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Psychologist Helps Screenwriters Unravel
Their Own Inner Scripts
by Patricia Ward Biederman, Los Angeles Times
Psychologist
Robert Maurer gives new meaning to the term script doctor. He puts
screenplays and other stories on the couch and helps them get better.
Maurer, 47, is a clinical psychologist whose specialties include
helping writers create characters that ring true and engage audiences.
Writers often come to him with a troublesome script in hand, then ask
for help with other areas of their lives.
As the Santa Monica therapist explains, he began working with writers
several years ago when a friend asked him to give a lecture at UCLA on
the psychological underpinnings of the thriller.
Maurer
sat down to prepare for the talk with a stack of movie thrillers. While
watching the suspense films of Alfred Hitchcock and such modem classics
as "Fatal Attraction." he realized that good writers are good
psychologists, aware of the urgent emotions that shape human behavior.
One of the psychological truths apparent to Maurer was the crucial role
fear plays in organizing the way we view the world. When afraid, he
said, we look for physical and emotional comfort and "the crucial
question is whether the person you are with will help you or hurt you."
The suspense that comes from a frightened character's not knowing whom
to trust is what makes the story of Hansel and Gretel "the ultimate
psychological thriller," Maurer said.
Contemporary
writers wisely rehash the psychological truths inherent in that fairy
tale all the time. He cited as one effective example the 1985
nail-biter in which Glenn Close's character is unsure whether Jeff
Bridges' character is a bereaved innocent or a homicidal maniac.
"'Jagged Edge' and Hansel and Gretel are the same story," Maurer said.
In his classes on storytelling at UCLA Extension and elsewhere, Maurer
tells his students about current research on perception and motivation.
Typically Maurer doesn't talk about character arcs or use other
industry jargon to explain how a changing character can mesmerize an
audience.
But he
does talk about something called the drama triangle, conceived by
psychotherapist Claude Steiner. In Steiner's view, human conflict
typically involves a persecutor, a victim and a rescuer. Maurer gives
the example of the alcoholic husband who persecutes his wife (the
victim), who nonetheless rescues him by helping him to bed.
What makes this triangle so useful to writers, Maurer said, is that
relationships are constantly changing. The morning after, the alcoholic
may become, not the persecutor, but the victim of an angry wife. These
shifting relationships can be the source of drama that has the ring of
psychological truth, Maurer said.
He
gives the example of the real-life drama of Anita Hill's testimony
during the confirmation hearings of Justice Clarence Thomas. "We were
riveted because we were trying to figure out who was the victim and who
was the persecutor."
Maurer has a highly respectable day job. He is director of behavioral
sciences for the family practice residency program at Santa Monica
Hospital Medical Center. He is also on the medical faculty at UCLA.
But for years, the Brooklyn-born psychologist has combined his
professional interests with a passion for the theater by counseling
drama and dance companies here and in England.
His
longest running association has been with the local cast of "Tamara,"
which has turned to Maurer to defuse tensions among the actors.
According to those involved in the production, scene stealing and other
disruptive antics decreased dramatically after he helped the cast find
ways to talk more candidly and positively with each other.
In the last few years, his involvement with writers and their problems
has grown. Now about half of his small private practice is devoted to
writers, he said.
Occasionally Maurer is called upon to treat such traditional literary
maladies as writer's block. He says he is sometimes able to unblock
writers with hypnosis and exercises that allow them to regain their
curiosity. But other problems are more common in his practice.
One
widespread issue for the TV and movie writers he sees, he said, is "How
do you stay passionate and clear about what you are doing when the
external reward system is so erratic?"'
Maurer tries to teach his writers to embrace fear, instead of being
paralyzed by it, and to reach out to others for comfort. He also tries
to immunize them against the rejection that is an almost daily feature
of their professional lives.
"There's no such thing as rejection," he tells them. He gives the
example of the man who asks a woman if she'll have dinner with him
Saturday night and she answering "I'd rather floss."
Where
does the pain come from in that encounter? What really hurts, the
psychologist argues, is not the rejection itself. The real killer is
the tape that plays in the rejectee's head telling him what a jerk he
is.
Maurer
urges clients to replace the put-down message with one in which they
congratulate themselves for their courage in asking for the date--or
making the pitch to the studio head.
Sometimes success, not failure, prompts writers to seek Maurer out.
"Some of these people are fine until fame and fortune hits," he said.
He has seen successful writers suddenly start abusing spouses,
squandering their money, dumping longtime associates (especially
agents), abusing drugs and alcohol and, perhaps worst of all, stop
writing.
"One didn't pick up a pen for three years before she finally came to
me," he said.
But people can be taught to stop sabotaging themselves, Maurer said. He
tries to get his clients excited about the writing process itself and
less concerned about the tangible rewards of making it.
Ironically,
he said, success often comes as soon as it no longer seems all
important. He also encourages his clients to find more sources of
pleasure in their everyday lives. "The last myth among artists is that
your pain is necessary to your creativity."
Venice-based writer Stephen Fischer has worked with Maurer and says the
psychologist has had a major impact on his work. The creator of the TV
series "My Sister Sam," Fischer has sold a number of screenplays,
although none has been filmed. He is currently writing an erotic
thriller for MGM.
Fischer says his post-Maurer stories have more "emotional
reverberations." And as he has become surer of the emotional
underpinnings of his characters, Fischer said, his work has become less
wordy.
The
writer explained that one of his fortes is "very snappy dialogue
between overly clever men and women. . . . One of the systemic effects
of my work with Maurer is a quieter confidence that a simple exchange
of dialogue is enough, that characters don't need to be constantly
clever. That's an enormous change for me."
Denise Halma, of West Hollywood, also praises the script doctor. Halma,
who recently finished writing the sequel to "Pretty Woman" for Disney,
said Maurer has helped her view setbacks not as failures, but as
illuminations.
And
when she is stuck in her writing, she said, she often reminds herself
of such Maurer- isms as "you don't know a character until you know what
he or she is afraid of."
Maurer is working on several nonfiction projects of his own, including
a book on the skills of successful people. But, so far, working with
Hollywood writers hasn't unleased his own inner screenwriter, although,
Maurer said, "my awe and admiration and respect for them has grown
considerably."
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Photo
from Robert Maurer's site www.scienceofexcellence.com
Dr. Maurer is
Director of Behavioral Sciences for the Family Practice
Residency Program at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and a faculty
member with the UCLA School of Medicine, and behavioral health instructor at the Canyon
Ranch Health Spa in Tucson, Arizona.
He
is author of the book One
Small Step Can Change Your Life
and the new CD/Workbook program One
Small Step Can Change Your Life: The Kaizen Way to Success
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