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Home > 2001 > September 3Christianity Today, September 3, 2001  |   |  
Cinema Verities
Even when they're writing fiction, these Hollywood insiders bring the truth to bear



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Brian bird's call to live for Christ in Hollywood came while watching Fantasy Island on a hotel television in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. But this was not just any installment of Fantasy Island. Bird himself had written this episode four years earlier. It was the only script he had sold before his screenwriting career had fallen by the wayside. Randomly catching the show on the other side of the world revitalized his desire to work in the entertainment industry.

"It was a crystal moment for me," says Bird. Although he considers Fantasy Island a "lame show," seeing it in Africa helped him realize the TV shows may also have potential for the advancement of "life and faith-affirming messages."

"I fell to my knees and said, 'God, put me back in the game,'" Bird says. "I just felt that Christians had to be at the table."

God answered Bird's prayer. Now, 14 years later, he works as senior writer and co-executive producer on CBS's highest-rated drama series, Touched by an Angel. The "show about God" is seen in 200 countries every day, Bird says.

Bird is part of a small minority of Christians working in Hollywood. But he, Karen Hall—a writer for the television show Judging Amy—and Ralph Winter—a producer whose credits include X-Men and the remake of Planet of the Apes—are three Hollywood insiders who strive to integrate their faith and art without compromising the integrity of either one.

Broadcasting faith

Early in her career, while writing for shows like M*A*S*H and Moonlighting, Karen Hall was an agnostic. When she committed her life to Christ five years ago, her reputation as a Hollywood writer was solid.

Since her conversion, Hall has observed a couple of factors that stoke Hollywood's anti-Christian sentiment: the exclusivity of Christianity in a world that stresses inclusiveness, and many pop-culture executives' ignorance regarding religious people and their faith.

"On TV it's a big deal if a character goes to church" because in Hollywood people in power aren't religious, Hall says.

But the anti-Christian forces within Hollywood aren't the only ones who criticize Christians in film. According to Robert Johnston, professor of theology and culture at Fuller Theological Seminary and author of Reel Spirituality, there are three types of Christians in Hollywood:

  • those who use the workplace as a forum for evangelism
  • those who bring biblical values and insight into the workplace
  • those who see professional excellence as their calling and testimony to God.

"Which is right? All three," says Johnston. "There are evangelicals in Hollywood who would center their activity in each of those categories, but often when other Christians think of Christians in Hollywood, they're only thinking of the first category."

Hollywood, on the other hand, is primarily concerned with entertainment, not content, says Winter, who spoke with Christianity Today from the California desert where he was working on the recent remake of Planet of the Apes.

A frequent problem for Christian screenwriters is being more focused on sharing an evangelistic message than on following the structural principles of good storytelling, Winter says. The result is stories that are more Christian clichÉ than compelling.

"If you want to get into screenwriting because you want to convert people, it's the wrong reason," says Winter. "My experience is that people who do that frequently leave the craft of screenwriting behind them."

Johnston agrees. "Such a mindset doesn't produce great screenwriters," he says. "As in any artistic endeavor, one's intention needs to be bringing to light and telling the story—it's a piece of reality that must be told. If storytelling is a means to an end, and not an end in itself, then one will fail."





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