Showing posts with label Margaret Heidenry article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Margaret Heidenry article. Show all posts

Monday, February 11, 2013

Margaret writes for Vanity Fair

Photograph by Jacek Nowak/Alamy

Vanity Fair's March 2013 Hollywood Issue, not only showcases
a fabulous photo spread by Bruce Weber, but
more importantly, includes an article by my good friend,
Margaret Heidenry.
When the Spec Script was King is a fascinating look at
the changing practices of  how the film business acquires content.

"Monday mornings in Hollywood used to mean something.
Back in the 1990s- before the weekend box office was entirely
dominated by sequels, prequels, movies based on board games, 
and other pre-sold "franchises" -- Monday mornings were when 
original screenplays hit the auction block, and here's how it
used to happen" : Click Here :^)

Here, Margaret delights in some fresh beef jerky ;)

Margaret has sold more than one screenplay, herself 
and has experienced first hand the ups and downs 
of the movie business. 
It's fun for me to see her journalistic side and I love VF magazine. 
I envy that she had the chance to interview William Goldman, 
the writer of one of my favorite movies,
"All the President's Men" and the Oscar winning, 
"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid", which helped create the 
then new  business model - write first, then sell.
There were some very exciting times for writers
before franchise films and playing it safe became the norm.
The audience definitely benefited, despite a dud slipping through
every now and again.

I hope so.

Congratulations again to a wonderful talented funny lady!

Take a look at the article or, better yet,
go out and buy it. It's a Collector's Issue :D
xo,
A

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Margaret, the early years...

My good friend, Margaret Heidenry wrote this fascinating article for the Sunday New York Times Magazine. On newsstands and online now- 
My Parents Were Educational (Home-Schooling) Anarchists 


The Heidenry family in Mexico 1975 (Margaret on railing at 4 years old)

"Tired of the constraints of the 40-hour workweek, my father, in 1972, quit his job in publishing. My parents were in their early 30s, and they had four children under 7. “But we still wanted to explore the world,” my father recalled recently. They bought six one-way tickets to Europe, leaving only a laughable $3,000 to subsist on. Young and idealistic, they thought they could easily educate us along the way. “Life itself would become a portable classroom.” Read more ...


One of  my favorite pictures of Margaret with her dad, Jack walking her down the aisle.

It's a great read, whether you are for or against (any amount of)  home-schooling. I've enjoyed reading comments after the piece online,  some of the conversation gets quite heated! I had to add my two cents about one of my favorite families-

I've been a friend of Margaret's for over 20 years and know her family fairly well, too. Over the years I've heard bits and pieces about their unorthodox upbringing, but this was eye opening. The transition from home school to public school sounds rough, but the early years of travel and a curriculum that included yoga, tea time & Spanish sounds great. Maybe that combination of experiences with a formal education paid off, because Pat and Jack raised four unusually charming, intelligent and well rounded people! They're an enviably close knit family which must have contributed a great deal to their success as adults. It's inspiring to read about people willing to break from the norm and also recognize when it's time to try something else.

It was a thrill to see this in print this morning. I love looking at the old photos with Mary, James and John as kids & of course the anarchists themselves, Pat & Jack Heidenry ;) 
Nice job Margaret! No wonder you're such an interesting fun lady.

If you don't have a copy of this Sunday's New York Times, you can read it online here

Have a great Sunday! 
xo, A

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