Esther Luttrell
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Your Script! Professionally Edited!

Your script is finished and now you wonder if it’s good enough. Is it right? Will it get read? Could it be better?
           

Producer  Donald Gold and Esther conduct Burt Reynolds Ranch Workshop.

            First off, your script is never finished. You just stop one day and move on to something else. As for “Will it get read”, that depends. Today’s market is so very fluid, it has changed drastically from what it was even a couple of years ago and continues to warp and morph. Yet one thing is certain: If you don’t know the craft of screen writing, your chances of having your script read all the way to FADE OUT are slim and fat (Slim chance of it happening; fat chance it will happen).

“Screen Writers Q & A” is here!  Order your copy of the highly anticipated book today!



Over the next few weeks watch for these exiting new pages:

- The Sunday Feature (featuring an interview with the week’s aspiring screenwriter)

- Writers Monthly Horoscope

- Famous Rejections to Make You Feel Much Better About Yourself!

- Screen Writers News & 
Screen Writers Café                         

           You have to lead your reader through a verbal romp. The words must be economical yet sizzle with life. You are entering one of the most highly competitive fields on this planet. You’ve got to know your stuff. If you are to compete with thousands of other aspiring screen writers and an equal number of professional screen writers looking to make their next sale, you have to stand out above the crowd. A good story isn’t the secret, though it’s important. But no one will know you have a good story if it doesn’t get read. And it won’t get read if it isn’t professionally presented. The further you live from Hollywood, the more true the statement.

            Check out the sample edits link, then zap over to read Credits and Credentials to see if you think I can be of service. After the edit, you are invited to email me for as long as you need advice, a shoulder to cry on, or someone eager to rejoice over your first contract. Good luck on your writing journey!

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