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The First Time I Got Paid For It

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Presents a collection of essays by such screenwriters as Eric Bogosian, T.S. Cook, Larry Gelbart, Lawrence Kasdan, and Carl Reiner, on their first writing jobs and what it takes to succeed in Hollywood.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2000

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5 stars
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51 (32%)
3 stars
58 (37%)
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22 (14%)
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Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Thomas.
290 reviews4 followers
January 19, 2008
Great easy quick read of now-established Hollywood scribes and the trials and tribulations they had to endure to get that foot (and script) in/under the door.
Profile Image for Mark R..
Author 1 book18 followers
August 25, 2010
The Writer's Guild Foundation asked a number of its members, screenwriters in film and television, and novelists who have worked in Hollywood, to write about the first time they sold a script, story, idea, etc.

The anecdotes range from humorous and silly to sentimental. Most are between three and seven pages long. The book begins with an introduction by William Goldman, so of course it gets started off correctly, with jabbing humor and all-CAPS profanities. From there it leads into stories of the Golden Age of Hollywood, the modern age of television, and other areas of entertainment.

This was a fun read, just the right length for this kind of book, and provided some entertaining insight into selling something for the first time.
Profile Image for Moira Fogarty.
443 reviews22 followers
August 12, 2021
In the immortal words of Nicole Byer, “What a treat! What a dream!” I enjoyed this collection of non-fiction essays on the theme of “first times” by screenwriters enormously.

The tales were brief and often funny, giving a glimpse of insight into the many paths that lead people to wrestle with The Blank Page, and the pressures that push writers to deliver a finished product (hint: it’s always money, they are always broke).

I picked this up initially because William Goldman (of The Princess Bride fame) wrote the foreword. I liked the mix of genres represented in the array of authorial voices - comedy writers, horror writers, dramatists, biopics, documentary films - you name it, they penned it. There’s a solid mix of male and female voices, and writers whose works are still screening or in production alongside pioneers of the industry who inspired their careers.

There’s even a husband and wife - Nicholas Kazan and Robin Swicord - each successful in their own right.

People rarely know the name of the writer in Hollywood, unless they’re doing double duty as the Director or Actor. I recognized Chuck Lorre from his vanity cards after Big Bang Theory episodes, and I knew Delia Ephron from You’ve Got Mail, (although I know her sister Nora’s rom com work better - When Harry Met Sally is a classic). Other names rang bells: Alan Alda from acting and writing MASH; Cameron Crowe from his directing work on Say Anything and Jerry Maguire...

What this book truly gifted me with was name-dropping older movies and books that I now want to watch and read, after hearing how they inspired comedy gold or moved an author to want to write a similarly great screenplay.

On my list is watching ‘Shine’, which I somehow missed in the late 90s, ‘Broadcast News’ with Holly Hunter, and a 1939 film ‘Ninotchka’ by Ernst Lubitsch. I also need to read ‘Enter Laughing’ by Carl Reiner, ‘Artistic Differences’ by Charlie Hauck, and ‘Father Sky’ by Devery Freeman.

I’m kicking myself for not taking notes as I was reading, since I’m sure there were a dozen other hot tips that I failed to mentally register.

This collection of anecdotes is now 20 years old(!) It was a joy to read stories by the people who made movies that formed my childhood and young adult years. I’d say the year 2000 is likely when my sense of humour calcified, and movies made since that time don’t often tickle my funny bone like older films do.

And so, this very positive review should be taken with a grain of salt by young’uns. As a late gen Xer, I loved it. However, I know that having turned 40 I am navigating old fogey territory when it comes to cinematic tastes; that applies to cinematic autobiographical works as well. You’ve been warned.
Profile Image for Matt Shea.
92 reviews5 followers
September 14, 2020
"The First Time I Got Paid For It" is in need of a new edition. The collection of "Tales From the Hollywood Trenches" is dated in more than a few ways. For example, the three writers who dedicate time in their essays to praising Harvey Weinstein may want to (if they haven't already) request their essay be cut from future publishings.

But, of course, you can't fault the book (or those writers) for including praises that seemed valid when the book was published two decades ago. You can, however, fault it for some attitudes that remain included. For example, Melville Shavelson's long-winded riff on how he got sued by Eisenhower's family for discussing the President's possible affair - romanticizing the relationship and the man - while throwing in a Monica Lewinsky joke every two sentences. After it was clear Melville's hypocrisy would go unnoticed by him, I gave him the honor of being the First Time I Skipped a Sexist and Pretentious Essay in the book.

Shavelson was probably the worst offender, but the book is littered with sentiments that haven't aged well. The names that attracted the reader to the book, the Alan Aldas, Carl Reiners, and Eric Bogosians, are certainly the main attraction and are worth your time...but they are heavily outweighed by writers whose work you may know, but names you are likely hearing for the first time. I praise the editors for including a wide range of notoriety, but ultimately many of the essays are similar and since the book is ordered simply by last name, some start to blend together, their storied mixed and confused in the reader's memory.

"The First Time" came to me as a recommendation from a trusted source and I tend to jump blindly into those. I don't think I would have picked it up finding it myself. A fresh edition, one with some cuts, new writers (particularly writers of color), and up-to-date credits may be worth your time. Otherwise, sit down in the bookstore or library and spend a few minutes on the writers you're interested in, then slot it back on the shelf and move on.
Profile Image for Kevin.
472 reviews14 followers
August 28, 2015
This delectable collection of entertaining essays by more than 50 TV and screenwriters is a treat not only for neophytes hoping to break into the business, but also for film buffs.

While most of the contributors write about their first paying job in the profession, many of the tastiest tales venture off to detail other "firsts":

Chuck Lorre (Roseanne; Cybill) hilariously recalls the first time he was fired (from a Beany & Cecil revival show);

Melville Shavelson recollects the first time he was sued (by former First Lady Mamie Eisenhower to stop the filming of a movie about the Ike-Kay Summersby affair);

and 12-time Emmy winner Carl Reiner remembers getting $1,000 to write his first novel, "Enter Laughing."

Many of the short pieces create suspense by withholding the name of a long-delayed or much-rewritten project until the very end. One of the best stories illustrating Hollywood's fickle nature is Australian Jan Sardi's piece on being at the center of a fierce bidding war over "Shine"; it concludes with the sobering fact that, over 12 years, he's had six movies produced in Australia but none in America.

Each reminiscence is only a few pages long (Michael Tolkin's biography at the end of his recollection is almost as long as his story), which keeps the pace quick and the writing lively. The sassy title, eye-catching faux noir cover art and the impressive list of contributors (Steven Bochco, Eric Bogosian, Cameron Crowe, Delia Ephron, Larry Gelbart, Lawrence Kasdan and Joan Tewkesbury are just a few listed on the back cover) make this a compelling item for film buffs.
Author 4 books2 followers
April 22, 2015
This is the perfect bathroom / bedside book. Short essays by writers that are often entertaining. Great fluff reading to fill a few moments, but unfortunately, nothing more. That's why I can only give it two stars ("it was okay" rating). It was passed on to me by a writer and now that I've finished, I'll pass it on to someone else.
Profile Image for Sean Condon.
Author 16 books30 followers
April 18, 2013
Should be much more interesting than it actually is.
1,365 reviews94 followers
June 24, 2024
Short blurbs from different screenwriters make for a dull read. Only 3 or 4 are worth glancing at, and many fail to even address the book’s theme.

Some of the best known TV and movie writers are the worst here. They range from 3 paragraphs to a few pages, but even the old-school writers fail with their typical shtick. The editors also don’t provide detailed credits so I have no idea who at least a third of these people are.

They are doing it for free to promote the Writers Guild, but prove they’re not worth the huge paydays they earn in Hollywood. One claims there are no longer any TV censors in 2000 (wrong) and another is surprised that men in “flyover country” get her sensitive feminist characters. Yawn.

It’s only meant for serious WGA newbies and has so few good stories that no reader should pay for it.
Profile Image for Jim Nirmaier.
91 reviews
July 28, 2020
Fun read as is to be expected from the faux “lurid” cover referencing the “first time” aspiring screenwriters got paid for their written work in Hollywood.

Beginning with a forward by legendary screenwriter William Goldman (Oscar winner for both Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and All The President’s Men), the book is a light, fluffy, and quite entertaining recounting of “first times” from legendary well-known writers and some that are not so well-known.

Includes reminiscences from the likes of Alan Alda, Steven Bochco, Eric Bogosian, Cameron Crowe, Larry Gelbart, Lawrence Kasdan, the recently late great Carl Reiner, and Steve Zaillian.

Recommended for fellow Movie Buffs out there looking for an easy quick summer read.
1,907 reviews5 followers
November 6, 2024
Quite short essays from screenwriters about their starts. What strikes me is how similar the writing is in a certain way. Largely, the same set up and payoff from all of them. There are many ways to tell the same story. Also, the writing is, well, good.

I have kept this and a few other books on this topic because I had hoped to write a screenplay at one time and also because they are entertaining. It feels as if you have a secret connection to all those folks behind the scenes. You don't but it feels like it.

I am finally ready to give some of these books up. When I retire, I think I will write.
128 reviews2 followers
January 5, 2021
This was a great book that chronicles in their own words, the first time writers got professional jobs to write. A great book of recollected stories of success in theater and film.
Profile Image for Jon.
667 reviews5 followers
May 29, 2025
A cool read, but it might be stronger if more of the essays stayed truer to the original conceit.
Profile Image for Michael P..
Author 3 books74 followers
November 23, 2010
More than 4 dozen screenwriters write (mostly) about the first time they were paid to write for the screen. Some go astray and discuss the first time they were paid to write, and a few manage (like my students) to turn in a paper that avoids the assignment. Most of the contributors are on the A-list in the profession. Most contributions are entertaining enough to repay time spent of them. Budding Hollywriters should take note of these experiences, and the books is interesting to those who study the place of writers in modern society. I can't imagine why others would be interested. I'm not sure this book really needs to exist, but it does and it whiles away a few hours pleasantly.
3 reviews
July 31, 2007
I picked this book up initially because my favorite screenwriter, William Goldman, did the foreword. Luckily, I enjoyed many of the fairly short anecdotes from established writers about their first break in the business. Goldman's story was the best...of course.
8 reviews
August 24, 2010
Funny and inspiring collection of essays written by screenwriters who have Made It, about one of their memorable firsts -- getting paid, getting fired, getting rewritten, etc.
Profile Image for RK Byers.
Author 8 books67 followers
February 9, 2013
the funny stories were REALLY funny, but even the ones that weren't were naked, honest and on some level at least, inspiring.
Profile Image for Jeff.
25 reviews
November 27, 2013
Nice anecdotal stories, but not particularly an actionable source of guidance.
Profile Image for Mary Stanwood.
37 reviews2 followers
August 24, 2015
Great collection of essays from successful writers in Hollywood about how the got their big breaks. I'll keep this on hand for motivation when I'm in a rut.
Profile Image for Edmund Davis-Quinn.
1,123 reviews4 followers
February 18, 2015
An enjoyable read about a lot of well known screenwriters first pay check. I read quite a few and may have to check it out again later.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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