The life of invisible storytellers who liven up our screens
The life of invisible storytellers who liven up our screens
As the entertainment
industry explodes from film and television on to the web, things are changing
for people who tell stories, write scripts and screenplays. Screenwriters are
in demand because they can write what everybody desperately wants—a good story.
Three screenwriters, working in different mediums, share their secrets to
writing engaging tales. Edited excerpts.
Get a Glimpse is a series
that explores a profession through the lives of three professionals at
different stages in their careers.
•••••••••••
Atika
Chohan, 38, Mumbai
“I am a bit of an emotional
kleptomaniac," says Atika Chohan, who confesses to being an obsessive
people watcher. Chohan worked as a print and television journalist until 2008.
“I was the most reluctant journalist I know," she says. She wanted to
write fiction, but didn’t know how to make money out of it. In 2008, on a lark,
she took the screenwriting exam at the Film and Television Institute of India
(FTII) and qualified. Once she completed the course at FTII, she moved to
Mumbai in 2009 with just ₹ 5,000 in her account and started to work
as a television writer eventually moving onto films like Margarita with a
Straw.
Starting
out: At
meetings with other writers and producers, Chohan would often get agitated and
storm out if the story seemed regressive. Life in Mumbai was hard. She recycled
her clothes, stayed in a cramped flat with strangers, pretended to be on a diet
when she couldn’t afford to share the bill at restaurants, and sometimes simply
confessed that she had no money.
The
big break: The
year she moved to Mumbai, Chohan managed to make it inside the Yashraj Studios
office to submit her script. “There I was, a girl from Delhi with just an idea
that she wanted to be a script writer, actually standing in that great Yashraj
studios passage," says Chohan, who still remembers the thrill of that
moment. Three weeks later, Chohan received a message from the studio indicating
they liked her script but were not likely to use it. Instead they offered her a
job with their writers’ team to work on the television series rishta.com.
While, this was indeed a good break, Chohan considers a chance to co-write a
script with Meghna Gulzar as her biggest break till date. A biopic on acid
attack survivor Lakshmi, the film stars Deepika Padukone and will start
shooting early next year.
To
make the cut: In the
early years Chohan obsessively watched films, dissecting the screenplays. She
believes to succeed as a writer, one requires consistency, commitment and
patience to work through rejections and re-writes.
“Nothing substitutes for a
hard copy of your screenplay. You should have at least two concepts for stories
elaborately written and one complete screenplay before you go around
approaching people. This is the greatest CV to have. The early years in Mumbai
can totally throw you off. My advice is to continue a day job till you have a
contract," she says.
The
changing tide: “This
is the best time to be a writer. When I started, there were too many
gatekeepers. You had to know the right people , do the right things. But now as
a writer, you can subvert the system, and get your work out," she says.
What
she loves: “The
access to a voice and the reach to an audience," says Chohan.
What
she hates: “The
arduousness of writing—it can be lonely. Sometimes, I starve for human
contact," she says.
Money
matters: Entry
level writers get ₹ 10-15 lakhs per project; at a mid-level this goes
up to ₹ 20-30 lakhs; and established writers can earn ₹ 40-60
lakhs per screenplay.
•••••••••••
Karan
Anshuman, 37, Mumbai
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Photo: Abhijit
Bhatlekar/Mint
“If actor Scarlett
Johansson passed by, I wouldn’t notice. But if Aaron Sorkin (screenwriter,
director, producer, and playwright) passed by, I’d jump up because writers are
my stars," says Karan Anshuman, best known for writing and directing the
Amazon Prime web series Inside Edge and Mirzapur. Growing up in Mumbai,
Anshuman spent hours on the sets as both his parents worked in television.
Determined to do something else, he studied computer science but a few
semesters into his course, he realized he didn’t enjoy the subject. He
experimented with art history, astronomy, till he made his way to film making
and decided to stick with it.
Starting
out: “Script
writers do varied work—writing for websites, corporate films, television as
well as short films. You go wherever the money takes you," says Anshuman.
But through all those years of struggle, he was kept constantly writing new
scripts .
The
big break: Anshuman
successfully pitched his first film script Bangistan to Excel Entertainment,
going on to direct the film which released in 2015.
To
make the cut: Watching
films is the best education there is. “I steal ideas from people’s lives
because you can’t write everything from your life," he says.
The
changing tide: “Write
a screenplay and shoot it on your phone. People have access to technology that
allows you to do this stuff now. Go to a friend struggling to be director, get
a couple of buddies to act and make a short film. And put it out there to get
noticed," he says.
What
he loves : “That
an idea, something you imagine, comes to life with thousands of people working
on it."
What
he hates: “Scriptwriters
rarely get the credit. The public ends up giving the credit for the story to
the director."
Money
matters: “If
you are a new writer, its likely you will get exploited on your first few
assignments so learn to negotiate. There are some agencies like Tulsea and Kwan
that represent writers. That helps. But payment for writers is still bad. They
don’t get any kind of royalties," he says. Payments can range
between ₹ 10 lakh to ₹ 2-3 crore.
•••••••••••
Anjum
Rajabali, 60, Mumbai
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Photo: Abhijit
Bhatlekar/Mint
It used to be a jungle
raj,and writers felt exploited all the time. But now things are changing. Today
if you have a good script, it has a chance to be made into a film, whether you
have access to the right people or not," says Anjum Rajabali, who divides
his time between scriptwriting , conducting courses and working at the Screen
Writers Association.
In 1981, Rajabali moved to
Mumbai to work as a clinical psychologist. He later joined Business India as
book reviews editor. “My job paid alright but I didn’t like it," recalls
Rajabali. A chance meeting with cinematographer Baba Azmi and his wife Tanvi
changed things. “Baba was very keen to become a director and he turned to me
and said, ‘Why don’t you write a script?’. I didn’t even know what a script
looked like or what the word screenplay meant," he says. But the idea
stayed with him and some months later he wrote a story about a boy coming back
to his village. “That story never got made into a film but I enjoyed writing
it."
Starting
out: Rajabali
wrote his first script, Drohkaal at 34. “Those days I would wake up at 4.30 am
and write till it was time to go to work. I’d come back and write for a few
hours. Every holiday, every festival I would sit and write. In those five years
(1992-97), I held my job at Business India," he says.
The
big break: A
chance meeting with Govind Nihalani, who was struggling with the script of
Drohkaal, was the big break for Rajabali. “We got talking and he invited me to
have a look at it. I gave him some suggestions," he says. Nihalani liked
the ideas and asked him to work on the script.
To
make the cut: “Screenwriting
requires a high degree of concentration and the format is pretty restrictive.
There is much emphasis on brevity and you have to learn that," he says.
Also, you need to be collaborative, and be able to hand your story over to the
director to shape it into a film. “If you want to be taken seriously, you can’t
just say I am a scriptwriter, give me work. Have at least two ready scripts and
five stories when you step into the market,"he adds.
The
changing tide: There
are so many contests like the Cinestaan India’s Storytellers Script Contest and
script labs like NFDC and Sundance where you can pitch ideas. Individual studio
websites have script submission sections too. “Put your story out there (after
registering it with the Scriptwriters Association of India). Every decision
maker, whether a director or a star, is looking for a good script," he
says.
What
he loves: "Millions
of people in dark cinema halls experience what I have first created."
What
he hates: “Saying
no to struggling writers who want help or suggestions. because I don’t have the
time."
Money
matters: As
a first time writer, you can earn between ₹ 10-15 lakh for a project.
For the second script you can jump to ₹ 25 lakh and from there it can
go upto ₹ 75 lakh per project.
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