Clips from a Hollywood Career - Rancho La Puerta
Events Calendar
Types of Events:
Spa Services

Clips from a Hollywood Career

Week of May 4, 2024

Clips from a Hollywood Career, starring Steve Martin, Johnny Cash, Gene Wilder, Harrison Ford, Dick Van Dyke, Forrest Whitaker, Jeff Goldblum, and Me.

How Movies Get Made: Stories about The Frisco Kid, The Jerk, and Lush Life
Michael Elias holds an informal chat about how films get to be made – and talk about three of his movies.

Is It Too Late to Be a Writer?  Of Course Not, But Then What?
Michael will talk about what to do with that completed manuscript – agents, publishers, and the new phenomenon of self-publishing.

 

Michael EliasMichael Elias is an award-winning writer, actor and director who has written film, television, theatre and fiction. His new novel, You Can Go Home Now, is a timely and addictive psychological thriller featuring a female cop on the hunt for a killer while battling violent secrets of her own.  The book was recently published by  HarperCollins in the U.S. and was released by Editions du Masque in France.  He is also the author of The Last Conquistador,published by Open Road Media.  Michael Elias was born and raised in upstate New York, moving to New York City   after graduating from St. John’s College in Annapolis to pursue a career in acting. He was a member of the Living Theatre (The Brig) and acted at The Judson Poets Theatre, La MaMa, and Caffé Chino. Elias transitioned to Hollywood and with Frank Shaw wrote the screenplay for The Frisco Kid starring Gene Wilder and Harrison Ford, then Envoyez les Violons with Eve Babitz and began a long partnership with Rich Eustis. Together, they wrote the screenplays for Serial, Young Doctors in Love and created Head of the Class a television series for ABC, partially based on Elias’ experience as a high school teacher in New York City. Elias also worked with Steve Martin, a collaboration that included material for Martin’s comedy albums, network TV specials, and the screenplay for The Jerk. Elias wrote and directed Showtime’s Lush Life with Forrest Whitaker and Jeff Goldblum. He was nominated for best Director at The Cable Ace Awards that year, and the TV movie has become a jazz film classic. His semi-autobiographical play about a small hotel in upstate New York was directed by Paul Mazursky, ran for four months in Los Angeles, with the LA Weekly naming The Catskill Sonata one of the best ten plays of the year.