“Night-time is when I brainstorm; last thing, when the family's asleep and I'm alone, I think about the next day's writing and plan a strategy for my assault on the blank page.” ThinkingWritingLastsNightNextPlansPagesStrategyBlankNext DayAssaultNight TimeBlank Pages Author:Athol Fugard
“I've done films where you have to get in shape for purely vanity reasons, when you read a script, turn to page 87 and it says: "Rips his shirt off and casually throws it onto chair" - and you're going to go to the gym the next day because nobody wants to see your big fat arse out there taking your shirt off!” WantReasonDoneBigsFilmTurnsNextShapesPagesScriptsFatsVanityShirtsChairsGymNext DayRipArsesShirt OffGetting In Shape Author:Bruce Willis
“I like to always stop with a couple of pages that I haven't - that are just raw copy, where I haven't touched it, I haven't tried to revise it, I haven't tried to polish it. It's like having a little bit of a runway. The next day when you sit down, you have the comfort of saying, well, I have got a little bit here, used to be in the typewriter. Now it's in the magic box, the computer.” WellsLittlesUsedNextBitsMagicHavensCoupleComfortComputerLittle BitPagesBoxesUsed To BeTouchedCopiesNext DayPolishTypewritersRunway Author:Stephen King
“I figure 1000 words a day, or four pages, and sometimes I'll write more, but I'll try not to. Because I think you don't want to exhaust what it is you're writing about, so the next day you would have to gear up for a brand new scene.” ThinkingWantWritingTryingSometimesNextFourFiguresScenePagesBrandsNext DayGearsBrand New Author:Carolyn See
“If you can't think of what to write, tough luck; write anyway. If you can think of lots more when you've finished the three pages, don't write it; it'll be that much easier to get going next day.” IfsThinkingWritingThreeNextEasierPagesToughLuckFinishedNext Day Author:Philip Pullman