by Gillian
Flaccus
After years of
watching Muslims portrayed as terrorists in
mainstream TV and movies, an advocacy group
hopes to change that image by grooming a
crop of aspiring Muslim screenwriters who
can bring their stories and perspective to
Hollywood.
The Muslim
Public Affairs Council is hosting a series
of workshops taught by Emmy-winning and
Oscar-nominated veterans over the next
month, an initiative that builds on the
group’s outreach for a more representative
picture of Muslim-Americans on the screen.
The workshops
are the natural evolution of MPAC’s efforts
to lobby TV networks and movie studios from
the outside, and they fit into a small, but
growing, movement to get more
Muslim-Americans behind the cameras.
MPAC dubbed
its effort the Hollywood Bureau, while Unity
Productions Foundation recently started a
similar project called Muslims on Screen and
Television. Other nonprofit arts
foundations, such as the Levantine Cultural
Center and Film Independent, have joined
forces by planning networking events for
Muslim actors and training and mentoring
young filmmakers.
“The idea is
to really give Muslims an avenue to tell our
stories. It’s as simple as that. There’s a
curiosity about Islam and a curiosity about
who Muslims are and a lot of the fear that
we’re seeing comes from only hearing one
story or these constant negative stories,”
said Deana Nassar, MPAC’s Hollywood liaison.
At the
council’s first screenwriting workshop last
Saturday, three dozen attendees packed into
a classroom in downtown Los Angeles to hear
Emmy-winning comedy writer Ed Driscoll give
tips of the trade, from knowing the audience
to making a script outline.
The students
reflected a diversity not often seen in
Hollywood’s portrayal of Muslim-Americans,
from a black woman who grew up in
Mississippi to a stay-at-home mom to a
defense attorney who dabbles in
screenwriting on the side.
Khadijah
Rashid, 33, said before class that her
Hollywood experience included working behind
the scenes on everything from reality TV to
the award-winning biopic “Ray.”
But Rashid
said she had always felt her own story
growing up Muslim in the Deep South was the
tale she most wanted to tell. She recalled
being teased as a child for her unusual last
name and choking down chunks of dry cheese
for lunch when the school cafeteria served
pork, a forbidden food in Islam.
“I don’t think
it’s much drama, but it’s my own personal
drama,” said Rashid, now a single mother
living in Pasadena. “I definitely want to
tell my story, but I need to learn how. If I
get the tools, I’ll just pour it out.”
With any luck,
Hollywood will listen. The industry has
taken more interest in telling authentic
Muslim stories in recent years, said Ahmos
Hassan, a Muslim-American talent manager who
has been in the business for more than two
decades.
“There’s a
demand for Muslim stories, but whether it’s
Muslim writers or not depends on the talent
they bring to the table,” Hassan, who owns
Chariot Management, said during a break in
the class. “They need to bring that to the
industry … and I think the industry is open
to it now, more so than any time before.”
MPAC has had
some success working with writers and
producers from the outside.
Its Hollywood
Bureau was founded after Sept. 11, 2001,
with a simple strategy: to make sure the
portrayal of Islam on TV screens was
accurate, even if it was negative. Since
then, the organization has consulted on a
parade of hit TV shows, including “24,”
”Bones,” ”Lie to Me,” ”7th Heaven,” ”Saving
Grace” and “Aliens in America.”
The group also
has held meetings with top network
executives from ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC, and
throws a Muslim-inspired version of a
Hollywood awards show each year for
productions, both mainstream and
independent, that advance understanding of
Islam. In 2009, winners included “Slumdog
Millionaire” and “The Simpsons,” for an
episode that featured Bart befriending a
Muslim boy named Bashir.
The goal is
not to spoon-feed Hollywood Muslim-friendly
story lines, but to increase awareness of
the diversity of American Muslims and to be
a resource for writers and producers, Nassar
said.
“There’s only
a small, small number of people who are
trying to drive a negative agenda. Most of
the time it’s innocent oversight, and
they’re very happy to get our take on what
they’re doing, to get our feedback,” said
Nassar, who also attended the workshop and
is an entertainment lawyer by training.
That feedback
has been an eye-opener and a challenge for
some in the industry, where the
Muslim-as-terrorist plot line has been an
accepted story for years.
“When you’re
sitting in the writer’s room, and you’ve got
to come up with a plot line and you’ve got
to come up with a bad guy, it’s really easy
to pull that out and say, ‘OK, Muslim
terrorist,’” said T.S. Cook, an
Oscar-nominated screenwriter who will teach
two of the four sessions. “It’s a lazy man’s
way to villainy and it’s pretty ingrained.”
Writer Roger
Wolfson, who worked on the TNT drama “Saving
Grace,” said MPAC consultants were
invaluable when he was assigned to write a
script for an episode that featured a black
death-row inmate who was converting to
Islam.
In the plot,
the inmate Leon had a personal angel, Earl,
who had been guiding him. Wolfson’s
challenge was to show Leon’s conversion and
decide if his angel would change in
appearance or if he would continue to exist
for Leon at all.
MPAC’s
consultants urged Wolfson to resist making
Leon’s character a militant, angry black man
and instead suggested that he focus on the
beauty and mystery of the moment of
conversion. The collaboration paid off, he
said.
“Everything
was my idea, but I didn’t know a single
detail. I didn’t know how you convert; I
didn’t know what it means; I didn’t know
what an Islamic angel would say, how an
Islamic angel would behave,” Wolfson
recalled in a phone interview.
In the end,
Wolfson showed Leon reciting the Islamic
declaration of faith in his prison cell as
his angel watches.
When Leon
opens his eyes, the angel is still there and
greets him with a simple “Us salaamu alaykum,”
or “Peace be upon you” in Arabic.
The episode
was one of the high points of Wolfson’s
career.
“With every
writer, you’re always looking for new ways
to provide freshness to your characters in
abbreviated fashion,” Wolfson said. “You can
do that, sometimes, by making somebody a
believable Muslim.”
Source:
http://muslimvillage.com