The first thing he did was Ace Ventura Pet Detective that he also
co-wrote.
He was in my class, and he
was the youngest writer on Bob Hope’s staff. I asked the class to write their
impression of Lajos Egri. He came back with Lajos Egri’s The Art of Dramatic
Writing. He sent me this, which wasn’t quite what I was looking for, but turned
out to be better than what I was looking for. He starts out,
One late
night as writer’s block set in, my savior Lajos Egri spoke to me from a burning
box of erasable bond so that I might know his laws.
·
1. The following commandments shall be carved in stone
to discourage any revision. Thou shall love the lord thy god Conflict as thyself.
·
2. Thou shall not have false gods: plot, dialogue, or
storyline before character.
·
3. Thou shall not steal, but thou may borrow and make
it thine own.
·
4. Thou shall not kill character with stereotypes,
shallowness, or two-dimensionality
·
5. Thou shall not commit adulltry sic, for as the
great Prophet Lew Hunterious has said after me “the greatest sin of art it
dullness.”
·
6. Thou shall not lie. That’s what agents are for.
·
7. Thou shall keep thy premise wholly.
·
8. Thou shall honor thy father and mother for it is
from them that one learns about oneself that from oneself all art emanates.
·
9. Thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself or this
will cause conflict, the source of all drama, with thy neighbor’s husband.
·
10. Thou shall keep the Sabbath unless thou has a
deadline.
Boy, oh boy, those are all in
their own way total truths, the ten truths in terms of screenwriting, and
storytelling.
“Thou shall honor thy father
and mother for it is from them that one learns about oneself that from oneself all
art emanates.” It’s certainly, in answer to your question, I have to give that
to my parents. My father, known as the nicest and the strongest man in Webster
County, Nebraska; I thought it would be a hell of a burden for me to bear as I
am an only child. It wasn’t any problem, he was just so adorable and such a
tremendous role model.
My mother, on the other hand,
was hell on wheels. She turned out to be the most powerful person in Nebraska in the late
forties or early fifties. She was the chairperson of the Republican Central Committee,
which picked all the senators, governors, congressmen and so forth, in her day.
She was a musician and graduated
when very few women graduated from the University of Nebraska. She graduated with
a major in music an emphasis on the violin; then went on to the New England
Conservatory of Music to get what today we know as a Master’s degree.
When she came back, my father
proposed to her. She said; “I’ll be your bride if I can get two things. One, I
want running water in the house,” which meant she wanted indoor plumbing as he
was a farmer. Number two, she didn’t want to have to raise chickens because she
didn’t want to step in whatever chickens leave behind. He said that would be
fine. She spent her life as a not so simple farmwoman who taught music to
probably everybody in the area, piano specifically and of course violin.
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