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These Juicy Beasts!

January 31, 2013 Team Beasts
Lucy & Benh
Lucy & Benh

“I’m just telling a story... It’s about a little girl and her father. I just want people to engage. Because everybody has a dad, and everybody loses that dad, on some level." -Lucy Alibar

Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin met as teenagers more than 15 years ago at a playwriting summer camp. At the time, they were just beginning to nurture their love for storytelling but would forge a lasting friendship that would lead to their eventual collaboration on the screenplay for Beasts of the Southern Wild, now nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Adapted Screenplay category.

On their first time meeting, Lucy told Indiewire:

We both won this playwriting award called Young Playwrights the same year. We got to go to New York and see a lot of plays together, and he and I just responded so quickly and so immediately to the same kinds of theater. We saw a lot of more traditional straight plays, and then they took us to see 'Hedwig ['and the Angry Inch'] and Benh and I just couldn’t believe we were seeing this. We would talk about it, and then we stayed pen pals, and we would send each other mix tapes and I would send him everything I’d write and he’d send me these short films he’d make every weekend. We just felt it was this very immediate artistic camaraderie that we had. It was part of a really wonderful friendship.

For the long time friends, Beasts' success and its recent Oscar nominations are as thrilling as they are completely unexpected, especially considering the long road it took to get there.

Northern Florida native, Lucy Alibar distinctly remembers the moment she realized that she could find a voice for her stories on stage. She recalled to Blackbook Magazine:

I went to this very good public school in Tallahassee, Florida, and in the library they had a copy of Ntozake Shange’s For Colored Girls…, and it just blew my mind because it’s just voices. It’s all first-person narratives, and a lot of southern literature is like that, too. Then I realized that the stuff I was reading like Flannery O’Connor—all these first-person narratives could be theatrical. That’s when I realized that my voice could be theatrical and could be on stage in this way that I never knew from reading Ibsen or any of that stuff.

As she began to develop her voice, Lucy found most of her inspiration was coming from personal experiences, the surroundings and cultures she grew up in, especially Georgia where her father was from and where all her plays her were based. Writing one play in particular, Juicy and Delicious, served as a coping mechanism when her "vibrant, strong-as-an ox dad" grew gravely ill.

In an interview with Tribeca Film, Lucy explained:

I wrote the play right when my dad was starting to get sick. Usually I’m a pretty in control person and pretty poised, but for some reason I couldn’t really process it; it really threw me for a loop. So I started writing a play about this kid named Hushpuppy losing his dad, and his world starts to fall apart in terms of time and order and space. Grits start raining down from the sky and the Aurochs start coming out of these caves through the red clay of Georgia to devour schoolchildren, and the teacher and the father are trying to prepare the children for the end of the world...Looking back on it, I think I was writing about me not being a child anymore—figuring out how I’m actually going to live through that. Because you can’t be a child if there aren’t any grown-ups, and I felt like my grown-ups were falling away. So that was the start.

She elaborated on the role her own father played in shaping the characters and relationships in her play:

My dad, like many Southern men, is this very emotionally expressive person who isn't as articulate in words about his feelings as he is with breaking a chair or something like that. And he does that all out of all strong emotions, but I was really interested in really watching [my character's] behavior change because I watched my own dad's behavior really change as he got sick and how that really changed our relationship.

As she often did with everything she wrote, when Juicy and Delicious was finished, Lucy sent it to her old friend from camp, Benh Zeitlin.

Around the same time, Benh was a Wesleyan graduate and had moved down to New Orleans where he was swiping his last few credit cards to finance his short film, Glory at Sea.

The short, set in a southern delta community, deals with the aftermath of a flood and "the community’s Orpheus-like efforts to keep alive its old traditions and loved ones". Shot over the course of five grueling months, including 3 work stoppages due to money shortages as well as a run in with the Coast Guard, Benh emerged from the experience with one very defining revelation. He would set his first feature in the same Bayou community that he had fallen in love with shooting Glory.  He tells Salon:

From the moment I came to New Orleans and the first time I saw Louisiana in general, it has this magical quality. It’s so different from where I come from and where I grew up. It has this sort of majesty and magic to it.

As Benh was just beginning to develop the seeds of his idea for a feature film, Glory at Sea was accepted to the  SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas. The filmmaker and his friends were on their way to the film's premiere in Texas when their car was rear ended by a drunk driver.  Benh recounts to The Hollywood Reporter:

It was 5 in the morning, and we were at a stoplight, and the driver was drunk and ran into us at full speed. I was in the back seat, and the collision collapsed it into the front seat, like an accordion. It turned my leg backward and shattered my pelvis, and I had to move back to New York for eight months. And that was when I started writing Beasts.

Benh had a clear vision of where he wanted to set his feature, a sinking piece of land on the coast of southern Louisiana that he would call the Bathtub. He was transfixed with the idea of this place at the end of the world, inhabited by a community of hold outs unwilling to compromise their physical and spiritual concept of home. As he began to flesh out the world his movie would exist in, he recalled the characters of his friend Lucy Alibar's play, Juicy and Delicious, and saw how they could easily fit into the landscape of the Bathtub. He reached out to Lucy about his idea and so began their collaboration on Beasts of the Southern Wild. Benh said in his No Film School interview:

The original setting, it had several similarities. It was sort of off the grid, it was out in the woods, it was rural, it was in a wetlands culture and alligators were part of it. There’s a lot of things that connected North Florida off-the-grid Wetlands to South Louisiana off-the-grid Gulf bayou culture, so it made a lot of sense and it all came together. There was just some weird synergy where I just felt like the two things were floating around like this and they just kind of glued together.

Lucy added to MSN:

I think the central idea that Benh came to me with was taking the characters of this father and child in the South and these aurochs that are coming down to devour the children as the grown ups get sicker. He was interested in transposing that to South Louisiana and to the bayous there. And it really started from there. From moving down to that fishing marina and just spending all our time and making that almost a third character in Hushpuppy's world.

Throughout the course of the following year, Benh and Lucy swapped ideas, notes and drafts back and forth from New York to Florida to Louisiana and back.

Lucy On Location BIgger
Lucy On Location BIgger

The process was truly a labor of love as Lucy juggled several part time service jobs to sustain her career as a writer. In fact, she tells Elle Magazine that nobody could get in touch with her when the script was accepted to the Sundance Institute's Screenwriters Lab because her phone service had been shut off due to lack of payment.

At the Lab, the pair refined the script through several revisions and under the guidance of seasoned writers like Michael Goldenberg (Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix) and Scott Frank(Out of Sight), eventually deciding to transform the character of Hushpuppy to a 9-11 year old girl and focusing on how the impact and stress of illness and environmental apocalypse affects their father/daughter dynamic. Lucy tells the film blog No Film School, "It sort of became more grounded as it went. I think the play was much more lyrical and much more fantastical and much less attached to real things, and the process of transposing it to Louisiana and taking these Apocalyptic events and attaching them to actual environmental phenomena."

As the film headed into casting and pre-production, the writers allowed the actors and the ever shifting landscape of the southern Bayou to serve as constant inspiration for Beasts. Again, from Blackbook:

We lived in this fishing marina for a couple months and talked to a lot of people about why they would stay, what would make them ever leave, and hear their experiences of losing loved ones. I remember this one gentleman that was a priest who talked about being in the room when his father died. Just the way he spoke about it was amazing; he was from the Bayou, so he had that way of speaking about it, and he was also a Catholic priest. I did a lot of listening.

Table read Bigger
Table read Bigger

The discovery of Quvenzhané Wallis motivated the pair to channel the world through the tiny lens of a six year old child. And, self proclaimed "Caucasian", Benh Zeitlin turned to his local actors to rewrite dialogue that felt more sincere and natural to them.  Benh tells Variety:

We did a massive revision of the script in collaboration with the actors, going through each line and asking, 'How would you say this?' It wasn't like we locked the script and then went down there and executed it. We had a very fluid plan responding to the world that we were discovering as we did our research.

The pair's creative commitment to one another as well as the community they invited into the process resulted in a film with deep emotional roots. The Beasts family will be celebrating our favorite storytellers' vision, craft and collaborative spirit for years to come.

Congratulations to Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin on their Academy Award nomination!

*All photos provided by Lucy Alibar.

In Awards, Beasts News, Blog, Cast and Crew Tags Academy Awards, Benh Zeitlin, Best Screenplay, Lucy Alibar, Oscars
5 Comments

Lucy Alibar Interview with Popsugar

January 10, 2013 Team Beasts
Lucy Beasts PopSugar

Lucy Beasts PopSugar

Entertainment and culture blog Popsugar sat down with writer Lucy Alibar to find out more about the real life story that inspired Beasts.

PopSugar: Being from Florida, how did your own Southern upbringing impact the movie?

Lucy: The reason I even wrote the play to begin with, and where it all started was, my dad was really sick and I was up in New York. I think it was trying to explain his parenting or our relationship. It might even be a rural thing vs. an urban thing, I don't know, but Southern men yell. They break sh*t when they're angry — you know, sh*t gets broke! And I think a lot of people just didn't get that about my dad, and they were like, "Well, he shouldn't yell, he shouldn't have hit you." I think maybe it started from me defending my dad a lot to people who didn't even realize they were criticizing him, but were maybe criticizing his way of parenting. Then, growing up in the South, you have this real ear for other peoples' stories. People talk in stories and you just find out a lot about other peoples' business.

Read the full interview here.

In Cast and Crew, Press Tags Fatherhood, Hushpuppy, Lucy Alibar, Parenting, Popsugar, Screenplay, Script, Wink, Writing
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And the Nominees are...

January 10, 2013 Team Beasts
Beasts Oscars
Beasts Oscars

It's a happy day for the Court 13 and Cinereach team, here at Beasts HQ.

This morning, the nominees for the 85th Annual Academy Awards were announced and we are thrilled and honored to have been included amongst a field of such amazing films and filmmakers.

Beasts of the Southern Wild has been nominated for:

Best Picture

Best Director, Behn Zeitlin

Best Actress, Quvenzhané Wallis

Best Adapted Screenplay, Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin

This recognition would truly not have been possible withoutthe incredible support of our Beasts family. You heeded our call, you told your friends and family about the film; you watched it in cinemas again and again; you facebooked, tweeted, tumbled and shouted about it to anyone who would listen. You showed the world how to Beast it and we can't thank you enough for that.  Congratulations to you and to all the nominees.

The awards show will be broadcast live on Sunday, Feb 24th on ABC.

The 2013 Oscar nominees are:

Best Picture "Argo" "Django Unchained" "Les Miserables" "Life of Pi" "Amour" "Lincoln" "Silver Linings Playbook" "Zero Dark Thirty" "Beasts of the Southern Wild"

Actor in a Leading Role Bradley Cooper - "Silver Linings Playbook" Daniel Day-Lewis - "Lincoln" Hugh Jackman - "Les Miserables" Joaquin Phoenix - "The Master" Denzel Washington - "Flight"

Actress in a Leading Role Jessica Chastain - "Zero Dark Thirty" Jennifer Lawrence - "Silver Linings Playbook" Emmanuelle Riva - "Amour" Quvenzhané Wallis - "Beasts of Southern Wild" Naomi Watts - "The Impossible"

Actor in a Supporting Role Alan Arkin - "Argo" Robert De Niro - "Silver Linings Playbook" Philip Seymour Hoffman - "The Master" Tommy Lee Jones - "Lincoln" Christoph Waltz - "Django Unchained"

Actress in a Supporting Role Amy Adams - "The Master" Sally Field - "Lincoln" Anne Hathaway - "Les Miserables" Helen Hunt - "The Sessions" Jackie Weaver - "Silver Linings Playbook"

Animated Feature Film "Brave" "Frankenweenie" "ParaNorman" "The Pirates! Band of Misfits" "Wreck-It Ralph"

Directing "Amour" - Michael Haneke "Beasts of the Southern Wild" - Benh Zeitlin "Life of Pi" - Ang Lee "Lincoln" - Steven Spielberg "Silver Linings Playbook" - David O. Russell

Writing - Original Screenplay "Amour" - Michael Haneke "Django Unchained" - Quentin Tarantino "Flight" - John Gatins "Moonrise Kingdom" - Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola "Zero Dark Thirty" - Mark Boal

Writing - Adapted Screenplay "Argo" - Chris Terrio "Beasts of the Southern Wild" - Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin "Life of Pi" - David Magee "Lincoln" - Tony Kushner "Silver Linings Playbook" - David O. Russell

Music - Original Song "Before My Time" from "Chasing Ice," music and lyrics by J. Ralph "Everybody Needs a Best Friend" from "Ted," music by Walter Murphy, lyrics by Seth MacFarlane "Pi's Lullaby" from "Life of Pi," music by Mychael Danna, lyrics by Bombay Jayashri "Skyfall" from "Skyfall," music and lyrics by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth "Suddenly" from "Les Miserables," music by Claude-Michel Schönberg, lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer and Alain Boublil

Foreign Language Film "Amour" (Austria) "Kon-Tiki" (Norway) "No" (Chile) "A Royal Affair" (Denmark) "War Witch" (Canada)

Cinematography "Anna Karenina" "Django Unchained" "Life of Pi" "Lincoln" "Skyfall"

Costume Design "Anna Karenina" "Les Miserables" "Lincoln" "Mirror Mirror" "Snow White and the Huntsman"

Documentary - Feature "5 Broken Cameras" "The Gatekeepers" "How to Survive a Plague" "The Invisible War" "Searching for Sugar Man"

Documentary - Short "Inocente" "Kings Point" "Mondays at Racine" "Open Heart" "Redemption"

Film Editing "Argo" "Life of Pi" "Lincoln" "Silver Linings Playbook" "Zero Dark Thirty"

Makeup And Hairstyling "Hitchcock" "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" "Les Miserables"

Music - Original Score "Anna Karenina" "Argo" "Life of Pi" "Lincoln" "Skyfall"

Production Design "Anna Karenina" "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" "Les Miserables" "Life of Pi" "Lincoln"

Short Film - Animated "Adam and Dog" "Fresh Guacamole" "Head over Heels" "Maggie Simpson in 'The Longest Daycare'" "Paperman"

Short Film - Live Action "Asad" "Buzkashi Boys" "Curfew" "Death of a Shadow (Dood van een Schaduw)" "Henry"

Sound Editing "Argo" "Django Unchained" "Life of Pi" "Skyfall" "Zero Dark Thirty"

Sound Mixing "Argo" "Les Miserables" "Life of Pi" "Lincoln" "Skyfall"

Visual Effects "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" "Life of Pi" "Marvel's The Avengers" "Prometheus" "Snow White and the Huntsman"

In Awards, Beasts News, Blog, Cast and Crew Tags Academy Awards, Benh Zeitlin, Lucy Alibar, Oscars, Quvenzhané Wallis
16 Comments

The Girl from the Southern Wild

October 17, 2012 Team Beasts
Lucy Alibar

Elle magazine recently interviewed Beasts of The Southern Wild co-writer Lucy Alibar on her trials as a starving artist in New York City, her inspiration for writing Juicy and Delicious (the one-act play that was the springboard for Beasts), and how she managed to raise $650 dollars for a trip to Cannes. Hint: her going rate for hugs is $10.

"It was about a boy named Hushpuppy confronting the illness and death of his father, a man capable of enormous love but ­apparently ­incapable of putting that love into words.

She made Hushpuppy a boy instead of a girl because her feelings about the play’s subject were so raw. She conjured a place where ancient beasts were rampant, lemons flew through the air, and feral children ate cat food.

And then her old pal Zeitlin saw the play and told her he ­wanted to turn it into a film. And then they got support from Sundance. The 11-year-old boy became a six-year-old girl (played by the incandescent Quvenzhané Wallis), Hushpuppy and her father ­became black, the ancient beasts became the movie’s ­signature fantastical ­“aurochs,” and Georgia turned into an impoverished Mississippi River Delta community in Louisiana."

See the full interview at Elle.com.

In Cast and Crew, Press Tags Interview, Juicy and Delicious, Lucy Alibar
1 Comment

Alibar Dispatch from Films by the Sea

September 21, 2012 Team Beasts
Wake Up In Holland

Lucy Alibar is currently stationed in the Netherlands where Beasts opened the 14th international Films by the Sea film festival.  In between Q&A's, she's been reporting back on her day-to-day and it looks amazing!

Did a great Q and A tonight, the last one here.

Outside my Window
EveningFilmsByTheSea

Here is the view outside my window.

Stairwell2
StairsAgain

Incredible audience in Vlissengen — big hearts, ravenous minds.  Awards ceremony tomorrow!

DutchCakety

Stay tuned for more snapshots from the Awards ceremony soon.

In Blog, Cast and Crew Tags Films by the Sea, Lucy Alibar, Travel
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