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May 2024 Issue [Report]

The Life and Death of Hollywood

Film and television writers face an existential threat
Photo illustration by Nicolás Ortega

Photo illustration by Nicolás Ortega

[Report]

The Life and Death of Hollywood

Film and television writers face an existential threat
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In 2012, at the age of thirty-two, the writer Alena Smith went West to Hollywood, like many before her. She arrived to a small apartment in Silver Lake, one block from the Vista Theatre—a single-screen Spanish Colonial Revival building that had opened in 1923, four years before the advent of sound in film.

Smith was looking for a job in television. She had an MFA from the Yale School of Drama, and had lived and worked as a playwright in New York City for years—two of her productions garnered positive reviews in the Times. But playwriting had begun to…

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