Saturday, January 2, 2010

Audio Interview: Leigh Brackett

Normally on Saturdays, we have a written interview, but today we kick off the new year with a special treat: An audio interview with veteran screenwriter Leigh Brackett. Brackett, who died in 1978, has numerous writing credits including The Big Sleep (1946), Rio Bravo (1959), Hatari! (1962), El Dorado (1966), The Long Goodbye (1973), and posthumously Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980). Talk about range!

The interview is conducted by Tony Macklin, who taped numerous interviews with screenwriters (check out his website). Here are his comments re the circumstances of the interview:

My interview with author Leigh Brackett took place in Kinsman, Ohio. I drove with my young daughter on a hot, humid, blazing July 1975 day to Leigh's rural farm house.

She was a gracious hostess and introduced us to her husband, fellow science fiction author Edward Hamilton. A lot of heady imagination was born in that rural locale.

I vividly remember Leigh's making us lemonade to help cool us -- it was pure sugar. My teeth still cringe when I think of it.

On the way home we stopped in the woods by a lake and took a refreshing dip in the warm water.

The whole trip was like a trip to an alien world, where we were welcomed by a fairy godmother.

You can access the interview here.

H/T to Rob Fuller for sending me that link.

3 comments:

GF said...

Saving this for a listen this evening, but thanks for turning up an unexpected treat on one of my favourite screenwriters.
Does anyone on here still read many older scripts and find them of value? Or even just fun? I remember the first time I read Citizen Kane (in Pauline Kael's book) and being thrilled by it, but I was also shocked recently when Carson over at Scriptshadow mentioned in his review of Best Actress that he'd never seen a Joan Crawford or Bette Davis movie. Is the general view that these films and scripts are of no practical use to a working or budding screenwriter in 2010? Does the modern canon start around Die Hard with even Chinatown seen as a bit of an oldie now? Just wondering.

Happy New Year to Scott and everyone here on GITS. Good luck with your projects this year.

(I don't suppose anyone has a PDF of Brackett's script for The Long Goodbye kicking around? Would love to compare it with the final cut.)

Scott said...

GF, do you mind if I promote your thoughts to a front page post? Because I am totally in agreement with you: There is such an incredible legacy of cinema. Why not avail yourself of movies from the 20s, 30s', 40s, and so on?

GF said...

Scott, please do - I'd be honoured.