Cally Phillips is someone with wide writing experience, and also the person with the brilliant idea of an Online E-book Festival - so I was keen to converse with her for this blog.
Sue: Cally, you worked in theatre and tv too. That’s something I’ve never done. What’s it like?
Sue: But you didn’t leave drama
altogether – you went from TV to theatre, didn’t you?
Sue: Cally, you worked in theatre and tv too. That’s something I’ve never done. What’s it like?
Cally: I really don’t
like leaving work unfinished and working
for TV that's pretty much a given.
When I made the decision to 'give up the day job' and write for a career
(having discovered I personally just couldn't write and do a day job) TV seemed
like the best bet to actually make a living from writing. In this country at
least. And I did make a living out of it. Unfortunately, in TV you get paid a
lot more often for scripts that never get made than you do for ones that do get
made. And the meetings! I hate meetings. And meetings about meetings.
Such a waste of time.
Cally Phillips |
You can spend three
or more years working on a script before it gets produced. Or more likely it
never gets produced. Irrespective of how good it is. And yet, when the
chips were down, I had a script cleared from start to production in less than
two months. (I was lucky, I came in as a stand-in when the budget was already
agreed and the 'development' time had run out.) If I could always have done
that it would have been great.
Endless drafts
because the money wasn't there to fully finance a project or because execs are
trying to second guess the next big thing, wasn't for me. I was really
aiming to write series drama but like so many 'be careful what you dream'
things, when I actually got into it I realised I didn't like the 'cut and
paste' style of writing as much as I wanted to have a good amount of creative
control.
In TV they pay you
well because they really are buying your time, which becomes buying your life.
An example. Producers and script editors (in my experience) have this
knack of phoning you on a Friday, before a holiday or Xmas and needing you to
make changes by Monday, day after New Year etc. When I realised this and
just gave up taking weekends or holidays, it made life a bit easier, but it did
strike me as a bit 'ornery'! I know that broadcasting is a 'business'
first and foremost and when I decided I didn't want to engage with the set
rules, I did the only other thing possible and walked away.
I'm not whining. It
was a pragmatic decision. That's the way the business works and if you don't
like it, don't do it. No writer can change or influence the way
broadcasting works. Writers (even through unions) just don't have that much
sway in the industry. Becoming a producer would be another option but even
then, it just takes so damned long to get anything done. It's a classic ‘jam
tomorrow’ situation and for me it's much more important to be able to be
actively creative on a day by day basis than have the promise of jam tomorrow.
'Brand Loyalty' |
Cally: Luckily for
me, as I was making this decision to leave TV I got the opportunity to do paid
work as a dramatist in residence and theatre was a place I was much more
comfortable in. I'd trained professionally as an actor before becoming a
teacher. Ironically whereas in TV you get paid for not having work produced,
in theatre you tend not to be paid even if you have work produced. And
it's still hard to get mainstream work produced. I wrote my first play in 1990
and it took 3 years to get it put on. Eventually I had to produce and direct it
myself. Critical acclaim but financial jeopardy. Still, it gave me confidence
in my own work and the taste for just getting on and 'doing it' rather than
waiting around for others to allow me to be creative. It took another 10
years before I was in the position to do that, but when it came, I grabbed it
with both hands.
Creatively I had a
journey to make too. I love the discipline and structure of screenwriting. I
love the immediacy and the particularities of writing for the stage. I love
writing dialogue. I enjoy the complexity and layering of words and ideas which
visual writing really requires. I like to be wholly creatively
absorbed. But I moved away from mainstream theatre towards 'drama' because
I wanted to see plays performed, not wait for the 'jam.'
Whereas with
screenworks, if they are produced they are 'there' as a legacy for all time
(sometimes not a good thing) theatre is an ephemeral art and that's fine but
more than that it can actually be a 'sharing' art form as well and in the 10
years I spent working actively in 'drama' I realised that I liked advocating
other voices at least as much as writing my own 'voice'.
Theatre (in its
broadest sense and here I think the word ‘drama’ is much more appropriate) is
something which people can share and not just as a passive audience. Boal
taught me that. And it ticked boxes for me by allowing me to direct as
well, so that I could use all parts of my creativity, mental and physical, at
the same time. I was lucky enough to get to work (and get paid) doing 'drama'
in mental health and disability settings and from that I developed a creative
style (and a business) using drama as advocacy. For a lot of the time I
was working in a pre-literate
culture. So the 'writing' was very, very
flexible as a concept. But for me, the active involvement in drama and
'voicing' the unvoiced through writing was absolutely the best time of my
creative life (so far). I would still be doing it but my health no longer
permits me to. It's a pretty full on, intensive way of working and I just
can't do that any longer.
'A Week With No Labels' by Cally Phillips |
Since 'giving up'
the active side of advocacy drama I've done a couple of things. Firstly I'm
engaged in writing more 'traditional' things with an 'advocacy' flavour, using
the skills and experience I gained during that creatively productive time.
Secondly, I've been ebooking my back catalogue - which gives a kind of closure
to the mountains of good work that all languished 'unfinished' because of
financial or fashion constraints. I've got most of my playscripts out as
ebooks now and I'm going to adapt a lot of my screenplays into fictional
form. But I've got a bit diverted into publishing just lately and as a
publisher I'm finding that I can enjoy voicing others at least as much as
seeing or hearing my own voice in published form.
Sue: You’ve certainly worked in a lot
of different media and forms! With all that experience, has your view of
writing changed at all?
Cally: I started
off wanting to influence the world through my writing. Twenty years on I'm not
that interested in what I have to say any more. I've lost the ambition or
illusion that I'm 'important' in that respect. And I'm no longer trying
to 'find myself' through my writing. I'm a lot more interested in making sure
other people have their say. And finding out about other people through
writing. I've never really enjoyed being centre stage and I've learned
that what I love most about writing is writing as a communicative shared
experience. Which is possible in all mediums, but easier in some than
others.
Sue: Thanks, Cally.
Cally is a member of
Authors Electric, who blog here, at Do Authors Dream of Electric Books?
Cally’s books and plays can be found here, with links to her blogs. She’s always got something
interesting to say!
1 comment:
Thanks for a great interview - Cally has been very kind to me (and my books) so it's wonderful to hear of her fascinating writing past.
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