Three interviews with pulpsters who would go on to write great movies. These interviews are taken from the University of California Press' Back Stories series.
Leigh Brackett: Journeyman Plumber
Interview by Steve Swires
She wrote that [The Big Sleep] like a man. She writes good.
Howard Hawks, quoted in Hawks on Hawks
Leigh Brackett with director Howard Hawks at work on Rio Bravo |
Leigh Brackett wrote scripts
for Hawks' The Big Sleep (1946), Rio
Bravo (1959), Hatari! (1962), El
Dorado (1967), and Rio Lobo (1970),
as well as for Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye (1973).
Besides being one of the few successful women screenwriters, she was one of the
earliest successful women science-fiction writers, having entered the field
professionally in 1939. Her best-known character is the larger-than-life
swashbuckling hero Eric John Stark, who first appeared in the pages of Planet
Stories in the 1940s and who returned in a series of novels she wrote
for Ballantine Books.
(This interview was conducted several years before her death
and the posthumous release of The Empire Strikes Back,
her final screen credit.)