
Robin U. Russin
Author of Screenplay: Writing the Picture
About the Author
Robin U. Russin is a Professor of Screenwriting at the University of California, Riverside, where he serves as director of the MFA program in Creative Writing and Writing for the Performing Arts. He has written, produced and directed film, TV, theater and transmedia projects. Russin is coauthor of show more Naked Play writing. A Rhodes Scholar, he holds degrees from Harvard, Oxford, Rhode Island School of Design and UCLA, where he earned an MFA in screenwriting. William Missouri Downs is an award-winning playwright who has written for film and several NBC sitcoms. His plays have been produced throughout the world and published by Samuel French and Playscripts. He is coauthor of The Art of Theatre and Naked Playwriting. Downs holds an MFA in screenwriting from UCLA. show less
Works by Robin U. Russin
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A reasonably good textbook on playwriting, but I would not use it for a textbook, because there are no writing exercises, which I consider a must for teaching a class. Still, it does have some features worth mentioning, such as the guide to marketing, which goes about half way there. It tells you what to do, and shows you how to write a good cover letter and query letter; that makes the book useful to anyone who wants to be produced. It gives some guidance on copyright, but no one is going show more to go on that limb too far. It's always IANAL, and that makes sense. I even hear lawyers who refuse to ring in on copyright. They did provide good resources, and advised joining the Dramatists Guild, the best advice there can be on the issue of protecting your work. Still there were some...issues. Such as the weird habit of referring to playwrights, directors, producers, etc predominantly as "she" in a politically correct form, but referencing only males when they quote or discuss anyone's work. Oh, yes, they did mention Marsha Norman once, and Eve Ensler once or twice, mostly in passing, but it is jarring to see so many "she" references coupled with nothing but male sources. And one idea they develop for how to make a character interesting is classically sexist. Those things, plus some jarring typos, lost the book a star. show less
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- 4.1
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