From: STRACZYNSKI [Joe]
Subject: Ah, but you've always been such...
To: GENIE
Date: 6/4/1992 8:54:00 PM
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Ah, but you've always been such a seductress....
Some nifty stuff going on, boys and girls, some of which I can't talk about yet, but hope to soon. See, at this stage of the game, the magic box opens, and suddenly all SORTS of people are let into the process...agents, casting associates on both coasts and in the midwest, licensing guys, marketing guys, advertisers...and usually the response to a new show is, "Okay, yeah, sure, come back to us after you've been on for a while." I can't betray anything just yet, but let's just say that that has NOT been the case here...the phone is practically ringing off the hook.
People are Getting It. Some of them are even coming to us, having heard about the show on the grapevine.
There's a point when a show begins to hit critical mass, when you've spent four years trying to get people excited, and suddenly there are excited people coming out of the woodwork at you, and now everyone begins to get some sense of what we've got here.
(God, I'm *dying* to tell you what one of those calls was...this is so spiffy, so neat, so BIG...wait, Joe, be patient, wait until the ink dries, keep your mouth SHUT for once, fer chrissakes....)
Tomorrow I go On Camera. Warners _ which is really supporting us in a big way _ is sending over some of their people to do an on-camera interview with me, Ron Thornton, possibly a couple of others, and include some of the EFX we've developed. The film is to be shown at a large gathering of execs, advertisers, marketing guys, the whole bit. I'll probably nab a copy to slip into the reel I've been making that shows the progress of B5, from early artwork to the first EFX reel, the new stuff, now this...eventually I'll add on new EFX, then maybe some actor stuff, and as we get into shooting, some snippets here and there, so that the reel is always absolutely current for conventions.
What you get the sense of, finally, when something like this really gets going, is of an army of people, and you have to play Patton, getting everyone where they're supposed to be, when they're supposed to be there. (Or maybe army ants would be a better comparison.) There's silence for a very long time at the beginning, then gradually it gets louder,and louder, and after a while...yikes!
For years, nobody knows you...you start to look for your face on milk cartons...then suddenly everybody wants to talk to you.
Y'know what? It's fun.
By the middle of next week, I should start getting video of actors auditioning in NY, and the 3-dimensional renderings of the set. Today I had to pick out the "audition sides," meaning those pages (sides of pages) of the script that an actor goes through in a session with the casting director to see if s/he's right...so you have to pick what amount to mini-scenes, and they have to be separate enough so that the actor can get a grip on it, but important enough to the plot to see how they handle exposition, and emotional enough to see how they project feelings of anger or joy or fear...all in 2-3 pages a shot.
It's tough being a writer, but I gotta tell you, it's a walk in the park compared to being an actor. It's rough work, and I have an endless respect for those who do it well.
Gotta crash now...have to look good on camera tomorrow. If that doesn't qualify for a miracle, I don't know what does....
jms |
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