Alex Kustanovich (10)

Alex Kustanovich (10)
ACT X -->

HORTON: . . . that you have to be able to work with people to be a screenwriter. You just can't be an egotistical -- 'This is what I want. If you don't wanna do it, I'm not gonna work with you.' That's not gonna work in the business.

KUSTANOVICH: That is correct.

H: Okay . . .

K: I would suggest to people, to young screenwriters . . . to read more books . . . than to watch movies. To read books rather than to watch movies.

H: Did you read Richard Walter's book?

K: Yes, I did because it was a requirement.

H: Would you recommend Richard Walter's book?

K: Yes. Yes, I would.

H: Okay. Actually, I use it in my courses. I like his book. I think it's a great foundation because it cuts to the chase.

K: Yes, no. I agree. It is good. Of course I haven't read Lew's book. But I did read Richard's book, and it's fine.

[But] I would personally . . . I would rather your students listen to Truby's tapes . . .

H: Wow. Okay.

K: Than read Richard's book.

H: Okay.

Now, what was that little snippet of a story . . .

K: Let me stop you for a second and tell you there's another book. I'm looking at my bookshelf right now.

H: Okay.

K: And there's a book that I actually gave as a present to Lew on his birthday . . . a long time ago when we were in school as a suck-up gesture.

There's a book called -- MAKING SHAPELY FICTION. And the book is by Jerome Stern.

H: Wow.

K: And this book is . . .

H: MAKING SHAPELY FICTION?

K: Right.

H: Okay. By Stern.

K: Stern.

H: Okay.

K: And it's a very good book about style.

H: Okay.

K: So -- I'd recommend that.

H: Okay, let me . . . I'm trying to wrap it up . . . and you . . . I very much appreciate . . .

K: I totally forgot that I have to leave . . . whatever.

H: Well, that's okay. We're gonna wrap it up.

There's a little snippet you told me years ago about the agony of writing that you picked up from Solzhenitsyn. What is that? Can you repeat that?

K: Yes, the agony of writing alone. And there was a story that Solzhenitsyn wrote in one of his memoirs . . . called 'The Oak and the Calf.' And he said that when he was in prison, he got use to silence and solitude so much . . . and got used to writing in solitude . . . that when he got back to Moscow . . . after he was released from prison . . . he couldn't write.

You're talking about this anecdote?

H: Yes, that's right.

K: He couldn't write because he would . . . y'know, the tramways and the buses and the cars would distract him.

So he asked his wife to lock him up in their basement and to give him a pot to piss in and a loaf of bread and water . . . just to create the same kind of conditions that he was used to in prison . . . so he could write.

So he was in kind of a locked cell with just a pot to piss in and water . . . and bread. And silence.

H: As far as you know, he used that process to write some of his big tomes.

K: That's correct.

H: Okay. And that was 'The Oak and the Calf' or 'Cat'?

K: 'The Oak and the Calf.' Calf meaning not the calf below your knee, but a calf . . . a small cow.

H: Okay. Now Alex . . . are you the same way? Do you have to be locked up to write? Or does that method work for you or not?

K: No, I'm totally different.

H: You like to get out and work with people.

K: That's right. That's right. And not necessarily . . . and I like to write with people, too, by the way. I really truly enjoy a collaborative process. Because, maybe because it comes from not trusting my own ideas.

That's possible. I do not deny that. It's for my psychiatrist to find out . . . which I don't have yet. Y'know, I never got one.

But maybe. That's a possibility. If I was more secure with my ability to write . . . maybe I would say: 'I wanna write alone.'

But that's a separate issue.

I love collaborating, I do. I'm bored to be alone. Being alone . . . an un-writing. So, when I start writing I work, like, for two hours. And I live in Los Feliz . . . so I just go out to a coffeehouse. And I just go there and sit there and look at the people and write.

So . . . noise . . . and . . . kind of hustle-bustle of the street.

H: So you're the opposite of Solzhenitsyn, actually.

K: Right. I can not write without music, first of all. I've gotta have classical music going all the time.

H: Wow. I didn't know that.

K: Yeah.

H: So, are you glad that you started down 'The Path of the Writer?'

K: Well, yes. I am glad because I can not picture myself working 9 to 5. I can not picture myself doing anything else . . . because it's truly . . . [it] is the thing that brings me joy. When I . . . Dorothy Parker said, and I repeat and quote her all the time on that . . . and it's a famous quote. She said that -- 'I don't like to write. I like having written.'

H: [laughs]

K: And that's basically . . . y'know, I sorta concur with that.

H: It's sort of the opposite of making love, I think.

K: Exactly. Sort of the opposite of making love. That's right. Making love is completely opposite, yeah.

And some people LOVE writing. And I wish that I were one of them. I wish, truly . . . because that would be great. Then I wouldn't have any doubts about becoming a banker, y'know? Or not becoming a banker . . . whatever.

David Mamet, Neil Simon, Steven King . . . many others love to write. The process. Love the process.

For me the process is very painful. However . . . the end of the process is rewarding very often. So . . . that's why I continue doing it.

H: And you like the life of the writer as long as you can pay your bills, I guess.

K: That's correct. I'm willing to live hand-to-mouth . . . as long as I can do that and survive. I would rather do this . . . even though I'm contradicting myself a little bit because before I said that . . . I wish I had a . . . very often I say to myself: 'Y'know, I'm this and this and that. And I wish I was man enough to make money so I could have a family, whatever.'

But . . . in the long run I would say to myself, 'I would rather do this because I enjoy the life of the writer. It's an interesting, challenging life. And also I enjoy being one . . . when my Muse visits me.'

H: You sound like you're doing great, Alex.

K: Well . . . I'm just struggling.

H: Thank you, sir. I appreciate it very much, Alex. And I wish you the best of luck on OUT OF THE COLD.

K: Right. Thank you very much. We'll keep in touch.

H: Okay.

K: Alright.

H: Take care. Bye.

[tape ends]

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