PRODUCEDBY THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE PRODUCERS GUILD OF AMERICA // OCTOBER | NOVEMBER 2019
THE PRODUCING TEAM THAT PUT THE HUSTLE IN HUSTLERS
P. 30 BETTING ON SHORT-FORM FOR THE LONG HAUL
P. 36
DONALD
DE LINE
“What’s great about being a producer is you never know what the week will bring, breathing new life into something in a way you didn’t think possible the week before.”
F O R
Y O U R
C O N S I D E R A T I O N
OUTSTANDING PRODUCER OF THEATRICAL MOTION PICTURES FINANCIAL TIMES
T H E T E L EG R A P H
C I N E VU E
TIME OUT
V OX
“EXTRAORDINARY.” RO L L I N G STO N E
“NOAH BAUMBACH’S MASTERLY NEW FILM IS HIS BEST YET.” T H E H O L LY W O O D R E PO RT E R
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CAMERA
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*Visit participating dealers for full program details. Not available on select base trims or with some other offers. Take new retail delivery by 01/02/20. ©2019 General Motors. All rights reserved.
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DONALD DE LINE PHOTOGRAPHED BY KREMER JOHNSON PHOTOGRAPHY
FEATURES 18 THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE He’s a studio exec-turned-producer who loves his present and looks forward to his future.
30 STRIP TEED OFF The Hustlers producing team is more in sync than a pole-dancing routine.
36 TAKING A LONG VIEW OF SHORT-FORM Content creators are counting on an appetite for mobile TV.
42 WINNING THE WAR It was a battle to bring The Current War to the big screen.
54 IT’S MAGIC TIME Hawk Koch has fun conjuring up captivating memories.
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FILM STUDENTS IN KENYA TACKLE CLIMATE CHANGE PHOTOGRAPHED BY BRADY VALASHINAS
DEPARTMENTS 7 FROM THE NATIONAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS
14 MENTORING MATTERS Tutorial opportunities abound
Celebrating innovation
8 FIRST PERSON
28 GOING GREEN Envisioning a greener future
Empowering inner-city kids
12 OPEN DOORS
61 MEMBER BENEFITS
50 ON THE SCENE Dodger Day, Diversity Grads
62 NEW MEMBERS 63 PGA HEALTH 64 FAQ: THE PRODUCERS MARK
Universal connection to crews
13 ODD NUMBERS
58 ABOVE AND BEYOND The rewards of getting involved
Villains: We love to hate them
16 THE INTERACTIVE FUTURE
66 BEST ON-SET PHOTO OF ALL TIME Last shot of the last movie star
60 MARKING TIME
Tips for creating choice-driven content
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5
PRESIDENTS Gail Berman
Lucy Fisher
VICE PRESIDENTS, MOTION PICTURES Reginald Hudlin Jon Kilik VICE PRESIDENTS, TELEVISION Gene Stein Lydia Tenaglia VICE PRESIDENT, NEW MEDIA Jenni Ogden VICE PRESIDENT, AP COUNCIL Melissa Friedman VICE PRESIDENTS, PGA EAST William Horberg Kay Rothman TREASURER Megan Mascena Gaspar SECRETARIES OF RECORD Mark Gordon Hawk Koch PRESIDENTS EMERITI Gary Lucchesi Lori McCreary NATIONAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/COO Vance Van Petten NATIONAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/COO Susan Sprung NATIONAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS Stephanie Allain Charles P. Howard Michael Ambers Lynn Hylden Nina Yang Bongiovi Paulette Lifton Stacy Burstin Rosemary Lombard John Canning James Lopez Yolanda T. Cochran Betsy Ockerlund Nolte Donald De Line Bruna Papandrea Mike Farah Kristine Pregot Donna Gigliotti Charles Roven Gary Goetzman Peter Saraf Jennifer A. Haire Angela Victor Marshall Herskovitz Ian Wagner EDITOR Peggy Jo Abraham
PARTNER & BRAND PUBLISHER Emily S. Baker CREATIVE DIRECTOR Ajay Peckham
COPY EDITOR Bob Howells
PHOTOGRAPHERS Kremer Johnson Photography, Shane O’Donnell ADVERTISING Ken Rose 818-312-6880 | ken@moontidemedia.com MANAGING PARTNERS Charles C. Koones Todd Klawin Vol. XV No. 5 Produced By is published six times a year by the Producers Guild of America 8530 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 400 Beverly Hills, CA 90211 310-358-9020 Tel. 310-358-9520 Fax
www.producersguild.org
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FROM THE NATIONAL EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS
CELEBRATING INNOVATION As National Executive Directors of the Producers Guild, we are constantly amazed by the innovative and meaningful content our members create. Nowhere is that more apparent than in the growing number of members producing “new media.” Defined by the PGA nearly 20 years ago, new media remains the most descriptive and inclusive way of referencing productions that are forced into existence from a landscape that’s constantly changing to include more progressive formats, techniques and delivery options. Key to the success of these projects is elevating the viewing experience of the audience—whether it’s giving them an opportunity to interact and make choices that alter the outcome of a story or placing them in an immersive environment. It’s an exciting time, and the Guild is honored to recognize outstanding new media producers by announcing the creation of The PGA Innovation Award. Going forward, this will be an official category of the Producer Guild Awards. We’re very grateful to the entire New Media Council, especially Vice President Jenni Ogden and John Canning. We’d also like to recognize New Media Council delegate Chris Thomes for all his hard work in spearheading the creation of the award. We feel it’s important as a Guild to demonstrate our support and commitment to the many talented producers of new media and look forward to bringing even more attention
to their projects in mixed reality, immersive and interactive storytelling. These groundbreaking producers add new dimension to our profession with works that are innovative and challenge the status quo. Acknowledging the importance of the producing team, the award will be given to a program as a whole, rather than an individual producer. All entries will be reviewed and voted on by a blue-ribbon jury of 13 distinguished leaders in the field of new media. The Guild is extremely proud of the rapid growth we’ve seen within the New Media Council and the many ways its Board serves our members. With the Innovation Award, we’re happy for the opportunity to publicly honor their remarkable work.
“It’s an exciting time, and the Guild is honored to recognize outstanding new media producers by announcing the creation of The PGA Innovation Award.”
Susan Sprung
Vance Van Petten
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F I R S T PERSON
BEYOND THE CAMERA A Producer Uses His Vision to Empower inner-city Kids Written by Vince Allen
THE WORLD OF PRODUCTION IS A WORLD OF TRANSFERABLE SKILLS No matter what kind of entertainment content we produce, situations that need problem solving always arise. Years of experience in this industry have taught me to expect the unexpected. A producer’s job is to make sure all the pieces of a project come together. The road to the finished product, however, is seldom easy. Not only have I gained experience with budgeting, casting, financing, scheduling, location scouting and various elements that go into preproduction, but I have also been thrown into situations that require skills
Take the opportunity to work with your peers and also give opportunities to those who are deserving but may not have the connections that you do.”
beyond the entertainment medium. I have learned the true value of kindness and persistence in everything I do. I’ve found that projecting an aura of patience and understanding is the best answer to dealing with uncomfortable situations. Some people may not seem deserving of this kindness, but at the end of the day, we have to realize that we are all equal. There are so many experiences and lessons to be gained from living the life of a producer.
THERE IS ALWAYS MORE TO LEARN My journey in self-growth and knowledge does not end with production. I continually
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F I R S T PERSON
educate myself in things that I’m passionate about. To have passion toward something is one of the greatest advantages a person can have. “It’s your place in the world; it’s your life. Go on and do all you can with it, and make it the life you want to live,” is a quote by Mae Jemison that I think expresses my philosophy well. If there is something I am interested in, I will make it a point to learn more about it so I can make it a part of my life. A willingness to learn new things can open up a world of opportunities. First, you are preparing yourself to gain more skill than you had prior. Second, you become more aware of your strengths and weaknesses. Third, to realize you have passion is an incredible gift because you have a drive that many people struggle to gain.
MY COMMITMENT BEYOND PRODUCING Eight years ago, I helped initiate Engage the Vision (EngageTheVision.org)—a 501(c) (3) nonprofit organization of which I am the president. Engage the Vision (ETV) is a mentorship program for elementary students in low-income minority neighborhoods. The program was started in Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School in South Central Los Angeles. I, along with a few others, walked into MLK to talk with the principal about the school’s needs and how we could help. We discovered that many young boys in the school did not have positive male role models present in their lives. This sparked the creation of ETV and its Young Kings program. Our mission is to encourage and empower youth through consistent, weekly mentoring; educate and liberate inner-city boys, girls and their families to reach their highest potential; and build strong, effective, self-sufficient and safe communities where everyone is uplifted. We have recently expanded our program to include female students—our Young Queens. Engage the Vision elevates students toward positive future growth by providing the groundwork for maintaining balanced relationships, establishing effective decision-making skills and living
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a healthier lifestyle. We have created this organization with love, and we aim to provide an environment that teaches its Young Kings and Queens to love, respect and lift each other up toward success.
FINDING BALANCE Engage the Vision has been a life-changing experience, and I have loved every second of it. There is no greater joy than seeing the appreciation our kids have for the program. It is always heartwarming to hear how ETV has provided an environment of safety, happiness and excitement for our Kings and Queens. I would not trade the time I have committed to ETV for anything, but I do admit that finding a balance between this organization and my career as a producer can be challenging at times. I have placed my whole heart in both my work and Engage the Vision. It can be difficult to give both equal time and attention. When I feel my heart is torn, I remind myself that all I can do is my best. Giving my energy to my career and the nonprofit is what brings me joy in life.
LETTING GO For anyone interested in joining the entertainment industry, it’s important to remember that the world of production can be stressful, intense and fast-paced. It is valu-
able to go in with this understanding, to keep a thick skin and always remember to have fun in everything you do. Do not take anything too personally. Because tensions can run high in the midst of production, let curt direction and sometimes rude conversation roll off your back, because at the end of the day you will discover that none of it was meant to come off that way. Take the opportunity to work with your peers and also give opportunities to those who are deserving but may not have the connections that you do. You do not always have to work with big names because you think it looks more impressive. What is impressive is gaining new understandings from people in the same position as you that you can use to excel in the future. Lastly, make sure to treat everyone you encounter with kindness, love and respect. I have found this advice never fails—whether you’re working in a paid profession or volunteering your time.
If you’re involved in a fascinating project outside your usual work demands, please let us know. We’d like to highlight your accomplishment. Just send an email about your passion, side job or venture with the topic “First Person” to producedbymag@ producersguild.org.
F O R YO U R C O N S I D E R AT I O N I N A L L C AT E G O R I E S I N C L U D I N G
OUTSTANDING PRODUCER OF THEATRICAL MOTION PICTURES
“
★★★★
AN UNDENIABLE TRIUMPH.” AWARDS CIRCUIT
BRILLIANT.”
“
VARIETY
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UNIVERSAL CONNECTON How to find a diverse, local crew anywhere in the world Written by Lisa Kors
Y
ou need a crew and you need it a Producer” (popular with reality TV great option. fast. You’ve got 48 hours to find producers) to “I Need a Fixer,” “I Need an The latest player in the staffing game is a female DP who speaks Farsi Editor” and “I Need a PA.” Crewvie. The brainchild of PGA members in Fargo. The clock’s ticking—what’s a Dana Melton, a Supervising Producer Marcei Brown and Jeanette Volturno, it producer to do? On top of that, you’re at All3 Media, finds “I Need A Producer” was built, created and is fully owned by looking to hire a diverse crew. an invaluable tool when she has to make women. Their ah-ha moment came when While more-experienced producers quick hires. “It’s a closed group, so not just they were in remote locations that weren’t may have a deep bench of talent to call on, anyone is on there,” Melton says. “They production-friendly and had to staff up newer producers often don’t. For many, the have to know someone already on it to get fast. “I was literally sitting on a boat off of first stop is an online resource like Staff Me approved. Also, my friends in the group an island in Fiji and texting Marcei ideas Up. With its free job posting service, progive me comments on people they know for this site” says Volturno. “We realized ducers can find everything from a sound who’ve responded to my listing. So I usuthere was a need for a database that conmixer in Seattle to a makenected people around the up artist in Minnesota. world with diverse, local The reach of this website crews and vendors.” can also be helpful when With its one-stop shoptrying to find crew in ping approach, Crewvie remote places. There are is positioning itself to 150,000 monthly active become a leader in incluusers on the site. They are sive hiring for your entire required to maintain their call sheet. It has an array current availability so of filtering parameters producers can see who’s that can help producers free in real time. find diverse candidates for But as every producer each position, as well as a knows, time is money. “Dream Team” feature that Sites like Staff Me Up allows them to quickly and others often put earmark crew and vendors producers at the mercy of they like. Dream Team The Crewvie team: coder Camille Alcasid, founders Marcei Brown and Jeanette Volturno, coder Sandra Jimenez subscribers who haplists are private unless the pen to catch their ad on creator opts to share them any given day. And the with other members. response rate can be uneven—from scant ally get two or three qualified candidates What all these tools have in common is replies to an avalanche of candidates. If with personal recommendations.” that they make inclusive hiring incredibly turnaround time is tight, it may be hard to But what if a producer needs to hire an easy for producers working at any scale— cull the hundreds of replies down to a few entire call sheet, including security and from student films to tentpole blockbusters. standout players and vet them fast. catering companies, while also keeping The sites are simple to navigate and free Enter the production Facebook groups. an eye on diversity? The past best pracor low-cost to use. So get searching—the Private groups have sprung up to cover tice of simply rifling through a Rolodex to Latinx drone operator you need in Dubai the entire staffing spectrum from “I Need rehire your crew favorites isn’t usually a could be just a click away. ¢
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O D D NUMBERS
WE LOVE TO HATE THEM A new villain HIT the big screen this fall. When it comes to box office appeal, one thing seems certain—it’s good to be bad.
5% Heath Ledger 58% (The Dark Knight) Jack Nicholson 26% (Batman) Zach Galifianakis 3% (The Lego Batman Movie) Joaquin Phoenix (I don’t even need to 8% see the new film to know he’s the best.)
JOKER, STARRING JOAQUIN PHOENIX, IS IN THEATERS. AT LEAST 22 PEOPLE HAVE PLAYED THE JOKER. WHO DO YOU THINK DID IT BEST?
Jared Leto (Suicide Squad)
32% Alex (A Clockwork Orange) 5% Sian Cla Cersei Lannister (Game of Thrones) 9% Hannibal Lecter (Silence of the Lambs) 37% Thanos (Avengers: Infinity War/Endgame) 17%
WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE VILLAIN?
31% Jaws (The Spy 28% Who Loved Me) Alec Trevelyan 8% (GoldenEye) Le Chiffre 21% (Casino Royale) Ernst Blofeld (On 12% Her Majesty’s Secret
WHO IS THE BEST JAMES BOND VILLAIN?
ILLUSTRATED BY AJAY PECKHAM
Darth Vader (Star Wars)
Goldfinger (Goldfinger)
Service, Spectre)
SURVEY RESULTS ARE A COMPLETELY UNSCIENTIFIC SAMPLING OF RESPONSES FROM PGA MEMBERS, THEIR FRIENDS AND SOCIAL MEDIA. JOIN IN THE FUN. WE WELCOME YOUR VOTE AT PRODUCERSGUILD.ORG/ODDNUMBERS.
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Congratulations to the winners of the 2019 Big Apple Film Festival Screenplay Competition (Summer Edition) Float Me Up by Daniel Talbott Indivisible Mom by Illona Rossman Ho From Here by James Sweeney Wet Rot by Stuart Creque The Lesson by Kimberly Kalaja Pieces, or A West Hollywood Club Called Rage by Chris Phillips Fakenham Hall by Yellowlees Douglas Zodiac: The Chosen by Soledad Lallad For further information on our winning scripts and writers, please e-mail info@bigapplefilmfestival.com
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M E N TOR I NG M AT T E R S
THE POWER OF MENTORING Programs offered by the PGA—and how you can contribute WRITTEN BY BHAVANI RAO
A
guru is often viewed as one of the most sought-after teachers a person can have. They are masters in their field, and with their guidance you can evolve to the next level. There are many versions of a guru, one of them being a mentor. A mentorship is a journey and a partnership in evolution for both mentor and mentee. At the PGA, we want to empower our members with the tools they need to create their stories and tell them confidently in bold new ways. The PGA Mentoring Committee oversees the popular PGA Mentorship Programs, which run throughout the year. These have been hugely successful in pairing people in the feature film, television production, reality and new media genres. The beauty of PGA mentorships is that each one is unique—not just the programs themselves but how you the members interact and learn from your mentors and fellow members.
One-on-One This program pairs up-and-coming producers with experienced PGA members. It also works for already-seasoned producers who might be looking to transition into another field. The mentor-mentee pairs meet or have detailed phone calls and emails at least three times over the six-month mentorship period. Often these relationships last well beyond the actual program.
with small groups of PGA members about their area of expertise.
Base Camp This was created to help fill the gap between reality, documentary, talk and digital producers looking to transition into scripted/episodic fare. Base Camp is a 10-plus-week program. Unlike one-on-one sessions, Base Camp is a practical training program with homework, pop quizzes and guest speakers, supplying our members with the tools they need to make it in the scripted world. The program has mainly been focused on TV, but we are introducing our film program later this year.
Morning Mentors This is the perfect combination of a little nosh and some great insight and advice. Highly regarded producers come in bright and early to have intimate conversations
Shadow Program This is the most coveted and prestigious mentoring program at the PGA. It is a unique opportunity for members to
shadow mentors as they go about their day-to-day work routine. By covering all aspects of production, the mentee gets an opportunity to “live” in the world they aspire to work in on a large scale.
WHAT YOU CAN DO FOR THE PGA MENTORSHIP COMMITTEE We need more committee members willing to help us with finding mentors, running programs and volunteering at events. These programs can only grow and improve if members are willing to step up and help. And we’re always looking for new mentors for all of our programs! If you are on a show and can offer a shadow, we want you. If you have time to work with a mentee oneon-one, we need you. If you love to teach, come help at our Base Camps. Or if you simply have time in the morning to offer advice over coffee and a bagel, let us know. ¢
If you have questions or would like to volunteer, email us at pgamentorapps@gmail.com. For general information, go to producersguild.org/members/group.aspx?id=150375 PRODUCED BY
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THE
INTERACTIVE
Future
I
nteractive movies, television and ads are here to stay. While Netflix’s Black Mirror: Bandersnatch thrust the medium into the mainstream, storytellers have been creating this type of content for decades. In the ’70s, it was participatory role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons. The ’80s brought the Choose Your Own Adventure books, and more recently, video games incorporating narrative choices like those from Telltale Games found great success. Now as a new wave of television and film producers start making choice-driven entertainment for the first time, how does one evolve from writing linear narratives to providing a meaningful level of choice for an audience? Here are five things creators need to keep in mind to make successful interactive content.
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5 Tips For Creating ChoiceDriven Content Written by Alon Benari
1 GIVE VIEWERS A CLEAR ROLE Any main character, whether protagonist or antagonist, needs a clear role and objective (think of Luke Skywalker’s drive to destroy the Death Star, or Darth Vader’s desire to protect it). When viewers know exactly who they are “playing” and how they’re expected to participate, they have a reason to care and to choose one path over another. This helps viewers invest in the story emotionally and feel they have a real stake in its outcome. It’s not just about engagement and “stickiness,” but about emotional connection to the content. When viewers buy in on an emotional level, they are more likely to stay with your story to the end.
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PROVIDE COMPELLING CHOICES
MAKE SURE THE VIEWERS’ CHOICES COUNT
When trying to determine if a choice is meaningful enough, ask yourself if the options presented will create conflict in the viewer. Conflict makes choices emotionally impactful and meaningful. It also makes viewers wonder what would have happened if they had chosen a different path. This investment in turn inspires replayability and also drives conversation with the viewer’s friends about the differences in their choices and the results. To ensure compelling options, avoid clear and easy answers, choices that are just two ways of saying the same thing, and arbitrary choices—go right or go left, for instance. Consider options that spark curiosity in the viewer of where that choice might lead and where it’s not immediately obvious what will happen.
The choices a viewer makes should have an impact. Key to delivering on the promise of truly meaningful choice is showing viewers that their decisions had a real effect in shaping the story and characters. Immediate feedback after a choice has been made is crucial, both in the interface— via a button or sound or animation—and in the story itself. Just like when a user clicks on a website link and expects to navigate to that destination swiftly, so must your interface and story respond to the user’s selections. Most importantly, make sure the final outcome of the story is actually shaped by at least some of the viewers’ choices. They have invested time and attention in your content, and you must pay them back by letting them feel it was worth it.
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KEEP INTERACTIVITY SEAMLESS
MAKE IT INTERACTIVE FROM START TO FINISH
When presenting choices and branches in a story (the point at which the viewer makes a decision that takes the narrative in a specific direction), make sure the flow of the video remains smooth and seamless. Immersion in the narrative is key, but things like clunky interfaces, long awkward pauses or choppy editing will pull viewers out of it. When a choice is presented on-screen and the viewer is making their decision, let characters keep talking or let the action continue in the background. Pay careful attention to the way you edit the branching points after a viewer’s choice. It’s key that the “fork in the road” is not noticeable.
This may sound basic, but it’s important to keep in mind that you are creating an interactive experience and need to deliver on that. The audience has agreed to participate. They are leaning in and waiting to interact with your characters and story. If you don’t deliver with choice and interactivity, they will slide back into a passive viewing experience. Start the interactions early and keep them coming! By following these five tips, storytellers, producers and narrative designers of any background can bring meaningful interactivity to their entertainment projects. The future of entertainment is choice-driven. Don’t be left behind.
Alon Benari is the Chief Creative officer at eko, a media and technology company specializing in choice-driven entertainment.
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Donald
DE LINE INTERVIEW BY PEGGY JO ABRAHAM photographed by kremer johnson photography
T
he first thing you notice is his big, broad smile. Donald De Line looks genuinely happy to be where he is, doing what he’s doing. It is no doubt one of the many reasons he’s had such a long, successful career in the entertainment industry. De Line began as a studio executive before transitioning to a full-time producer. He totally understands the symbiotic relationship between the two career paths and credits his time running studios with making him a more involved, aware and participatory producer. De Line’s approach to his work is based on a collaborative style of leadership, which perfectly suits this easygoing, dedicated filmmaker. He loves being on set and looking after his crew by anticipating and solving problems. He also enjoys being part of the tight-knit family that forms during a production and is genuinely grateful for the friendships that come from working together. De Line’s curiosity and varied interests are apparent when you look at the breadth of his films—The Italian Job; I Love You, Man; Green Lantern and Ready Player
One, to name a few. As a studio exec, he was tasked with coming up with a broad slate, and that mentality has informed his producing. He’s up for anything as long as it’s a great story. His openness carries over into his acceptance of and excitement about the rapidly changing production landscape and the emergence of streaming content. True to form, De Line’s upcoming projects are an amalgam of interesting stories and perspectives. There’s the YA movie based on the classic book The Phantom Tollbooth. It’s a hybrid live action/CGI film. Then there’s Marian, a retelling of the Robin Hood myth from the perspective of Maid Marian. As De Line puts it, “It was really always the woman behind the man and not the man.” And he’s looking forward to a limited series called The Man in the Rockefeller Suit, the true story of a guy who impersonated being a Rockefeller for 20 years. Think a real-life version of The Talented Mr. Ripley. So wherever your future film tastes lead you, expect to meet up with a smiling Donald De Line. I guarantee he’ll be happy to see you.
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THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE
WHAT FIRST ATTRACTED YOU TO THE ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY? When I was a kid, my family’s big activity every weekend was going to the movies. It was something that as far back as I can remember, I looked forward to. There was lots of debate and discussion about it, as we pored over the theater section in the Saturday and Sunday papers. So it was just something that was always a big part of my life. I found it to be such a transportive experience; it was something that affected me emotionally in a huge way, and it was just always a big part of my life.
WAS THERE ANYONE OR ANYTHING IN PARTICULAR THAT INSPIRED YOU EARLY ON? The access I had to the movie business as a kid was from our elementary school library. It was a series of biographies of different famous people throughout history. One I discovered was on Cecil B. DeMille. So I read his biography to learn what a movie director and producer did and how that worked. And it was just fascinating to me. I realized that that was someone’s job and it opened my eyes to that world.
REALLY? IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL? THAT IS SO RANDOM. Yes. Cecil B. DeMille. It was in first or second grade.
YOU STARTED IN THE BUSINESS AS A STUDIO EXECUTIVE. WAS THERE ANYTHING IN PARTICULAR YOU LEARNED AS AN EXECUTIVE THAT REALLY HELPED YOUR TRANSITION TO PRODUCING? Absolutely. First of all, I think any studio executive is a better studio executive if they’ve been a producer. And I think any producer is a better producer if they’ve been a studio executive. Because we work hand in glove. To really have an understanding of what goes on—on each side—behind the curtain, is very, very helpful. We need each other. So I felt that having 13 years under my belt as a studio executive was very useful for me in terms
them feel taken care of, appreciated, and valued for their time and effort. A happy cast and a happy crew are critical to the outcome of a film. You want people to do their best and give what they have at their highest level.
There’s just something about the creative process and watching a film come to life that’s like nothing else.” of developing skills to deal with people and in delegating. As a producer, you have to be a leader on the set. You’re the parent. Being an executive taught me a lot about how to walk onto a set and assume that role and make people feel supported, make
DO YOU ENJOY SPENDING TIME ON THE SET? Yes. I’m a producer who loves being on set. I get there at call in the morning. My job is to check in with the director, take a mood temperature, suss out whether or not everybody is happy, get a bead on any issues that might be brewing. Basically get the lay of the land. It’s so funny because I’m very close with my sister, and years ago when I transitioned from being a studio executive to being a producer, when I would call her she would say, “Oh, you must be on set.” I’d ask, “How do you know?” And she’d say, “Because you sound so happy. You’re always happiest when you’re on set.” There’s just something about the creative process and watching a film come to life that’s like nothing else. It’s incredibly satisfying.
I FEEL LIKE IF I WERE PART OF YOUR TEAM, I WOULD REALLY APPRECIATE THAT INVOLVEMENT AND SUPPORT FROM THE PRODUCER. I’ve had a lot of positive feedback that way over the years, whether it’s from a makeup or hair person or a prop person—any aspect of production. And then I’ll hear stories about them having experienced the opposite. So yes, I do think it matters.
WHEN YOU MADE THAT TRANSITION TO PRODUCER, WAS THERE ANYTHING EARLY ON THAT SURPRISED YOU? [LAUGHS] Yeah. It surprised me how little I really knew about what went on in the actual making of a movie. As an executive, I had dealt with so many movies for so many years and visited lots of sets, watched lots of dailies and been involved in everything from developing scripts to
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THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE
seeing cuts of movies in postproduction. But to really be there behind the scenes and experience it is entirely different. It gave me great appreciation for what producers do. Of course, to a large degree, I already had that appreciation. I was very much an executive who valued strong producers, and I always felt they made my job much easier. I always slept better at night when I knew there was a strong producer on set.
BUT ONCE YOU JUMPED INTO IT YOU HAD EVEN MORE APPRECIATION? A hundred percent. It really opened my eyes to the way things get done—what it’s like for a director on a given day to be faced with so many decisions under great pressure. As an executive you can sit in an office and say, “Well, why doesn’t he or she just do X, Y or Z?” It’s really not that easy.
THEM ALL. DO YOU HAVE A FAVORITE GENRE YOU TEND TO LOOK FOR MORE THAN OTHERS? It’s really interesting you bring that up. I’ve thought about that before, and I think part of it is a result of having been a studio executive for a long time before I was a producer. Because as a studio executive I had to have a slate of movies to put out every year, so there’s some for family, some comedy, some drama. And I was used to thinking of a broad slate of films. So when I became a producer I kind of approached developing that same way.
I WAS THINKING ABOUT READY PLAYER ONE . I CAN ONLY IMAGINE THAT WHEN YOU WORK WITH STEVEN SPIELBERG IT PUTS A PROJECT IN ANOTHER DIMENSION. Yes, it does.
YOU HAVE PRODUCED FILMS FROM SO MANY DIFFERENT GENRES. HEIST MOVIES, ROM-COMS, BIOPICS, ACTION THRILLERS—YOU’VE MADE
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THAT BEING SAID, WERE THERE ANY PARTICULAR LESSONS YOU LEARNED THAT WERE SPECIFIC TO WORKING WITH HIM,
Mark Wahlberg, Ari Emanuel, Michael Bay, De Line and Dwayne Johnson check out dailies on Pain & Gain; Donald De Line on the Warner Bros. lot, where he has his production company
ANYTHING THAT MADE THAT A DIFFERENT EXPERIENCE? He’s just amazing for the singular talent he brings to everything he does, not to mention his work ethic is incredible. He would get there two hours before the call time, already working with his editor before the crew arrived in the morning. During lunch he’d be back in the editing room or shooting on the motion capture stage. He never wasted a minute. It was really something to see. I’ve worked with a lot of different directors, and all directors are hardworking. You can’t direct if you’re not hardworking. But he really takes it to another level.
THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE
IN TERMS OF PROBLEM SOLVING, YOU SAID YOU LIKE TO BE THERE IN PERSON, ON THE SET. IS YOUR PROCESS A COLLABORATIVE ONE? I absolutely view it as collaborative. Some people enjoy collaboration more than others. It’s important that it’s approached that way, though. It’s the only way it can happen correctly, really. So yes, I try to stay ahead of potential problems and potential pitfalls. I communicate a lot with the line producer, with the AD, with the heads of departments. I know what people’s issues are. I know what they’re worried about. I know if something is
upcoming that will stress certain people out. I’m always looking for ways to make sure we continue on a smooth path and try to stave off something that could make us stumble. If you realize you’re not going to make your day, everyone will be pulling their scripts out trying to figure out what we might do more efficiently, what we might be able to cut, what we might be able to push along in the schedule. That’s part of what I love about it. It’s puzzle solving with a timer going, in the best way. [LAUGHS]
IS THERE ANYTHING THAT YOU HAVEN’T DONE IN YOUR
CAREER THAT YOU STILL WANT TO DO—EITHER IN THE INDUSTRY OR NOT? Oh, that’s super interesting. I would like to write, whether it’s a screenplay or a novel. So much of my life is reading, whether it’s scripts or books, and so much of my material comes from books, so it’s all kind of interconnected in my brain. I love writers, and I have such respect for them. I’ve always wondered, “Could I do it? What would it be like?” I work with writers every day. I’d like to be able to put myself in their shoes and understand their process and their experience in a way that I don’t think I ever truly
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THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE
De Line enjoys a laugh with Michael Caine, Alan Arkin, Morgan Freeman, in scene from Going in Style
could unless I tried it myself. But that is something that I’ve just been too scared to try, so far.
might become another project, or making calls back to my office and trying to stay up on business.
IT’S VERY INTIMIDATING, I THINK.
SO BASICALLY YOU’RE DOING WORK IN BETWEEN WORK?
It is intimidating and yet I know plenty of people who all of a sudden I’ll run into— somebody who was a studio executive or a producer—and they’ll say, “Oh, I wrote a book.” Or, “I sold a script.” And I think it’s the greatest thing in the world. It’s all about growing, learning, broadening your horizons in life. We only have a finite amount of time. And really, it’s something I would like to accomplish.
WHAT DO YOU LIKE TO DO DURING DOWNTIME ON A SET, BETWEEN TAKES? If there’s not something that has to be paid attention to on the set, I’m trying to keep my other stuff going. So I’m either reading other projects, or reading what
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Exactly, exactly, yeah, just more work.
road where you thought, “No, this can never work,” oftentimes I’ve found the absolute best things have come from that. It leads to completely unexpected discoveries. A problem can be your greatest gift in disguise. Most importantly, a producer must always protect the story. We can never take our eyes off the story.
WHAT DO YOU THINK IS THE HARDEST PART ABOUT BEING A PRODUCER?
WHAT ARE SOME OTHER FUN PARTS OF THE JOB?
I suppose it’s balancing your responsibility to creatively do what’s best for the movie with being fiscally responsible to your financiers and staying within the box that you’ve agreed upon. That can be very tough and very challenging and put you in hard positions a lot of the time. It’s not always easy to make both sides happy. But I find that’s part of what’s fun about the job. You can always come up with a solution. And when you’re forced into going down a
I find one of the most thrilling things is I have a profound respect for editors, and I think brilliant editors are kind of the unsung heroes of our business. I’ve seen an editor create alchemy out of their own idea—their own thought about what a moment could be—that is completely brilliant and not what anyone intended, and then it turns out to be the best of all. I am just in awe of that. So I love the postproduction process and watching editors work. I love talking to editors
Heaven to Filmmakers. Liz Gilman Executive Producer 515.725.0044 liz.gilman@iowa.gov produceiowa.com
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THE COVER: DONALD DE LINE
Michael Wright, Zak Penn, De Line and Steven Spielberg get to the point filming Ready Player One
“A HAPPY CAST AND A HAPPY CREW ARE CRITICAL TO THE OUTCOME OF A FILM. YOU WANT PEOPLE TO DO THEIR BEST AND GIVE WHAT THEY HAVE AT THEIR HIGHEST LEVEL.” about why they made choices or how they did things. I know what an editor can accomplish, and I think that most people don’t, and I wish they were better understood and celebrated.
WHAT CHANGE IN THE INDUSTRY HAVE YOU EMBRACED MOST? I’m embracing all of the change that we’re in right now. We are in a difficult transition period with the shrinking of
the traditional movie business. We are learning to adapt to a lot of new things and new ways of watching movies with the advent of the streamers. At first I was resistant. I’m now open and embracing of it. The appetite for smaller movies is diminishing at studios, but the streaming business is healthy and robust and wants those movies. And that’s a great thing. I don’t separate those two things anymore. I look at them all as just opportunities to tell good stories and get films made.
SO DOES THAT MEAN YOU’RE READY TO TELL YOUR THREE ACTS IN 10 MINUTES, LIKE ON QUIBI? You know what? I want to learn that form too—a complete experience in 10 minutes. That’s fantastic. I’ve never done it before. I’m game. That might be the most fun I’ve ever had!
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PHOTOGRAPHED BY GERSON LEIVA
GOING GREEN
ENVISIONING A GREENER FUTURE FILM STUDENTS IN KENYA CONFRONT CLIMATE CHANGE Written by Katie Carpenter
P
icture this: a young African woman is racing down a stretch of savanna, baseball hat, blouse drifting behind her, armed with a butterfly net. As the glare clears from the lens, we see she is chasing a bright orange butterfly, weaving in the sub-Saharan sun. Ivy is laughing at her companion, another Kenyan entomologist. He can’t keep up with his swift lab partner. “Run, run, run,” she chides in her African lilt, laughing as she leaps forward to catch her prey. The African queen butterfly the two scientists take back to their bush lab at the Mpala Research Center tells a story of the global pollinator crisis and the impact of climate change on our world. The drama will unfold in a stunning film, with shallow depth of field, bright colors, photogenic locations and catchy African rhythms. Best of all, it’s a tale told through a character unquestion-
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ably ready for her close-up. Maybe Hollywood could use a dose of Ivy. “Why Is Hollywood So Scared of Climate Change?” That was the headline on a recent New York Times article, and when I was called for a response, I did a little research. Only three studies pop up on the topic of why more stories about climate change don’t appear in U.S. film or TV. The results are stark. One study determined that out of more than 800 movies released last year, the total with foreground climate themes was three. Most blockbusters that touch on environmental themes are focused on conflict, politics or mayhem. Avengers: Infinity War and Aquaman come to mind—hardly the level of engagement in the issue we’re looking for. I recall a thoughtful scene on a farm in Interstellar and a symbolic storm in Beasts of the Southern Wild.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY BRADY VALASHINAS
GOING GREEN
We can’t overlook Downsizing from 2017 or Young Ones in 2014. Still, a paltry showing. If features tend to ignore climate change, you might think television news surely must be on the case. But just when experts are predicting worsening impacts from climate change, we learn from Media Matters that “Broadcast TV news coverage of climate change plummeted 45% from 2017 to 2018, even as the climate crisis steadily worsened.” One studio exec told me the lack of coverage is largely because climate is still a divisive issue, and producers and studios need to sell tickets or get high ratings. This year, though, the UN reported that sea level is rising faster than expected—temperatures too. Can we doubt there is human drama in that? I was recently in Kenya teaching documentary film to a class of American and Kenyan undergraduates in the Princeton Global Seminar. They learned camera, sound and editing, but also how to create innovative films about climate and conservation that would engage audiences around the world, in spite of the clear resistance and polarization. I saw an opportunity to conduct an experiment: Could fresh young minds with movie cameras and a passion for wildlife and wilderness take on climate and conservation differently? Could they get their films to reach beyond “the converted” audience and out to audiences everywhere? Five hours north of Nairobi in rural Laikipia County, stories of drought, hunger, thirst and endangered wildlife reign. There are also powerful tales of resilience and compassion. It’s a beautiful, heartbreaking and mesmerizing country, a frame that is rich with opportunities to talk about climate change and conservation without dividing audiences. I have spent time in Africa, producing films about elephant poaching, flamingos in decline, crocodiles hunted for their skins and other endangered species. Now the lens needs to be widened, for none of those stories is complete without addressing climate change. To prime the students, we spent the first week tucked away in a rustic classroom, serenaded by noisy hornbills and pinstriped guinea fowl, screening environmental documentaries. We diagrammed
them, discussed them and evaluated their elements, asking why they thought some succeeded and others failed. After that first week, the bleary-eyed novice filmmakers began high-end camera training, research and interviews. Some of the scientists we shared our campus with came to talk about the reality of African environmental issues. The most often repeated stories were about the increase in human-wildlife conflict and scarcity of water. These were dark themes, and bringing them to life in engaging ways would be a challenge. Two weeks in, the students began producing their film projects, each an eight- to 10-minute “conservation short” on a globally relevant topic. In the end, they created short works of surprising power. Their films were original, refreshing and bordering on radical. The one about butterflies brought tears to our eyes. Another about small farmers standing their ground in a fight for water—while the supply is declining and mechanized farms are using huge pumps to steal it out of the river that runs between them—brought us to our feet. The personal profiles of a charismatic ranger and a wildlife veterinarian conveyed the looming extinction of the northern white rhino. The last two on the planet were located on a nearby reserve. Climate change was a plotline in every film. We were blown away. The productions were low-impact. No animals were harmed, no climate was changed. Instead of huge Range Rover Defender safari vehicles, choppers and small planes, this group shot using cargo-carrying bicycles called boda boda bikes and a small drone operating on rechargeable batteries. We lit our night shots with headlamps. We had no printed scripts, no plastic, and we recycled everything. We drank rainwater and cooked over a fire. Clearly that would be hard to duplicate in Hollywood, but we need to up our game. Our films have to be more persuasive, cheaper, greener. We need to work with purpose, compassion and ingenuity, while telling a great story with amazing characters. Box office numbers and ratings will come. Maybe this is the year conservation shorts will break out. This fall, filmmakers, network heads and foreign buyers will gather at the Jackson Hole Wild Film Festival to celebrate environmental films. I have won at Jackson with two of my recent films, on elephant poaching and ocean conservation. This time I’m judging the category of Conservation Shorts, which includes an entry from Richard Branson on endangered rhinos, along with others on rising sea levels and burning rainforests and their impact on wildlife. I’m delighted that some of the participants in our Mpala film course applied to travel to the festival from Kenya to learn more about filmmaking in the wild from the veterans. The rich programming to be offered at Jackson Wild is tantalizing, and yet the Mpala students just might have more to teach than they have to learn. Green production guidelines, vendors and inspiration can be found at www.greenproductionguide.com
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Teed Off Meet the producing team that’s more in sync than a pole dancing routine written By Kevin Perry photographed by shane o’donnell
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Jessica Elbaum and producing partner Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas
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s the battle of the sexes rages through our human condition, we struggle to understand the other while simultaneously clamoring to define our own community. Who are we, what are we capable of, and how can we achieve the next stage in our collective evolution as the constant refrain of us-versus-them clouds our progress? These questions are at the heart of Hustlers, and Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas’ office is a hotbed of finger-pointing—but in the most gloriously upbeat way imaginable. “These are two female producers who embraced each other’s strengths,” Goldsmith-Thomas beams as she points admiringly toward her producing partner-in-crime, Jessica Elbaum. “Make no mistake, this woman …” “And this woman!” Elbaum can’t help but interject with her own declaration of solidarity, gesturing right back. Maneuvering the praise train back on track, Goldsmith-Thomas continues, “I would work with her in a heartbeat. She has great taste. We make movies for everyone; we just happen to be women.” The two producers pooled their considerable talent to bring Hustlers to lascivious life. The bad-girls-gone-worse tale depicts a cabal of opportunistic exotic dancers who prey upon their male clientele to bilk them of their cash made in the glitzy underbelly of Wall Street, circa the onset of the Great Recession. “This is a movie, in my estimation, about the American dream. It’s about power, it’s about greed,” says GoldsmithThomas. Finishing the pitch, Elbaum adds, “The rise and fall.” Their words dovetail effortlessly as Goldsmith-Thomas forges ahead. “It’s about people, who in this case happen to be a group of women, who played the game and then played too far, not unlike the Wall Street guys. Only these women probably got punished more. I wouldn’t say it’s female empowerment. I would say it’s about …” “Getting what’s yours.” Elbaum once again punctuates her partner’s sentiment
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with femme finality. Much like the characters in Hustlers, this producing pair has been alchemizing adversity into cinematic gold ever since they began charting their own respective filmmaking tracks. Goldsmith-Thomas worked as an agent for years, which is how she started her whirlwind collaboration with Jennifer Lopez. Meanwhile Elbaum had been yukking it up with comedy moguls Adam McKay and Will Ferrell. Soon their destinies would converge around a true crime exposé about a gang of vigilante strippers. Jessica Pressler’s 2015 New York Magazine article, “The Hustlers at Scores,” set in the midst of the global economic meltdown of 2008, was going viral. “I had the article sent to me from Adam McKay,” recounts Elbaum. “And Jessica Pressler had sent it to him because she interviewed him right around The Big Short. So he forwarded it to me, and I knew right away that there was something there. I sat with Pressler and got the rights. We were off to the races. Shortly after, we hired Lorene to write it and then eventually direct it.” Elbaum is referring to Lorene Scafaria, the visionary helmer of Hustlers, who was also on the radar of one Elaine GoldsmithThomas. “I had heard about Hustlers, I was tracking it, I was sort of doing my legwork, so it was divine providence that Lorene loved it and I was chasing it. It was one of those things where the ‘yes’ was within grasp, because for me everything is, ‘How hard do I have to work to get the yes?’ In a business of no.” One way to pave your path with success is to
enlist the help of a true icon. “Lorene said from day one, ‘This has to be Jennifer Lopez. Ramona has to be Jennifer Lopez. She’s all I see when I write this, she’s all I see when I think about shooting this,’ and the dream came true.” Goldsmith-Thomas echoes her director’s words, reminiscing about how J-Lo was “a ll in as a producer, all in as a star, understood and embraced it as a supporting role, saw it for what it could be and immediately gave notes. I can’t stress how involved Jennifer was and how much she believed in both Lorene and what this project was saying. It’s one of the things I love most about Jennifer, because she’s super smart. She didn’t do this for money; she did this because she knew who Ramona needed to be and the many layers of this very complicated character.” Complexity proved to be a mighty sword, and its edges soon began to cut both ways. “What was tricky about this script is
“THAT’S WHY WE WANTED CARDI IN IT. NOT JUST TO MAKE IT AN EVENT, BUT SHE HAD GREAT EMPATHY FOR WHO THESE WOMEN WERE AND WAS UNAPOLOGETIC.”
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that the women, y’know, you root for them and then they go too far. They’re drugging people!” exclaims Goldsmith-Thomas. “We were uncompromising. We didn’t want to say that they only went after the rapists or the bad guys. They started with the bad guys, then they got greedy, much like the bad guys. It’s Wolf of Wall Street.” Elbaum concurs, “The Wall Street guys didn’t only go after certain people. They didn’t give a shit! They went after innocent, gray-haired, anybody. It was like feast or famine.” “I worked as hard as I’ve ever worked to help Lorene maintain her vision, to not compromise the truth of the story or the commerciality,” says Goldsmith-Thomas. “This is hard, but it’s OK. It makes us work harder. It creates more of a mountain for us to blast through. There was a cartoon when I was young—this little kinda funnylookin’ guy would go up to a mountain and scream, ‘Vavoom!’ And the mountain
would blow apart. Like a little Super Mario guy. Then he’d sort of walk through and reach another mountain and go, ‘Vavoom!’ And I think that imprinted on me. It’s not like I shout at the mountains, but I look at them and strategically think, ‘OK, how do I get over this one?’” As this question rang through the metaphorical creative canyons, a cavalry rode in to answer it. “Everybody brought something to the table,” adds Elbaum. “That’s what was so great about this team.” “Lorene had a DP that she fought for,” extols Goldsmith-Thomas, heralding the cinematographic virtues of Todd Banhalz. “Fought for!” seconds Elbaum. “She reached out to him, met with him very early on and they started setting the look even before we were green-lit. They had been working on this for years. We had a very truncated prep and it was go, go, go, but thankfully Lorene and Todd had been really at this for several months.”
In addition to their A-plus crew, there was more star wattage behind the scenes of Hustlers than most movies have on the screen. Will Ferrell was one of the film’s champions, and fellow producer Lopez tried to entice him to join their proverbial lap dance. Goldsmith-Thomas recalls, “Will showed up on the set and everybody was so excited. Jennifer was like, ‘Put Will in the movie!’” Lopez was also instrumental in wrangling one of the world’s hottest musicians to enlist in the mayhem. “Jennifer said, ‘You know who should do this—because she understands this story and she doesn’t judge these women, and she fundamentally inhabits it—is Cardi.’” The Cardi in question is Ms. B herself, the first solo female artist to snag a Grammy for Best Rap Album, so she knows a thing or two about beating the men at their own game. “That’s why we wanted Cardi in it,” says Goldsmith-Thomas, “not
Jennifer Lopez gets direction from Lorene Scafaria on the set of Hustlers
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Producers Jessica Elbaum, Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas (front) with executive producers Alex Brown, Pamela Thur
just to make it an event, but she had great empathy for who these women were and was unapologetic. She understood why they did it. That’s hard.” On the topic of difficulty, fitting into Cardi B’s calendar proved to be a herculean task. “Her schedule was so challenging, and she had concerts, and our schedule was so condensed,” Goldsmith-Thomas explains. “Cardi would do live Instagrams, and I would go, ‘Do Hustlers!’ I would go on Instagram.” “That’s how we knew where she was,” Elbaum continues. “And I would track her!” finishes Goldsmith-Thomas. This zeal would soon pay off with a cast that rounded out the producers’ vision. The headliner was fresh off a year of acclaim and ceiling-shattering of her own, so they were thrilled when Constance Wu said yes. She was clearly right for the story. Crazy Rich Asians star Wu brings her signature mix of humor, savvy and
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vulnerability to the Hustlers leading role. Surveying the resulting star power of their troupe, Elbaum calls the film “a movie that will be eventized so that people will leave their houses to go see it.” “It was a very bumpy, rocky road,” she continues, “but really Elaine got this set up.” Eschewing the spotlight in favor of humility, Goldsmith-Thomas responds, “We’re all sort of dancing, right? We’re all doing the dance, and I guess I would sort of pull back and say, ‘What does it take to get a movie made now?’ Forget about female or male. What does it take to get a movie, that isn’t a Marvel film, made?” Gleefully answering the rhetorical throwdown, Elbaum sings, “Some dancin’!” The exchange elicits a shared laugh between the two before Goldsmith-Thomas elaborates, “And it takes hustle. So you’re looking at the hustlers behind Hustlers.” “It was a journey,” admits Elbaum, “but a journey that led us to finding each other and finding all the right people, and
I think that it finally landed in the hands that it needed to be in.” In fact, the quest often led the team upstream(ing), but they survived the deluge together. “I’ve never seen it as difficult as it is now, because we’re in transition,” Goldsmith-Thomas assesses. “We’re slowly becoming a streaming industry, which is fine, by the way. The streamers saw this script and loved it, but wanted it to be black and white, no shades. It’s not tied up in a bow. I would love to know what people think. It’s an amorality tale, so our heroes sometimes slip.” When asked to predict their postrelease fortune, she once again turns to Elbaum. “By October, I hope I’m in production, I hope you’re in post. I hope the world is a little bit happier and richer and clearer and that the mountains—for a minute—don’t need to be scaled.” Mountain or no mountain, things are really looking up for the women who conquered Hustlers.
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Taking a Long View of
Short-Form Quibi and others are counting on an appetite for mobile TV Written By Chris Thomes
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In a world where it feels like there can never be enough content to satiate the ravenous “I want what I want when I want it” viewer, it seems that any content— even nontraditional programming—can find its legs and make a go of it. However, there is one area of programming that has yet to actually make it over the top of the hill without rolling back—which it has many, many times— premium small-screen programming. I have written about this format for the past several years, and the story is always the same. A wave of enthusiasm comes along, investment happens, jobs are created, content is produced, and then, without a sustainable business model, it all unravels. This wash, rinse, repeat cycle has included the wrecked ships of Disney’s Stage 9 and Maker Studios, Go90, Machinema and Vessel. While all of these platforms have tried and failed to find an audience for short-form video programming, it looks like “groundhog day” may actually be coming to an end. With a very serious $1 billion-plus programming budget, Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman’s premium short-form platform, Quibi, leads this latest run at the windmill. As a refresher, mobile content of this ilk is under 14 minutes, has high production value, is original or derivative in nature, and often serialized. Most of it to date has been lifestyle programming. Very rarely has scripted shortform made a go of it, but it did have its day a few years back. Spurred on by the launches of streaming services and content slates like Seeso, Fullscreen, ABC’s ABCd, and Comcast’s Watchable, dozens of short-form content studios emerged to capitalize on the voracious appetite for stories told in 10- to 15-minute increments. But the market was short-lived, as subscribers failed to materialize and digital advertising competition from Google and Facebook made it hard to recoup budgets. However, as mobile consumption continues to grow, Hollywood’s digital producers have been turning their attention to a new crop of potential
buyers with increasingly deeper pockets. Over the last two years, the major streamers (Netflix, Amazon and Hulu) started experimenting with show formats and lengths. Amazon funded Funny or Die’s short films, Netflix funded new episodes of Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (which range from nine to 23 minutes each), and even Hulu started to populate ancillary short-form programming alongside its related main shows in the extras section. Driving this momentum for the streamers is the notion that short-form series have started to become a cost-effective way to keep fickle young viewers engaged between, say, new seasons of Stranger Things or The Handmaid’s Tale. The average cost of a digital project is typically about $10,000 per minute, but that can stretch higher than $20,000 if a project or the talent (actors, writers, director) warrants. Those budgets might have been more than the digital ad market could bear in the early, sponsor-supported days of short-form, but they are a fraction of the billions of dollars that Netflix and other streamers spend on programming every year. Professional organizations are also starting to recognize the seriousness of the short-form market. Our own PGA now honors short-form with its Outstanding Digital Series award, and the Television Academy has several Emmy categories for short-form programs including animation, drama, comedy, variety, and actress and actor in a short-form drama or comedy series. All of this interest is dwarfed, though, by Quibi’s investment in the space. Initially, Katzenberg raised nearly $600 million from investors to put up a shingle for his new digital media and technology investment firm WndrCo in early 2017. Then, at the tail end of 2018, having teamed up with former eBay CEO Whitman, Katzenberg
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TAKING A LONG VIEW OF SHORT-FORM
launched Quibi, a short-form, mobile-based subscription streaming service that debuts next year. With $1 billion in backing initially from the likes of Disney, WarnerMedia, Fox, Viacom and NBCU, among others, Katzenberg and Whitman started with a lot of muscle. And their approach has moxie, too. At the Produced By Conference this past June, Whitman touted that “We’re the first OTT service launched without acquiring a library,” which means all that investment will disappear pretty quickly as they ready their service for debut. Quibi isn’t the only major player investing in this space. Former Lionsgate co-COO and Motion Picture Group co-president Steve Beeks and former Fox Division president Mike Dunn have launched Elemental Content And Solutions, a new short-form production and distribution company that will be a fulcrum for funding and creating live action and animated series, told in three- to five-minute segments. Like Quibi, they are betting the 18–34 demo will spark to a new way of
consuming content—that is, in short bites. Quibi will drop videos in seven- to 10-minute chunks, which is very similar to the 11-minute segments on television today in between ads. As with TV, monetization will come from advertising, but there will be no more than 2 ½ minutes’ worth of ads in an hour. There will be a 15-second ad pre-roll for a five- to 10-minute session, and for those less than five minutes, there will be less than a five-second ad. Elemental’s content is shorter in length and its initial focus will be to align with mobile telecommunications carriers in high-growth international markets whose youthful customers are clamoring for such content. The early emphasis is overseas in Asia, South America and Europe, and their intention is to launch programming slates with those international carriers by the first half of next year. While all of this sounds well and good, for the producer looking to capitalize on this market opportunity, there are some serious things to consider.
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TAKING A LONG VIEW OF SHORT-FORM
IS THERE A POTENTIAL MARKET FOR IT? ABSOLUTELY. Mobile video consumption continues to rise. Quibi’s bet is that it will have the ability to grab a percentage of viewers who are willing to pay for programming that’s far superior to YouTube and other social platforms. And with the general trend of consumers paying for streaming content, Quibi executives feel like they have a great shot at capturing on-the-go viewers. Their thinking is that if there are people who are watching more than an hour of video on their mobile devices every day, it’s not that crazy to believe that Quibi can get 2% to 4% of those consumers to a paid experience.
WHAT ARE THE DEALS LIKE? SURPRISINGLY GENEROUS. Quibi’s deals are great for studios, but not necessarily for Quibi. As part of its deals, Quibi pays the cost of a show, plus a 20% production fee. For this, Quibi exclusively licenses the content in bite-size viewing form for seven years, after which the rights revert back to the creators and producers. But crucially, after two years on the service, creators will be able to edit the short-form version into one feature-length project and can sell the rights to international buyers.
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This innovative IP ownership model has upsides for both producers and platforms and stands in stark contrast to a streamer like Netflix, which takes all global rights for long periods of time. For producers, shortform has always felt challenging in terms of revenue streams, but Quibi offers a way to break out of that with potential real value for the producer and distributor.
IS THERE REVENUE TO BE HAD? PEOPLE ARE STARTING TO BET ON IT. According to reports out this past July, Quibi has already booked $100 million in upfront ad deals from advertisers including Google, Procter & Gamble, Walmart and PepsiCo. Quibi’s starry and well-funded commissions give a clear sense of its ambition in the shortform market, while backing from both investors and advertisers suggests a high degree of confidence that it has the right ingredients to captivate audiences and generate impressions.
DOES THE VIEWER ACTUALLY WANT SHORT-FORM? THAT’S THE MILLION-DOLLAR QUESTION.
Short-form, premium content may have the wind pointing in the right direction, but astute producers will wonder if it’s really filling a consumer need. Do people actually want premium short-form? Well, you could ask the same thing about the iPhone. There were plenty of mobile devices out there before the iPhone came along. What Apple did was make people want the iPhone. They created the desire for it by portraying it as a cultural phenomenon and tapping into the consumer’s sense of a cool factor. Changing consumer behavior is not easy, and it takes a lot of money to create programming that consumers will watch not just once, but many times—and hopefully recommend to friends. It will also take a lot of money to market it as a mainstream choice, something sorely missing from prior short-form efforts. Quibi and others are well aware of the hurdles, but they’re hoping their investments will get the train over the hill. And even if there is no consumer appetite yet, these new ventures are going to do their best to make you hungry.
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WINNING Producing partners never gave up the fight to bring their current project to the screen written By Katie Grant
W
HAT HAPPENS WHEN A STELLAR
ALL ITS OWN, COMPLETE WITH THE HERO
SCRIPT, STRAIGHT FROM THE
SAVING THE DAY AT THE 11TH HOUR AND
BLACK LIST, GETS MADE INTO A
A FEW FUNDAMENTAL LESSONS IN WHAT
POTENTIALLY GREAT MOVIE, ONLY TO HAVE IT CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRES OF
42
PRODUCING IS ALL ABOUT. “IT’S JUST A GOOD MAN WHO MAKES BAD
A NOTORIOUS SCANDAL AROUND ITS
DECISIONS IN THE SEARCH FOR GREATNESS,”
FORMERLY GREAT, NOW UNCREDITED,
IWANYK NOTES OF THE CURRENT WAR’S
PRODUCER? IN THE CASE OF THE CURRENT
MAIN CHARACTER, THOMAS EDISON, PLAYED
WAR, TWO OF ITS PRODUCERS, BASIL
BY BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH. THE CURRENT
IWANYK AND TIMUR BEKMAMBETOV,
WAR RECOUNTS THE STORY OF THE
NEVER GAVE UP ON THAT POTENTIAL
CUTTHROAT RACE AMONG EDISON, GEORGE
GREATNESS, ULTIMATELY FRONTING THEIR
WESTINGHOUSE AND NIKOLAI TESLA TO
OWN FUNDS FOR RESHOOTS, RECUTS
BRING ELECTRICITY TO THE EASTERN
AND RESCORING THE MOVIE TO RESTORE
SEABOARD IN THE 1880S. “IT WAS AN
THE CREATIVE VISION OF THE DIRECTOR,
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL SCRIPT. I THOUGHT
ALFONSO GOMEZ-REJON. THE STORY OF
IT FELT LIKE THE SOCIAL NETWORK, LIKE A
HOW THE CURRENT WAR MORPHED INTO
PERIOD MOVIE THAT WAS DONE IN SUCH A
ITS EXISTING FORM COULD BE A MOVIE
CONTEMPORARY, FRESH WAY.”
PRODUCED BY
THE WAR
PRODUCED BY
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WINNING THE WAR
The Current War, initially a Weinstein Company production, was pushed for early release—apparently to beat the news of Harvey Weinstein’s past going public—in a rushed cut that did not fit with the director’s vision. After The Weinstein Company’s collapse, the film was shelved for two years, only to be saved by the William Morris Endeavor agency. Gomez-Rejon’s lawyer there found a contractual clause granting the director’s mentor, Martin Scorsese, final cut. Up until that point, Scorsese had yet to even see a cut. This gave Iwanyk and Bekmambetov a chance to move back in the direction of painting the competition among the three inventors as more a modern Bill Gates versus Steve Jobs or Mark Zuckerberg versus the Winklevoss twins story than a mere period piece. Iwanyk recalls, “The loophole came from WME and their lawyer, P.J. Shapiro. We never gave up, and they never gave up, and Benedict never gave up saying, ‘Okay, we are going to lock hands here and we’re going to figure this out.’ And remember, I’m friends with all these people but still, agents and producers are often on other sides of the table. On this one, we all got together and said, ‘We’re not going to allow this thing to die.’ And so I’d love to take credit for it with Timur and Alfonso, but I’ve got to give a lot of credit to the reps. They were amazing.” Another amazing tale is how Bekmambetov found the story. “I had a dream to make a movie about Tesla for 10 years. I didn’t find a good story. And the first time I read Michael Mitnick’s screenplay, I finally understood that I should make a movie not about Tesla, but about Edison,” he explains. “We can understand Tesla better through Edison’s point of view. Every story I read was about some freaky, crazy guy and absolutely unrelatable. To make the story understandable you need that bridge. You need a normal guy with relatable weaknesses and talents.” Both producers have serendipitous connections to Edison’s story. Iwanyk’s maternal grandmother actually lived next door to Edison in New Jersey, and his other grandmother worked for Westinghouse. Bekmambetov’s father and brother were both electrical engineers in the Soviet Union. He himself even went to the Moscow Power Engineering Institute. “I spent two years, and I was fired because I spent more time directing shows in the theater than studying electric stuff. Then I studied as a production designer for six years at the Alexander Ostrovsky Theatrical and Artistic Institute.” As such, getting this story out there in the way the script promised, following Gomez-Rejon’s creative approach, was more than just a bone to pick for each of them. The way they collectively dug their heels in to get the movie back after the hasty original cut speaks to the power of producing. Iwanyk says, “The dailies were amazing ... in some ways, the dailies were so great, and the performances were so great, that it brought Harvey closer to the movie, because he smelled something that could be spectacular. And he held onto it really tight, and usually, when somebody holds onto something very tight, it becomes dysfunctional. And so our post process quickly
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The Current War producer Timur Bekmambetov
“I THINK FOR CENTURIES OUR ANCESTORS WERE TRYING TO CREATE A TRUST BETWEEN PEOPLE … I LEARNED THAT THE ONLY WAY TO CREATE THIS TRUST IS TO TELL STORIES.”
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WINNING THE WAR
became dysfunctional.” Once that happened, Iwanyk’s approach was to keep going. “You can’t ever give up. And I believe so much in Alfonso, personally and professionally, and I saw what he did and sacrificed for the movie, that even on that level, I was never going to surrender. “But I also thought, ‘This movie could be great. And I’m not going to allow [anyone] to harm this movie.’ And I’ve got to tell you, there were incredibly dark days. And even when it’s at the most despairing, darkest place, if you believe in it, you just have to push forward.” He continues, “I have to say, of all the movies that I’ve ever worked on in my entire career, I’ve never had a more cohesive and effective and functional relationship with the talent and their reps, as I’ve done in this movie. And so I have to hand it to Mike Simpson, Roger Green and Chris Donnelly on behalf of Alfonso, and Billy Lazarus on behalf of Benedict and Nick Hoult. We were all on the phone two, sometimes three, days a week. We were all in it together.” That stick-to-itiveness comes honestly to each of these producers, who chose their own paths to storytelling through cinema. Iwanyk headed straight to a mailroom post at Warner Bros. after studying political science at Villanova. He knew he didn’t want to be a lawyer and wanted to give his passion for movies a shot. He fully assumed he’d be back in New Jersey a couple years later if it didn’t work out, but that was in 1992 and he’s still here, heading his company, Thunder Road Pictures. Iwanyk’s desire to tell stories through film came after he saw Ordinary People. “At first, I just enjoyed movies. For me, they were an incredible escape. It was Star Wars, Raiders of the Lost Ark, the John Hughes movies. I was blown away by those movies. And then, as I got a little bit older, the first time I saw a movie that didn’t exist for my enjoyment and my entertainment—but existed for me to think about life differently—was Ordinary People. When I saw that movie, it shook me to the core.
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“I thought, ‘This movie doesn’t exist just to thrill me. This movie exists for other reasons.’ And I think that was the first movie when I realized, ‘OK, this is a form. This is a way of storytelling that could go above and beyond entertainment.’ They could coexist—don’t get me wrong—but it was the first time I realized the emotional power of it.” Iwanyk’s time at Warner Bros. taught him about three fundamentals of producing: one’s own point of view, relationships and writing notes. “The only thing you really have is your point of view, as an executive or as a producer, because we’re
not writing or directing anything. So understand what that point of view is. “Two, sometimes it’s about relationships and about trusting people. That even though you may not be completely on board, you should trust in people who may be right. And then, the third thing was, they taught me how to write notes. I was writing five or six sets of notes a week. It was hell. It made you go into your instinct, and listen to yourself about why you’re not responding to certain things on a script or on a cut.” Bekmambetov, on the other hand, started as a writer and ended up directing his
WINNING THE WAR
Above: Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon with producer Basil Iwanyk Left: Director of photography Chunghoon Chung, Stanley Townsend, GomezRejon
own movie because he couldn’t find a satisfactory director. And the same was true for producing. “Then I couldn’t find a good producer to produce my next movie, and I became a producer myself. And since the end of the ’90s, I’m directing and producing at the same time. It’s just about the freedom and to have responsibility. As you know, it is easier to ask forgiveness than to ask permission.” His company, Bazelevs, produces movies and commercials and houses his creation, Screenlife, “an innovative digital language that tells a whole narrative within the frames of a screen.” “I think for centuries our ancestors were trying to create a trust between people. Between people and nature, people and God, and the universe. I learned that the only way to create this trust is to tell stories. You can’t dictate what they should feel,” Bekmambetov explains. “You should just tell them the story. They will all love, cry, have fun or be scared. Just emotions. Emotions, a collective experience, help to create this kind of trust between people. “And I believe we cannot save the world or change the world by creating rules or dictating. What we can do, as filmmakers, is just tell stories—emotional and touchable and inspiring stories. And these stories will change people. I believe this movie, The Current War, is a movie which potentially will help people
PRODUCED BY
47
WINNING THE WAR
to understand how inspiring, but how dangerous, is technology.” Although the two producers had not previously worked together, and their producing roles were very different on The Current War—Bekmambetov as the one who generated the material and Iwanyk as the one on the ground to get the movie made—they became a really good team. Bekmambetov explains, “I cannot imagine this movie being made without [Basil], because he is like the spine of the production process. I was involved more in development. I just inspired this, let’s say. He was literally in charge to drive this process. And he was, until the end, the driver. He did everything. It’s about his ability to force people to do what he thinks is right and to listen to what they’re saying, and to be able to find the
elegant. That contribution is very important—to be creative as a producer. To find a way to make things happen.” In the end, they both followed Iwanyk’s belief in betting on yourself. “On a financial level, if you have the opportunity, bet on yourself—because if it works, the windfall, financially, is great. So, don’t be afraid to spend your own money,” Iwanyk says. Self-financing is what helped save The Current War from the wrong creative road it went down in post. But they did much more than bet on themselves. They bet on the quality of the material, the caliber of the performances, the creativity of the camerawork and the vision of the director. Holding onto that vision is a job that both these producers take very seriously. They are hoping and betting that the rest
of us respond positively, as they did, to the story of three historical visionaries. As Bekmambetov puts it, “We live in the world of these visionaries and inventors, and they will really change the future. They are the real heroes, not soldiers, not boxers, not politicians. I believe inventors are the most influential and attractive characters in today’s world.” He adds, “It’s about cinema. Cinema is an unbelievable source of magic. You know, power. Of course, I’m just a part of the process. And that’s the case [for all] art, but specifically cinema. It’s like we’re dreaming for two hours. In that vein, it’s magic.” The Current War can be seen as a collective invention of these two talented producers. They are hoping their creation will allow us to see ourselves in the magic reflected on the screen.
PRODUCED BY
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ON THE SCENE
PGA DODGER DAY, AUGUST 10, LOS ANGELES
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MICHAEL Q. MARTIN
Some 100 Guild members turned out on a beautiful evening at Dodger Stadium for our annual PGA Dodger Day. The Dodgers, who recently clinched their seventh consecutive National League West division championship, took on the Arizona Diamondbacks. PGA members not only celebrated a 4-0 Dodgers’ win, but also enjoyed free food in the Coca-Cola All You Can Eat Right Field Pavilion. Starting Dodger pitcher Kenta Maeda bounced back from several poor outings and put on a clinic as he pitched seven scoreless innings. Caleb Ferguson and Joe Kelly kept the D’Backs scoreless in the eighth, and closer Kenley Jansen pitched a perfect ninth for the combined shutout. The exciting day at the ballpark was organized by the PGA Events Committee.
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PGA’S ANNUAL HOLIDAY PARTY
12.8.19
The PGA will hold its Annual Holiday Party on December 8, 2019. This year’s theme is inspired by Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief. As part of the fun, guests will participate in a game where they’ll be asked to find clues in order to catch a jewel thief. There will be amazing prizes (think airline vouchers) and surprises at the bewitching event. Everyone is encouraged to “dress their best” for the elegant French café affair. It promises to be an evening where you’ll feel like you’ve been transported to the French Riviera. Sponsorships are still available.
For more information, contact Susannah D’Arcy at susannahdarcy@gmail.com
PRODUCED BY
51
ON THE SCENE POWER OF DIVERSITY MASTER WORKSHOP GRADUATION, AUGUST 2019, LOS ANGELES
Class of 2019 Power of Diversity Workshop graduates with co-chairs
Workshop participants with chairs and mentors
PHOTOGRAPHED BY ROBBIE BALLEW
A big congratulations to the new graduates of the PGA’s 15th annual Power of Diversity Master Workshop. Fourteen producers representing 11 projects in TV, film and documentary completed the program in August. The eight-week workshop, led by PGA Co-chairs Sasheen R. Artis and Matt Johnson, teaches master classes on pitching, premise development, film finance, line producing, demystifying the writers’ room, agent and manager representation, distribution, dealmaking, and the worlds of virtual and augmented reality. The classes are headlined by some of the top producers and executives in the entertainment industry. In addition, the Diversity Committee has established relationships with various international film commissions, which have sponsored participants in the workshop. In turn, the PGA has taught workshops worldwide—in places such as Jordan, South Africa, Brazil and Taiwan. The Power of Diversity Master Workshop is free and open to both PGA members and nonmembers. Applications for next year’s program will be available in February 2020. For more information, visit pgadiversity.org.
CAPITAL REGION HAPPY HOUR AUGUST 14, WASHINGTON DC
PHOTOGRAPHED BY PETE COUSTE
PGA members from the Capital Region enjoyed a unique happy hour at Three Seas Production Studio in Northwest D.C. They were able to tour the facilities of the studio, which offers a la carte postproduction services including color correction, sound design and animation, as well as branded content and marketing resources. Three Seas currently offers a 5% discount to any Guild member booking its services. The happy hour provided an opportunity for our members to mix and mingle with staff from Three Seas and to network with invited guests. Cheers!
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IT’S MAGIC TIME Hawk Koch conjures up some captivating memories Written by Rona Edwards
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PRODUCED BY
W
e know him as a former president of the Producers Guild of America. A past president and governor of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. That’s the public Hawk Koch. But this accomplished industry veteran has a much bigger story. He grew up in Hollywood, the son and namesake of famous producer and beloved studio head Howard W. Koch. He immersed himself in the make-believe and magic of the movies even before he knew what his father did for a living or what would ultimately become his career. However, it wasn’t always easy living in the shadow of such a larger-than-life man, as he reveals in his new memoir, Magic Time: My Life in Hollywood, cowritten with his wife, Molly Jordan. “Magic time” is an expression Hawk overheard Jack Lemmon say before he’d shoot a scene—a mantra he himself adopted. The book was born out of Hawk’s years of experience and the movies he helped make. Stories? He’s got a million of them. But this memoir is more than tales of show business and the enormously talented actors and directors Hawk has worked with. It’s really a coming-of-age story. He admits he “came from privilege but didn’t feel privileged at all.” On one of the first movies he worked on, Hawk overheard someone say the only reason he got the job was because his dad was the head of Paramount. “My heart just sunk, and then another guy said, ‘Yeah, but he’s really good and he’s working really hard, so why don’t you give him a break?’” Hawk recalls. “And I realized at that moment—I was like 19 years old—I had to do everything I could to try and not be just Howard Koch Jr., the son of Howard Koch, but Howard Koch Jr., a man all by himself.” Hawk went to work achieving that success in his own right. From assistant director on movies such as The Way We Were (1973), Chinatown (1974), Marathon Man (1976), Heaven Can Wait (1978)—which he also produced—to producing The Idolmaker (1980), Wayne’s World (1992) and Primal Fear (1996), he’s been involved with more than 65 feature films. Streisand, Redford, Fonda, Beatty, Coppola, Pollack, Schlesinger, Polanski—Hawk has worked with a who’s who of Hollywood. “I am one of the luckiest guys in
Clockwise from left: Koch with Warren Beatty in Heaven Can Wait; with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau from The Odd Couple; with Francis Ford Coppola on set of Peggy Sue Got Married; working with Roman Polanski and Jack Nicholson on Chinatown
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IT’S MAGIC TIME Magic Time: My Life in Hollywood comes out November 12. the world,” he says. Luck, though, is only part of the equation. His experience and know-how brought him a long way, too. “The book is about the fun ups and downs of making films as well as the ups and downs of dealing with a father who was the most-loved man in Hollywood,” says Hawk. “When I was introduced to somebody, they didn’t say ‘Hi.’ They said, ‘You must be so proud to be the son of the most wonderful man I’ve ever met.’” A real turning point came when Hawk had his bar mitzvah … at age 50. The transformation that happens for most boys at age 13 happened to Hawk later in life. It was truly a rite of passage that changed everything for him—including his name. It was while sitting across from the rabbi that he realized he could have his own name, and not carry his father’s as he had for 49 years. It dawned on him that he used to write his initials HWK on his schoolbooks, and the kids nicknamed him “Hawk.” “Hawks,” the rabbi told him, “can see from horizon to horizon at the same time, and they have the ability to see a mouse from a mile away. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you could see the panoramic of your life and the detail all at the same time?” After he changed his name, people really saw him for the first time; separate, and not as someone’s son. When asked what it takes to be a good producer, Hawk has some acute observations. “I think that being an assistant director really taught me how to be a good producer, because an AD has to look at all the options and be ready for anything that’s going to happen. When I used to break down a script, I used to see everything and know if the weather’s bad, we’re going to go here; if the actress is not happy in the morning, maybe we can go this way; if the actor has a fight with someone—well what do we do? It’s all what-ifs, and I think I was taught by some pretty damn good ADs ahead of me how to always look at every single thing that could go wrong and keep on the same track if everything’s going right.” He continues thoughtfully, “As a producer, I read the scene that is going to be shot
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Magic Time is loaded with Hawk’s own personal pearls of wisdom, including these five tenets: • Have fun! • Work with people you like. Be in a relationship with someone you like. • Do something that matters. • Have courage. Don’t live in fear. • Live your dream. Who am I? What do I truly want to be? And if you had one minute to live, ask yourself, did I live the life I wanted to or the one I was supposed to? that day to make sure I know the reason why it’s being shot. If it’s not important, it shouldn’t be shot.” In other words, let everyone else worry and focus on what they need to do. A producer needs to look at the big picture, making sure they get what’s important to the story. Although the book is very personal, the tales Hawk tells about making movies are sure to attract the most avid cinephile. From escorting Natalie Wood to the set to planning and shooting a real football game in Heaven Can Wait, this is a treasure trove of iconic moments in modern Hollywood history. When Francis Ford Coppola was about to direct Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), it was up to Hawk to get the wildly creative director to make decisions in preproduction in order to keep the film on budget. He put together a manual of what had to be done to prepare for the shoot, which basically stated “that no piece of lumber, no nail, could be hammered on any set until the plans had been drawn, estimated and come in within budget.” All the department heads had to sign those blueprints, and all had to be signed off by Coppola before production began. The bottom of the contract concluded, “The director has the right to change his mind.” Coppola agreed. On set, Coppola was surprised that no one asked him any questions. Hawk reassured him, “That’s the idea, because you’ve prepped everything. The only thing you have to worry about
now is the actors and where to put your camera.” Hawk has used that formula on most every movie since. “I’ve always said ‘our vision.’ I’ve always said when movies go over budget or when movies don’t work, the studio, the director, the producer and the actors didn’t have the same vision. When they all have the same vision, that’s when it really works.” A driving force behind the PGA’s Producers Mark with Vance Van Petten and Mark Gordon, Hawk, alongside Kathleen Kennedy, Lawrence Gordon and Mark Johnson, also urged the Academy to use the PGA’s arbitration system for its Oscar eligibility. “The Mark is the thing I’m most proud of, other than my children. We’ve changed the culture. We’re the producers of the 21st century, and the Producers Mark works, and the real producer has respect.” However, he says there is more work to do. “We need to get the Producers Mark for streaming and TV. We need to constantly look forward and not look back. The business is changing faster than ever, and we just need to keep abreast of it.” Hawk goes on to share his aspirations for the PGA. “Everyone in our Guild needs to be protected by all of us. We are not a collective bargaining group, so the only way we stay together and the only way that we help is to help one another. I hope that everybody knows that the Guild through its volunteers, from the presidents on down, survives because of all of us, not just one person. We are all in it together.”
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A B O V E & BEYOND
A LEARNING EXPERIENCE THe rewards of chairing the pga education committee Educational programming is one of the premium benefits of the Producers Guild. Seminars, master classes and salons are designed to provide our members with up-to-date information geared toward producers. Rebecca Graham Forde and Pam Keller are the current Co-chairs of the Education Committee (West). Both have been on multiple committees for several years. Amazing volunteers like them—giving their time, energy and expertise to fellow members—are the backbone of the Guild.
R
ebecca Graham Forde has been a PGA member for 13 years. Her volunteerism has included the Diversity, International and Mentorship committees. She has also served as AP Council Chair and Vice Chair. “Serving as Co-Chair for the Education Committee with Pamela Keller has been an incredible opportunity to help shape and deliver educational programming for our entire membership,” says Rebecca. She goes on to explain that she always gets something out of volunteering, like making a new connection or learning new things about our business. Her best Guild experience has been the annual Power of Diversity Master
P PAM KELLER
Workshop, where she continues to be a mentor year after year. “It’s the best-kept secret in the business, and the people both on the committee and those who have passed through the workshop are some of the best people I’ve met.” Our business is constantly changing, and Rebecca feels getting involved helps keep her on the cusp of what is new. She also believes there is a place for everyone to help out in the PGA. When she is not volunteering for the Guild, Rebecca is a “professional cat herder, plate spinner and wordsmith.” Currently she is the Co-EP on multiple series for Discovery Channel/Pilgrim Media group.
am Keller is another longtime member who has been very involved on the AP Council Board of Delegates for six years, last year as a Vice Chair. She also served on the National Board of Directors for four years. Previously Pam was the Chair of the Rough Cuts West Committee and served as Volunteer Coordinator for the Produced By Conference for many years. Pam volunteers because she wants to do whatever she can to “ensure inclusive, safe working environments” as well as “truth in credits” for the producing community. Pam
REBECCA GRAHAM FORDE
believes it’s also a great way to network and help support the Guild. One of her most memorable PGA volunteer experiences was last year at the 2018 Produced By Conference, serving as a mentor at the Producers Mashup. “Vance asked me to participate and had kind words, calling it a full-circle experience since I worked the conference the first four years.” Pam is currently writing and developing her own projects as well as doing freelance production consulting. ¢
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P G A AT YO U R SERVICE
ABOMINABLE Suzanne Buirgy, p.g.a.
AD ASTRA
MARKING TIME The Producers Guild proudly salutes the following whose credits have been certified with the Producers Mark. This list includes films released in August and September. Certification via the Producers Mark indicates that a producer undertook a major portion of the producing duties on the motion picture.
Dede Gardner, p.g.a. Jeremy Kleiner, p.g.a. Anthony Katagas, p.g.a. James Gray, p.g.a. Rodrigo Teixeira, p.g.a.
AFTER THE WEDDING Joel B. Michaels, p.g.a. Julianne Moore, p.g.a. Bart Freundlich, p.g.a. Harry Finkel, p.g.a.
THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE 2 John Cohen, p.g.a.
IT: CHAPTER TWO Barbara Muschietti, p.g.a.
THE KITCHEN Michael De Luca, p.g.a. Marcus Viscidi, p.g.a.
LINDA RONSTADT: THE SOUND OF MY VOICE James Keach, p.g.a. Michele Farinola, p.g.a. Rob Epstein, p.g.a. & Jeffrey Friedman, p.g.a.
LUCE John Baker, p.g.a. Julius Onah, p.g.a.
THE NIGHTINGALE THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN Neal H. Moritz, p.g.a. Tania Landau, p.g.a.
BRIAN BANKS Amy Baer, p.g.a. Shivani Rawat, p.g.a. & Monica Levinson, p.g.a.
BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON Matthew Plouffe, p.g.a. Tobey Maguire, p.g.a. Margot Hand, p.g.a.
DORA AND THE LOST CITY OF GOLD Kristin Burr, p.g.a.
FAST & FURIOUS PRESENTS: HOBBS & SHAW Dwayne Johnson, p.g.a. Chris Morgan, p.g.a. Hiram Garcia, p.g.a.
FREAKS Adam B. Stein, p.g.a. Zach Lipovsky, p.g.a.
THE GOLDFINCH Nina Jacobson, p.g.a. & Brad Simpson, p.g.a.
GOOD BOYS
To apply for Producers Mark certification, visit us online at producersguildawards.com.
Evan Goldberg, p.g.a. Seth Rogen, p.g.a. James Weaver, p.g.a. Lee Eisenberg, p.g.a.
HUSTLERS Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, p.g.a. Jessica Elbaum, p.g.a.
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Kristina Ceyton, p.g.a. Bruna Papandrea, p.g.a. Steve Hutensky, p.g.a. Jennifer Kent, p.g.a.
ODE TO JOY Mike Falbo, p.g.a. Jason Winer, p.g.a. Michael Lasker, p.g.a.
THE PEANUT BUTTER FALCON Tim Zajaros, p.g.a. & Chris Lemole, p.g.a. Albert Berger, p.g.a. & Ron Yerxa, p.g.a. Lije Sarki, p.g.a. Dave Thies, p.g.a.
SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK Guillermo del Toro, p.g.a. Sean Daniel, p.g.a. Jason F. Brown, p.g.a. J. Miles Dale, p.g.a. Elizabeth Grave, p.g.a.
THEM THAT FOLLOW Bradley Gallo, p.g.a. Michael Helfant, p.g.a. Danielle Robinson, p.g.a.
WHERE’D YOU GO, BERNADETTE Ginger Sledge, p.g.a.
WHERE’S MY ROY COHN? Matt Tyrnauer, p.g.a. Corey Reeser, p.g.a.
47 METERS DOWN: UNCAGED James Harris, p.g.a. Mark Lane, p.g.a.
P G A AT YO U R SERVICE
MEMBER BENEFITS ■ Discounted registration for Produced By Conference and Produced By: New York. ■ Vote on Producers Guild Awards and receive discount tickets to the event, as well as DVD screeners for awards consideration. ■ Access to CSATTF online safety training videos. ■ Admission to special PGA pre-release screenings and Q&A events. ■ Full access to PGA website including events, calendar, social networking tools, members-only video library. ■ Access to PGA Job Board, online resume search, employment tools and job forums.
■ Eligibility for PGA Mentoring Program. ■ Listing of contact and credit information in searchable online roster. ■ Arbitration of credit disputes. ■ Participation in the Motion Picture Industry Health, Welfare & Pension Plan. ■ Free attendance at PGA seminars. ■ Wide variety of discounts on events, merchandise, travel. ■ Complimentary subscription to Produced By.
THINK GLOBALLY, FILM LOCALLY Gardens, roads, ponds, mature trees, statues, architecture.
THE HUNTINGTON
626-405-2215 | FilmHuntington.org
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NEW MEMBERS The Producers Guild is proud to welcome the following new members, who joined the Guild in July and August 2019.
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PRODUCERS COUNCIL Leslie Belzberg James Bills Melanie Block Wayne Borg Michael J Cargill Tim Coddington Joseph Cohen Henriquez 1 Cait Collins Sean Demott Esther Dere Dan Dieffenbach David Dittlinger Anthony Dominici William Doyle Geralyn Dreyfous Chris Ferguson Oscar Generale David Grossman Justine Gubar Leslye Headland Keaton Heinrichs Adam Horowitz Justin Jones Brooke Karzen Christopher Keenan Edward Kitsis Phil Lott Peter Luo Ari Mark
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Raymond Markovich Lorraine Montez Benjamin Murphy Denis O’Sullivan Kay Oyegun Carla Pennington Gabrielle Pickle 2 Joe Plummer Jen Prince 3 Sarah Regan J Sanchez Regina Scully Douglas Segal Akshay Shah Louis Tancredi Dahlia Waingort Jhennifer Webberley Nicholas Weinstock 4 Han West Shawn Yue
AP COUNCIL Albert Andrade 5 Samuel Baird Julie Baner Charles Bender Andrew Biesen Dylan Brodie Pamela Brown Rebecca Burnett
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Ryan Cassells Marissa Cattel Sue-Ellen Chitunya Andrea Christensen William Davalos Matt Davis Matthew Dunn Christina Elefante Gisela Evert Kristin Fowler Katharina Gapski Gilda Graham Ali Griffith Hannah Haidar Brittany Hendricks July Hodara Liz Hodes Jennifer Jorgenson 6 Justin Kilmer Debbi Kutchai Julia Lambert Daniel McGilvray Ray McIntyre Billy McLellan Elisabeth Miller Colleen Murphy Laura Myers Niccole Ostonio Rob Overbeck Krutin Patel 7
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Toby Pease Wendy Perez Jerry Peters Samantha Polan Lisa Rodgers Robin Saxen Timothy Smith Myles Sorensen Daniel Spilatro Chau Tong 8 Loranne Turgeon Alyssa Ulrich Aydrea Walden William Wohlken
NEW MEDIA COUNCIL Sarah Borger Mickey Capoferri Karen Fensterstock Kaitlyn Pickerelli Edward Saatchi 9
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P G A AT YO U R SERVICE
PGA HEALTH: WHAT’S YOUR STORY?
“I WORK ON A WEST COAST IATSE PRODUCTION.”
“I RUN A SMALL COMPANY.”
“I AM AN INDIVIDUAL LOOKING FOR THE BEST COVERAGE I CAN AFFORD.”
Motion Picture Industry Plan
Open Health MEWA Plan
The Actor’s Fund
Available to: Producers/Produced By, Executive Producers, Associate Producers, Post-Production Supervisors
Available to: Employers and employees of small production companies
Available to: All professionals who work in the entertainment industry
Who: • Work at a company with a minimum of three employees. Company owner may count as an employee if s/he draws a salary from the company.
The Actor’s Fund is the official organization representing the Affordable Care Act to the entertainment industry.
Who: •Work for an AMPTP signatory • Work on theatrical motion pictures, prime-time network series, prime-time, first-run syndicated series •Utilize a West Coast IA Crew • A re credited with 600 hours of work over the past six months. (Assume a 60-hour work week.)
CONTACT: (866) 491-4001 Request information about MEWA (Multiple Employer Welfare Association) plans.
CONTACT: (800) 221-7303 (New York) (888) 825-0911 (Los Angeles) Request a consultation to discuss individual plans available on the open market.
Once qualified, participants must be credited with 400 hours of work in the subsequent six-month period to extend coverage. CONTACT: Your payroll or labor relations department.
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FAQ: THE PRODUCERS MARK those three little letters have a lot backing them up
WHEN I SEE P.G.A. AFTER A PRODUCER’S NAME IN A MOVIE’S CREDITS, WHAT DOES IT MEAN? It means that according to the rules of the Producers Guild’s certification process, that producer performed a major portion of the producing functions on that particular motion picture.
DOES THE P.G.A. AFTER THE PRODUCER’S NAME MEAN THAT THE PRODUCER IS A MEMBER OF THE PRODUCERS GUILD? No. A producer does not need to be a member of the PGA to receive the “p.g.a.” designation after their name. In many cases, the sets of initials you see in movie credits (such as A.S.C. and A.C.E.) indicate membership in an organization. The Producers Mark is different. It’s a certification mark; its purpose is to designate that the producer has met an officially recognized standard of performance on that film.
IF A PRODUCER DOESN’T RECEIVE THE P.G.A. MARK FROM THE PRODUCERS GUILD, WHAT HAPPENS TO THEIR PRODUCING CREDIT? Nothing. The Producers Mark doesn’t control or affect the “Produced By” credit in any way, nor does it invalidate that credit by its absence.
WHAT IMPACT DOES THE P.G.A. MARK HAVE ON AWARDS? Determinations for the Producers Mark and for producer award eligibility are determined at the same time and via the
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same process. In addition to the PGA, AMPAS, HFPA and BAFTA all rely on the PGA process to guide their decisionmaking. However the final selection of nominees is always at the discretion of the organization giving the award. Overwhelmingly, these organizations concur with the PGA determinations, but occasionally, the decisions diverge.
WHAT’S THE PROCESS? The process is initiated by the copyright owner of the film. After the postproduction process has commenced, but four to six weeks before credits are locked, the owner submits a film for consideration via ProducersGuildAwards.com. Within two to three weeks, the PGA sends out eligibility forms to every producer credited as “Produced By” or “Producer” on the film and sends confidential verification forms to a wide variety of third parties associated with the production of the film: the director(s), writer(s), department heads, company executives and key crew members. Once forms have been returned, the PGA convenes a panel of arbiters, each of them active and experienced producers with numerous (and recent) credits, typically in the genre or category of the film under consideration. (I.e., if the film is a major studio tentpole, we try to utilize arbiters with considerable experience in making those big-budget studio pictures. If the film is a smaller indie movie, we rely on producers familiar with that type of production, etc.) An initial arbitration panel typically has three arbiters. The arbiters review all materials
returned to the PGA by the producers and third parties, with all names of individuals credited on the film redacted, so that arbiters can arrive at a judgment based on the testimony provided rather than the name recognition and perceived reputation of the producers. Following the determination, the PGA staff informs the producers of the decision. Producers who object to the decision have five days to notify the Guild of an intent to appeal. After giving producers the opportunity to add to or clarify their testimony, the PGA will convene a new panel of arbiters. All appellate panels consist of three producers. If the initial decision was unanimous, the appellate panel will consist of one producer from the original panel and two new producers; if the initial decision was not unanimous, the appellate panel will consist of three new producers. The decision of the appellate panel is final.
SO WHEN ARBITERS ARE LOOKING AT THESE FORMS, WHAT ARE THEY SEEING? The eligibility form filled out by producers asks them to indicate their level of responsibility for a variety of producing functions spanning development, preproduction, physical production and post-production. The form also includes a free-response section for the producer to more fully elaborate on the specifics of the production and their role on the film. The verification forms filled out by third parties typically ask the respondent questions related to the nature of their collaboration with the credited producers.
P G A AT YO U R SERVICE
(For instance, the verification form for editors asks the editor to designate which producer(s) consulted with the editor regarding dailies, gave notes on cuts or participated in screenings.)
WHO SELECTS WHICH ARBITERS VET THE CREDITS OF WHICH MOTION PICTURES? That determination is made by the PGA’s Associate General Counsel in consultation with the National Executive Director/COO.
WHAT IF THE PGA SELECTS AN ARBITER WHO (UNBEKNOWNST TO THEM) IS BIASED AGAINST A GIVEN PRODUCER OR FILM? The Guild takes proactive measures to prevent that from happening. Prior to convening the panel, the PGA provides all producers with a list of potential arbiters. Producers are free to strike any arbiter for any reason. Such arbiters will not be empaneled for that particular film. Furthermore, all arbiters are asked to affirmatively state that they have no interests in the films to be arbitrated that might result in a biased judgment. Even if all of those hurdles are cleared, an arbiter will be removed from the process if they or the PGA administrator feels that bias is affecting their judgment.
WHY CAN’T THE PGA BE MORE TRANSPARENT ABOUT THE PROCESS? We maintain the strictest confidentiality around the identities of the producers, third parties and arbiters involved because such confidence is the only
p.g.a. way we can hope to get accurate and truthful information. Many producers are powerful figures in this industry and this might put pressure on third parties and arbiters to achieve a desired decision. Keeping those identities confidential is the only way to maintain the integrity of the process.
ONCE A PRODUCER’S CREDIT IS CERTIFIED WITH THE P.G.A. MARK, IS THAT CERTIFICATION APPLIED PERMANENTLY TO ALL OF THE PRODUCER’S FILMS? No. A Producers Mark appended to a producing credit applies to that film only. It represents the nature of the work performed on that film alone and does not “carry over” to future productions.
WHY DO SOME FILMS CARRY THE P.G.A. MARK, BUT NOT OTHERS? The Producers Mark is voluntary. Each of the major studios—Universal, Disney, Warner Bros., Sony, Paramount and Fox—has signed a contractual agreement to submit their films to the Guild for credit certification, as have Lionsgate, DreamWorks and DreamWorks Animation, Lucasfilm, Marvel, MGM, New Line and Pixar. If an independently owned film elects not to participate, we can’t
force them to submit for certification. The Producers Mark also is recognized by the WGA, DGA and SAG-AFTRA. The PGA has agreed not to license the Producers Mark for use with any combined credit (e.g., “Directed and Produced By …”)
WHO DOES THE PRODUCERS GUILD REPRESENT? The PGA is composed of over 8,200 professionals working in motion pictures, television and digital media throughout the United States and around the world.
HOW IS THE PGA DIFFERENT FROM ITS FELLOW GUILDS? Unlike the DGA, WGA and SAG-AFTRA, the PGA is not a labor union. This means that we can’t go on strike, set wage minimums, or negotiate collective bargaining agreements on behalf of our membership. As we are now the largest professional trade organization in the entertainment industry, the PGA provides numerous benefits for its members, including educational and training events, employment opportunities, social and networking functions, and a collective voice that represents and protects the varied interests of producers and their teams, including the Producers Mark. ■
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BEST ON-SET PHOTO OF ALL TIME
LAST SHOT OF THE LAST MOVIE STAR
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t was July 2018, just two months before we would lose one of the most prolific and popular actors of his generation—Burt Reynolds—and he was working right up until the end. Reynolds was being interviewed for a documentary called Movie Money CONFIDENTIAL. It explored the intersection of filmmaking and financing, particularly how to raise money for lowbudget and independent movies. The production schedule was very tight, and the filmmakers weren’t sure they would be able to include Reynolds. He had been extremely busy promoting The Last Movie Star and prepping for Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood. Scott Dupont, PGA member and one of the producers, explains: “The last week of filming we got a call that Mr. Reynolds agreed, on two conditions—that the interview take place at the Burt Reynolds Institute for Film & Theatre and that his Master Class students be in attendance.” So it was a moment when DuPont was slating for the cameras that another producer, Maggie Pamplin, captured this classic shot of Reynolds doing his interview. Sitting across from him was the director and a room full of the actor’s students. DuPont says, “His passion for teaching the next generation of filmmakers was palpable. Even with the large audience of students and crew during the interview, you could hear a pin drop.” Growing up near Reynolds on Jupiter Island, Florida, DuPont always dreamed of working with the star. When the movie debuted, he summed up his feelings for the project, saying “I hope this new documentary will inspire and empower the next generation of filmmakers and hope that Buddy—as his friends called him—would be proud.” This touching photo captures the actor doing what he loved best, performing and teaching. It’s a picture-perfect ending to a life well lived. ■ We know what you’re thinking. “Best of all time? No way. I’ve got an on-set photo way better than that.” If that’s the case, we dare you to prove it. Submit it to BOSPOAT@producersguild.org. Before you submit, please review the contest rules at producersguild. org/bospoat. Because no matter how great your photo is, we have no desire to get sued over it.
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