Rod Serling on Writing
Part 5 of a 16-part series featuring the master storyteller on video.
Part 5 of a 16-part series featuring the master storyteller on video.
Ever since I launched Go Into The Story, I have regularly gone down the Internet’s rabbit hole in search of unique video clips featuring renowned writers. In 2010, I hit the Mother Lode: A series of 16 clips featuring Rod Serling chatting with what appear to be college students circa 1970.
Most well-known for the long-running TV anthology series “The Twilight Zone” (148 episodes, 1959–1964), Serling has over 70 writing credits including the screenplays for movies such as Seven Days in May and the original Planet of the Apes.
Back in 2010, I went through each clip and extracted some key quotes from Serling. Then as is often the case with the Internet, the videos disappeared.
However, they have emerged once again, a big hat tip to Doc Kane for surfacing them. As long as they are up, I will reprise the series. Today Serling answers the question: Would you inject your philosophy into a piece of work?
“One of the major problems with strong writers who deal in dialogue above plot, which happens to be more my forte than plot, if you look at some of the pages of the stuff I’ve written, and even some of the good things, shut your eyes, you won’t know who’s talking because they all talk alike. And who do they talk like? Me. Now that’s wrong!”
For Part 1 of the series, go here.
Part 2, here.
Part 3, here.
Part 4, here.
Tomorrow: More of the interviews with Rod Serling.