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Media Coaching - Brand Strategy

Author of “Race To the Red Carpet”
I’ve worked on 24 feature productions, 55+ Red Carpet premieres, photo edited over 1.2 Million images in 300+ features, written hundreds of bios and Pitched and hosted “Entertainment Tonight,” photo shoots for magazines and posters +
Speaking engagements include SAG Foundation, AFI Conservatory, NALIP, UCLA, The Actors Network Hollywood and more.

Contact me for a “Race To The Red Carpet” speaking engagement or personal coaching session.

My Writing… is diverse

It’s personal and very much a part of me and most everything I do. Even if there are volumes of published works.

It started with a love of puppets. And probably because there was an audience every Sunday at my father’s church.

My sisters skated in an annual carnival and April became my favourite time of year to watch the production come together. Then I wanted to participate. I would read as fast-or-slowly as it took me to “read out loud” in my mind… a great precursor to my audiobook narration activities. I’d have conversations with TV characters in my head while doing tasks like picking blueberries, or exploring the forests and rocks up in Muskoka, or doing mundane things like shovelling snow or delivery papers. I liked exploring the Why of everything.

I studied creative writing, screenwriting and writing for the film and telecommunications industry at Boston University.
I made part of my living writing press kits, press releases, canned features and hundreds of bios (I can still almost compose them in my head). I wrote other screenplays for myself and I still have projects that I’ve returned to in addition to a few I’ll share here.

Two books through Smashwords ~ Titles are active links for my Kids book and YA Time Travel book:

“The Secret of Why Bumblebees Buzz”

“Time Drifters”

The Old Pros

Braden Wright's "Old Pros" • A crafty farce in two acts of deception

To date, there have been two public staged-reading of "Braden Wright's 'Old Pros'"
Following a workshop reading in May 2005, we produced and hosting a reading at AFI’s Mark Goodson Theatre on Monday, October 17, 2005 with an awesome cast that included the extraordinary, late actors Katherine Helmond (Josephine Ahlgren) and Al Ruscio (Dean Homa), as well as Suzanna Voss (Meredith Nolin), Fred Ornstein (Bernie Switzer), Georgia Phillips (Heather Benton), Jordan Rider (Davis Tovell), Christine Dunn (Pamela Sears) and the funny-where-he-stands Michael Fitzpatrick (Jamie Sears).

"Four Play” at South Simcoe Theatre, Cookstown, Ontario

“The Old Pros” was selected for this festival and directed and performed for the festival audience.

Additionally, the AYA (Act Your Age) committee at ACTRA Toronto performed a workshop of the text.

I’m sharing my notes from the original production here so they have a place to live “on the interweb.” Photos of the two original casts will be found & posted. They always make me smile


About the Play
Braden Wright's "Old Pros" is an original two-act farce set in a talent agency for seasoned actors. In this comedy, not acting your age can be life-threatening.

Synopsis
The Old Pros talent agency for seasoned actors appears doomed when its founder drops into a coma and her great-nephew, Jamie, arrives to close the doors for good. The five remaining clients-the very proper Heather, ex-airforce pilot Dean, luggage salesman Bernie, part-time nurse and prosthetics expert Meredith, and the grandly-theatrical Josephine-however, leverage their own crafty counter-proposal. They soon coerce Jamie into impersonating a dead ex-client at a TV commercial shoot-one that is directed by Jamie's wife, Pamela, from whom he is currently separated. By pretending to be old, Jamie glimpses what it means to be young. Yet, trying to save the agency and Jamie's marriage may prove to be a costly move for everyone when, piece by piece, the truth is revealed. Or, at least, something like the truth.

What others are saying...
"Kaufmanesque in essence... clever, inventive and with some great twists." "Exceptionally timely." "Beautifully realized speeches for almost every character and some major laughs." "Characters that jump off the page and that you fall in love with, all in a story worth telling. I smell a hit!"

The Characters within the Ensemble of "Old Pros"
Founded by Miriam Richardson and her late husband, Elly, The Old Pros talent agency is now home base for five unlikely friends. United by a love of acting, by the ever-present promise of stardom and the family bonds they have formed, each of the clients also shares in the hope of keeping the agency going. HEATHER once danced with Miriam as a Rockette. Now divorced and alone, she still yearns for that big break and an award for her talents even as she fastidiously tends to the daily dealings of the agency and talent breakdowns. DEAN, a seemingly carefree former airforce pilot, careens along with a harmlessly lecherous bent, lucky in acting, somewhat unlucky in love. His attention is currently focussed on the brassy MEREDITH, a widow, part-time nurse, peace activist and prosthetics expert who, at 62, is the youngest client. BERNIE, a shuffling octogenarian, luggage salesman and veteran of local theatre, still longs for his chance on TV. Rounding out the "family" is the grandly-theatrical JOSEPHINE, a wondrous spirit resolutely living a charmed existence of her own creation and utterly devoted to the world of drama as a veteran of the international stage and screen.

Fumbling into their world comes Miriam's great-nephew, JAMIE, a former child star whose recent failure of his marriage and less-recent disappointments in his career have dimmed his joy and his view of life's promises. His TV-director wife, PAMELA, is as strong and assertive as her job and her crumbling marital situation demand, despite regrets about the light and love she once shared with Jamie.

Complicating their current situation and chances at reconciliation is DAVIS, the brazen and unabashedly hedonistic ad agency man with a schedule to meet and a bounty of pleasures to taste along the way. If only MIRIAM hadn't just fallen into a coma, perhaps there would be hope for them. And yet, maybe the Old Pros office still has some of Miriam's spirit in it after all.


Why I wrote "Old Pros"
I love the British farces of the 20s and 30s. Seeing "Rookery Nook" or "Thark" or "One For the Pot" at The Shaw Festival was a highlight of my summers as a teenager. I wrote "Old Pros" with that kind of energy and pacing in mind.

My foremost goal throughout the process, was, quite simply and emphatically, to entertain. I wrote it to offer a fun and joyous evening where people could escape and laugh.

This play is a tribute to my grandmother-a great lady who celebrates her 100th birthday in October-who, to me, has always seemed "old" and yet vital and alive at every age. The play also commemorates the men and women who sang in the choir at my father's church, the ones who lifted our house with such laughter when they came for parties. And it's a cathartic antidote for my own feelings about age-when I was five, I pronounced to my parents that I'd had no childhood-and for the struggle so many people feel in making a living in the arts.

This play is set amongst an older ensemble and is a kind of ritual rite-of-passage for initiating the younger generation into the reality of the spectrum that life brings us. Theater permits us the presence and privilege to live this experience. In the midst of the characters' lives we glimpse some bittersweet perspectives about aging and it shows and affirms that we have a choice when it comes to how we perceive life and what we value.

The serious issues that each of us faces as we age, and our society and this nation as a whole, may only be touched upon within this play but they help to ground it and center it. They are a counterpoint to the laughter and the wild fun of farce. Most importantly, they provide an allegory of their own... that each of us may see ourselves in each stage of life and embrace choice-at any stage and in any circumstance-as our true inheritance. It's our choice to live, our choice to laugh, and our choice to act in our lives so that the show may go on. ~ Braden Wright