“My
mother wanted us to understand that the tragedies of your life one day have the
potential to be comic stories the next.” – Nora Ephron
Ephron, born in May of 1941, was a journalist, essayist,
playwright, screenwriter, novelist, producer, director, and blogger born into a
family of writers.
She popularized the term "Everything is copy" when asked where she got her writing ideas.
Ephron's parents were both writers, and she was the first of 4
sisters to follow the profession. One of her three marriages was to Washington
Post writer Carl Bernstein - with who she had two sons (one, Jacob, also becoming a writer). Ephron died from pneumonia in 2012, a complication brought on by leukemia.
A three-time
Academy Award nomineee for her writing of Silkwood,
When Harry Met Sally, and Sleepless
in Seattle, she won numerous writing awards
in many different genres. And for When Harry Met Sally, had
there had been an award for best original scene, she probably would have taken
that home too. It depicts an elderly woman
sitting in a restaurant watching Sally and telling the waitress “I’ll have what
she’s having.” If you haven’t seen it, take a look on
You Tube to brighten your day.
“I try to write parts for women that
are complicated and interesting,” Ephron said.
“Just as women actually are.”
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