Rating:  Summary: The playwright's Survival Guide Review: "Ours," said William Faulkner in discussing the writer's responsibilty "is to show the human heart in conflict with itself." But Mr. Faulkner left the state the WRITER'S human heart to others. And it is here where Garry Garrison takes up the cause. While his comments apply to playwrights, they could also relate to any of us who swim in the cold currents of creativity. Perhaps the most sagacious piece is entitled, BEHAVE. Here Garrison Brings to life his fourth grade teacher Miss Rochelle, who in stentorian tones enjoined her incorrigible charges to "'BEEEEEEEE-HAVE or your butt is mine.'" In this hilarious essay Garrison deftly makes a plea for civility in the land of artistic tyranny and self-inflated "diva-fication." But he often, in many essays, uses his own flaws as tools for teaching, thus avoiding the pitfalls of didacticism. With section headings such as FOR YOUR HEART, FOR YOUR HEAD, FOR YOUR SOUL AND FOR GOOD MEASURE, the book is an artful blend of the practical and the philosophical--a sort of chicken soup for the chicken itself. "The universe is a cold and lonely place. It is we who put love and meaning within it," says one of Woody Allen's characters in CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS. And it is Garry Garrison who has put love and meaning into the playwright's universe of deception, dismay, dejection and disillusionment--and offers us hope, help and heart. After reading this book I knew for certain that I was no longer, alone. Franklin Ashley College of Charleston
Rating:  Summary: The Human Heart in Conflict with Itself Review: "Ours," said William Faulkner in discussing the writer's responsibilty "is to show the human heart in conflict with itself." But Mr. Faulkner left the state the WRITER'S human heart to others. And it is here where Garry Garrison takes up the cause. While his comments apply to playwrights, they could also relate to any of us who swim in the cold currents of creativity. Perhaps the most sagacious piece is entitled, BEHAVE. Here Garrison Brings to life his fourth grade teacher Miss Rochelle, who in stentorian tones enjoined her incorrigible charges to "'BEEEEEEEE-HAVE or your butt is mine.'" In this hilarious essay Garrison deftly makes a plea for civility in the land of artistic tyranny and self-inflated "diva-fication." But he often, in many essays, uses his own flaws as tools for teaching, thus avoiding the pitfalls of didacticism. With section headings such as FOR YOUR HEART, FOR YOUR HEAD, FOR YOUR SOUL AND FOR GOOD MEASURE, the book is an artful blend of the practical and the philosophical--a sort of chicken soup for the chicken itself. "The universe is a cold and lonely place. It is we who put love and meaning within it," says one of Woody Allen's characters in CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS. And it is Garry Garrison who has put love and meaning into the playwright's universe of deception, dismay, dejection and disillusionment--and offers us hope, help and heart. After reading this book I knew for certain that I was no longer, alone. Franklin Ashley College of Charleston
Rating:  Summary: Buy This Book! Review: Gary Garrison has finally written a book on playwriting which grabs the heart and touches the soul of what playwrights must do. He tells you writers MUST write what they know then proceeds to mimic the act with his own personal morality tale. And this is the value of the book: he practices what he preaches page by page.When he announces that: "I'm calling my first playwriting teacher!"you hear the phone dial. You imagine the conversation.(The man may get out of you the best dialogue you've written in years!) He does not lie to you. He laughs in the face of himself. Supplies the golden rules: 1) BEHAVE! 2) WATCH THE BIG LIPS! (How often we need to heed these lessons becomes the moral to his story). But this is the reason the book is so good: like a good theme, it has a very basic universal and philosophical message and our hero, though flawed, offers up honest dialogue. He shares folly: "I don't read books!" But not as in Bucky Bush "I don't read books" (we can assume that mom-bang-the-watermelon-librarian was responsible for some book reading). He loves plays and watching people on the street. He shares delights: "A play reading is like a blind date" He gives us hope and tells us we are special. I have only one word of advice: Get this book. Read it. Buy presents for it. Take it to lunch. If you are a teacher, throw out the unread playwriting textbook and give those future playwrights this valuable instruction manual. If you are a writer, order a copy and you will delight in the bonus of finding a new friend.
Rating:  Summary: Buy This Book! Review: Gary Garrison has finally written a book on playwriting which grabs the heart and touches the soul of what playwrights must do. He tells you writers MUST write what they know then proceeds to mimic the act with his own personal morality tale. And this is the value of the book: he practices what he preaches page by page. When he announces that: "I'm calling my first playwriting teacher!"you hear the phone dial. You imagine the conversation.(The man may get out of you the best dialogue you've written in years!) He does not lie to you. He laughs in the face of himself. Supplies the golden rules: 1) BEHAVE! 2) WATCH THE BIG LIPS! (How often we need to heed these lessons becomes the moral to his story). But this is the reason the book is so good: like a good theme, it has a very basic universal and philosophical message and our hero, though flawed, offers up honest dialogue. He shares folly: "I don't read books!" But not as in Bucky Bush "I don't read books" (we can assume that mom-bang-the-watermelon-librarian was responsible for some book reading). He loves plays and watching people on the street. He shares delights: "A play reading is like a blind date" He gives us hope and tells us we are special. I have only one word of advice: Get this book. Read it. Buy presents for it. Take it to lunch. If you are a teacher, throw out the unread playwriting textbook and give those future playwrights this valuable instruction manual. If you are a writer, order a copy and you will delight in the bonus of finding a new friend.
Rating:  Summary: You must own this book if you are a playwright Review: Gary Garrison's book is the first in my reading of playwriting books that solely addresses what you must do as a writer in the theatre to keep your heart in your writing and at the same time focus on what it means to be a professional playwright. It is honest, hilarious, uplifting, and it will motivate you to get back to work as a writer. So many books are out there that discuss how to write plays, but there are none that examine the life and business of playwriting. Gary's book opens up this aspect of playwriting with chapters like: "Who needs An Agent?" and "Instruction or Destruction." He offers insights into the play development process: "Who Are All These People and What Are They Doing to My Play?" that most playwriting manuals don't really discuss. As far as I'm concerned, it is going to be a must-read for all my students of playwriting, particularly those who are going out into the world and into the profession. It is a gift from Gary, who is a inspiring teacher of playwriting and a talented theatre professional, directly to you, an aspiring playwright. Personally, after reading this book, I felt like Gary peered into my soul as a working writer, saw all my bad writing habits; my soul-killing, art-crushing, internal censors and switched them off. After several years of reading his hilarious, soul-searching articles in "The Dramatist," the journal of the Dramatists Guild, Inc., it's a pleasure to have his ideas pulled together in an important guide to the profession of the dramatist. Even if you are not a playwright, this book is uplifting, funny, powerful, and a hell of a good read. I highly encourage actors, directors, designers, and theatre technicians to pick up this book, if only to understand what it is like to be a playwright and survive in the profession. Go on and put it in your shopping cart, you'll be glad you did.
Rating:  Summary: The human heart in conflict with itself Review: I reviewed this book several days ago under the above title. Why wasn't it included?
Rating:  Summary: a must-read for playwrights Review: This book is smart, pragmatic, hilarious, and full of love. Garrison's willingness to bare himself, to use his own successes and frustrations and hard-fought wisdom to instruct and encourage--it adds up to a profound act of generosity. As if a toughened-yet-still-passionate playwright-pal is pushing you to stay focused, to smarten up, and, most important, to pursue your work... What a great gift he's given to his fellow writers!
Rating:  Summary: a must-read for playwrights Review: This book is smart, pragmatic, hilarious, and full of love. Garrison's willingness to bare himself, to use his own successes and frustrations and hard-fought wisdom to instruct and encourage--it adds up to a profound act of generosity. As if a toughened-yet-still-passionate playwright-pal is pushing you to stay focused, to smarten up, and, most important, to pursue your work... What a great gift he's given to his fellow writers!
Rating:  Summary: Only if you're really blue.... Review: This book seemed to be really interesting; after I've read it, I feel to have wasted my time. I don't know who could find this work useful; the author writes in a pleasant way, but the content is really poor. If you're a dramatist -and you feel blue- this book can help you; but you'll never find here any practical suggestion - only encouragements.
Rating:  Summary: Got Scripts? Review: This is a must-read for anyone who takes their writing seriously and wants to progress past the page and onto the boards. This is the heart and soul of craft and business savvy -- Read it or be left behind, scratching your head and wondering what happened to your promising writing career.
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