By
Laura P. Valtorta
It’s
a spiritual experience when Marco and Dante head off to mass on a Sunday,
leaving me alone with my MacBook Pro, a headful of ideas, and a novel to work
on. I fill the bird feeder, set up on the dining room table, and put on some
music – maybe the album Avalanche by Sonia Jacobsen, the saxophonist and
composer who’s working on scoring my latest short film, Disability.
Writing
is necessary. Even when I’m working on films and thinking about directing them and
producing them, with all the hyperactivity involved in producing (the funding,
the scheduling, interviewing, shooting, editing, and promoting), a filmmaker
still has to find time to Make Art. Also run a law office.
Without
art, we would be nowhere in the filmmaking business. I worry about Clabber
(that’s not his real name). He is my partner in making these films. The one who
does all the “Real Work,” as he calls it; The Real Work involves set building,
shooting, and finessing the sound and lights.
Good
old Clabber. He wears shorts and a baseball cap to work, but he’s so far from
the land of Laid Back that once in a while it sends him a postcard. But that’s
it. With a business to run, three small children at home, and several
casually-clad employees to shepherd, he has very little time to write. I worry
about this. Keeping Clabber happy is something I want to do. Because he’s a
nice guy, and because he’s my studio executive.
Although
I’m no kind of expert, I believe that Creating Art is one of the five pillars
of happiness, along with Family, Work, Exercise, and Charity. Art is pure
communication. Someday, when I’m not scripting films and writing novels, I want
to learn how to take better photographs and paint portraits along the lines of
Modigliani and Frida Kahlo. Art should always be a part of Family, Work,
Exercise, and Charity. And vice versa.
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