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Creating Characters: Let Them Whisper Their Secrets
 
 
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Creating Characters: Let Them Whisper Their Secrets [Paperback]

Marisa D'vari (Author), Ken Atchity (Foreword)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 1, 2005
Fresh, invigorating, and jam-packed with solid how to advice this amazing desktop resource reveals the secrets highly paid screenwriters and best-selling novelists furiously fight to keep under wraps.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

D'Vari has 20 years of hands-on experience working in Hollywood as a studio story analyst, consultant, and executive. She currently lives in Boston, MA and is the producer/host of the nationally-syndicated cable TV show Scene Here. She conducts seminars on screenwriting all over the country.


Ken Atchity received his PhD in comparative literature from Yale University in New Haven Connecticut. During his academic career, he served as chair of the Department of Comparative Literature at Occidental College, was a Distinguished Instructor at the UCLA Writers Program and was a Fulbright Professor at the University of Bologna in Italy. As a best-selling author Dr. Atchity has written fourteen books, including A Writer's Time and Writing Treatments That Sell. Using his multifaceted talents as a writer-mentor-editor-producer, the author founded AEI, a highly successful literary management firm specializing in author representation and movie production. He currently resides in Los Angeles, California.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 233 pages
  • Publisher: Michael Wiese Productions (July 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0941188973
  • ISBN-13: 978-0941188975
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,384,792 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

"Let's make wine fun & approachable!" says Marisa D'Vari, luxury travel and fine wine writer, now the proud recipient of the 2011 Fine & Rare Wine Specialist Program bursary (a joint effort by the Austrian Wine Academy, continental Europe's largest wine-school, and Hotel Residenz Palais Coburg), and the 2010 AXA Millésimes Scholarship. Both are directly affiliated with her studies for the Master of Wine program.

D'Vari is also a judge for the International Wine and Spirits Competition., among others,

D'Vari writes about wine for several publications, including London's FT, Robb Report, Quarterly Review of Wine, the San Francisco Chronicle, Food Arts, South China Morning Post, Sante, and many more in addition to being Wine & Spirits Editor for Taste Cincinnati magazine. She is the publisher of AWineStory.com in addition to syndicating her weekly column to a variety of newspapers, magazines, newsletters, and blogs.

D'Vari travels constantly, usually dragging along an enormous wine atlas (Jancis Robinson, anyone?) In a recent period she was invited to taste wine at Bordeaux's En Primeur, (one of three American women), judge wine for the International Wine and Spirits Competition in London, review Burgundy's 2011 vintage, toured top Champagne houses with a handful of other educators, and visit dozens of producers in Hungary, Spain, France, and Napa...

... and she also battled baboons during a visit to S. Africa's wine regions (well, at least was astonished to see them, instead of birds, attacking juicy ripe grapes).

A wine educator, D'Vari holds three of the most important and rarest international wine designations including the Diploma of Wine and Spirits from the Wine and Spirits Educational Trust, one of 323 individuals (as of January 2011) to earn the Certified Wine Educator designation from the Society of Wine Educators, and the 'Certified Sommelier' designation from the Court of Master Sommeliers in addition to numerous other designations from the American Sommelier Association and the Sommelier Society of America. She is the first American to be invited to join the UK's prestigious Association of Wine Educators.

In March of 2011, D'Vari was awarded the Level 5 Honors diploma from WSET for completing a year long research project focusing on the topic of marketing wine to millennials. Fewer than 67 people hold this designation worldwide.

In Boston D'Vari had produced and hosted the television show A Taste of Luxury (1995 - 2003) in which she interviewed the late Robert Mondavi and Julia Child, Daniel Boulud, Adam Tihany, Charlie Palmer, Todd English, and similar guests from 1995 to the present.

A So Cal gal (and UCLA grad) D'Vari had been an executive at many Hollywood studios, working with screenwriters to develop stories. "People love stories," D'Vari says. "As a wine educator, I use very entertaining and dramatic stories about wine to help them learn." Her two books on storytelling are published and available at bookstores and Amazon.

While in Boston, D'Vari taught a diploma level course at the Cambridge School of Culinary Arts, served on the board of the Roger Saunders School of Hotel Management, and taught classes at Harvard and Emerson college while also teaching presentation skills to corporations such as Gillette and speaking on the subject of publicity, the subject of Building Buzz: How To Reach And Impress Your Target Audience one of her five books.

She is a member of the Society of Wine Educators, International Association of Culinary Professionals, American Sommelier Association, a Fellow at the James Beard organization, a long standing member of the American Society for Journalists & Authors, National Speakers Association, and Member of the Magazine Publishers of America. Recently she has been awarded a fellowship from Far Niente winery in conjunction with the Symposium for Professional Wine Writers that takes place at the Meadowood resort in the Napa Valley each year, and is in part sponsored by the Napa Valley Vintners Association.






 

Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not such a big deal., August 25, 2005
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This review is from: Creating Characters: Let Them Whisper Their Secrets (Paperback)
While this book may be useful to the novice writer or one unfamiliar with personality assessment tools, I found it more irritating than helpful and not particularly original. Ms. D'vari has adapted the Myers-Briggs, Enneagram and the DISC to create her own, very simplistic, MORE system which she uses to help the writer develop the personality traits of the imagined characters.

My biggest complaint with this book was that all of the question marks were upside down and backwards! This, along with numerous typos and/or misspelled words, indicates a lack of care in either the writer, the publisher or the editor. If you can overlook these, which I found to be more grating than nails on a chalkboard, perhaps you will discover more of interest than I did.

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24 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Starts off okay but fizzles, July 27, 2006
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This review is from: Creating Characters: Let Them Whisper Their Secrets (Paperback)
Basically, what the author has done is to group the various related types in the Enneagram (or Myers-Briggs or Jung) into just 4 types and uses a scoring system to weight each one.

Movers - driven, goal-oriented 'Type A'
Observers - factual, aloof, and insecure
Relaters - romantic "people" person
Energizers - charming, flamboyant storyteller
(Hence "M.O.R.E.")

(There's a danger to this kind of oversimplification. If we were to divide up the world into, say, "Hispanic" and "Not Hispanic" it would simplify the categories, but a lot of nuances and depth of cultures would be lost. It seems to be counterproductive if depth is what you're looking for.)

I've tried using this book with my 3 main characters in my current project. And I find that by applying this methodology, they're more likely to be alike than different. There's not nearly enough on distinguishing characters *within* these 4 types once you have them. For example, let's say I have two Movers. They shouldn't be exactly alike, so how do I make them different? If she scores 27 for Mover and Relater, how do I balance those? If he scores 26 as an Observer and 22 as an Energizer, how do I factor in the latter?

After your characters are categorized, the book seems to fizzle and the discussion on M.O.R.E types appears to be over. The author gets into "channeling," character goal-setting (and not just for the story but for a lifetime), determining a character's wardrobe, and visualizing a character's "autopsy." It would seem that types would drive something like wardrobe choices and goals, but it's not even mentioned.

I was hoping for more.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars More Formulas From Hollywood!, February 25, 2008
This review is from: Creating Characters: Let Them Whisper Their Secrets (Paperback)
This book would appear to have potential from the first couple of pages (in which the author goes into length explaining the sources for her MORE theory ). However, the more you read, the more you feel you've read this before, written by people with better insight into character development, and who might've actually penned a screenplay or two. As she herself explains, her job capacity in the movie "business" is as an executive. Therefore, this book has an executive's values. Superficiality, one dimensionality and complete contempt for the characters we should in fact respect. Can humanity REALLY be divided into four categories? Even as I read it I found myself clustered into all four of them. True characters; human characters will never always be or show one aspect of their personality. We all want to at times be the center of attention (energizer), or care for others (relater), or think clearly before making a decision (observer) or move relentlessly forward (mover), sometimes simultaneously! But don't tell the author that! Humans have been divided into four types of people and that's that! Quite honestly, you should really re-evaluate acquiring a book endorsed by Christopher "one story fits-all" Vogler. If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Did you ever see a film or read a book, and strongly feel you have met the character before? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
female personality style, story analysts, creating characters
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Pretty Woman, All About Eve, Bette Davis, Bridget Jones, Eve Harrington, Fatal Attraction, Margo Channing, Michael Douglas, Dona Sol, Jerry Maguire, Julia Roberts, Penny Lane, Valley Girl, Basic Instinct, John Nash, Ray Bradbury, The Male Relater, You've Got Mail, Almost Famous, Andy Warhol, Beverly Hills, David Lynch, Melanie Griffith, New York Times, Sharon Stone
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