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Screenwriting for Physicians
Preconference: Friday, October 21, 2005
Sea Crest Oceanfront Resort
Falmouth, Cape Cod, MA


Executive Summary

Screenwriting for Physicians is designed to give aspiring physician-authors what they have never had before: hands-on and practical training on the specific techniques needed to write a saleable screenplay. This course is also beneficial for students not specifically interested in writing screenplays as much of the materials apply to all genres. This preconference was very well received when first presented in 2004 as the above quotes indicate. Don’t miss it.
 

SCHEDULE (Friday, Oct. 21, 2005)

7:30 - 8:30 Registration and Continental Breakfast

8:30 - 9:30 Classic Aristotlean Storytelling or An Engaging Character Overcomes Tremendous Obstacles to Reach a Desirable Goal!

9:30 - 11:00 Screenwriting 101: Everything You Learned In Film School in 90 Minutes or Less!
The Golden Rules of Screenwriting: The basics of storytelling, conflict, establishing a sympathetic character who wants something badly, three-act structure (beginning, middle, end), inciting incident, active pursuit, legitimate manipulation of audience response, overcoming obstacles, THE SILVER RULE - show don’t tell, tension, exposition, genres, books vs. films, characterization, character arc, raising stakes, planting (foreshadowing) and pay-off, and involvement (all illustrated with filmic examples, time permitting).

11:00 - 12:00 Final Draft: Creating a Unified Format
There is a standard format used by all of the Hollywood studios for screenplays. This format is called the master scene format and it is the clearest, cleanest way to tell a visual story. It prioritizes only two things - what the characters do and what they say! Feelings, thoughts, and backstory are the verboten. Show us the story and we must glean everything from what the characters say and do, with the emphasis on the visual over the verbal.

12:00 - 1:00 Lunch With Faculty (Provided)

1:00 - 2:00 What Agents Are Looking For in a New Writer/ Client

2:00 - 3:00 You Don’t Say or The Essence of Good Dialogue!
The basics of good dialogue. This will be illustrated with excerpts from famous Hollywood films:

Why it should be used sparingly
What makes it credible
Why it should add texture to the action not just underline or repeat it
The essence of subtle, artful dialogue that adds to the image system instead of taking the place of the visual

3:00 - 5:00 Friday Afternoon at the Movies or Structure, Structure, Structure!
The key to writing is structure. So, we all will watch excerpts from a classically structured Hollywood film and analyze the heck out of it, including identifying the Act 1, 2, and 3, turning points, unifying filmic devices, climax, etc. Then we will look at the scene-o-gram and how it applies. Further, we will look at causal relationships in stories and the intricate dynamic of sequences, scenes, and beats - taking us to the essence of non-dialogical storytelling.

 

Faculty

Richard Krevolin is an author, playwright, screenwriter, and professor. A graduate of Yale University, Richard went on to earn a masters degree in screenwriting at UCLA’s School of Cinema-Television, and a master’s degree in playwriting and fiction from USC. For 15 years Richard has taught both undergraduate and graduate screenwriting classes at USC Cinema/TV School as well as UCLA Film School, Ithaca and Pepperdine. Under his guidance, his students have sold film scripts and TV shows to Universal, Paramount, Dreamworks SKG and numerous other studios and production companies.

He is the author of the books, Screenwriting From The Soul (St. Martins Press), Pilot Your Life (Prentice-Hall), and How To Adapt Anything Into A Screenplay (Wiley & Sons). Richard has several screenplays under option and in development. Furthermore, his newest script, "How to Shag a Woman Properly" will be shot this year and will be released in 2006. He is also the author of four young adult novels that will be published in the next year.

He was one of the writers of the documentary, Fiddler on the Roof: 30 Years of Tradition. He was a finalist in the $500,000 Kingman Screenwriting Award, the Chesterfield Contest, the Klasky-Csupo Writing for Children Contest, the Nicholl Fellowship Screenwriting Award, the USC One-Act Play Festival, the HBO New Writers Project, and the Eugene O’Neill National Playwrights’ Conference. His one-man show, Yahrzeit, was a huge hit at the Santa Monica Playhouse, running for five sold-out months. Under a new name, Boychik, it opened Off-Broadway at Theater Four in New York City and is now touring the country. He received a Valley Theatre League nomination for best director and best play for his one-man musical RebbeSoul-O.

His play, King Levine opened at the Odyssey Theater under the direction of Joseph Bologna and after receiving rave reviews, transferred to The Tiffany. It was also nominated for an Ovation Award as Best Adaptation. In the past few years, Richard had two one-person plays open in L.A., The Lemony Fresh Scent of Diva Monsoon Man (starring Ruth DeSosa) at the Rose Alley and Seltzer Man (starring David Proval of The Sopranos) at the Tiffany. His newest one man play, MEYER LANSKY, has been translated into Hebrew and will be running in Tel Aviv at the Cameri Theater in 2005. His plays have been performed with Ed Asner, Allen Arbus, Jean Smart, Mackenzie Phillips and Richard Kline.

Krevolin has been a panelist and keynote speaker at a variety of popular writers’ conferences, including the Maui Writer’s Conference, The Santa Fe Screenwriters Conference, the Hollywood Film Festival, The Surrey Writer’s Conference, and The Learning Annex.

Reviews from last year's attendees:

"One of the most interesting days of my recent life."

"I greatly enjoyed this program-I had no prior knowledge of screenwriting, but now feel I know all the important basics."

"Richard’s enthusiastic presentation has made me excited about the possibilities in this field of writing."

"Richard is a great speaker, good at analyzing and
outlining structure of screenwriting."

"I definitely enjoyed the speaker and his excellent
presentation, very dynamic. I did not want to leave the room!"

"Very well presented, enthusiastic lecturer, a great deal of information presented in an easy to follow format."

"Thanks a million, top notch presentation!"

"Excellent."

"Terrific."

"Great."