Elan Mastai
Elan Mastai | |
---|---|
Born | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Occupation | writer, producer |
Nationality | Canadian |
Genre | screenwriting, novels |
Notable works | The F Word (screenplay), All Our Wrong Todays (novel) |
Website | |
elanmastai.com |
Elan Mastai is a Canadian screenwriter and novelist. He is best known for The F Word, for which he won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards in 2014.[1]
His other screenwriting credits include MVP: Most Vertical Primate and Fury.[2] He has described The F Word as the first time he wrote a screenplay in his own voice, rather than to the commercial demands of a mass-audience film.[3]
He was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia,[4] to a Canadian mother and an Israeli immigrant father. Both his parents are Jewish, and they met in Jerusalem.[5] He studied film at Queen's University[6] and Concordia University.[4]
In 2015, Mastai secured a $1.25 million deal for his debut novel, All Our Wrong Todays.[7] A science fiction novel, the book concerns a man from an alternate history utopia who, while part of a time travel experiment, causes a drastic alteration of his history, and regains consciousness in our society. The novel was published on February 7, 2017.[8] In 2017 he was described as working on a screenplay for All Our Wrong Todays, and working on a second novel.[9]
Mastai is supervising producer and staff writer of NBC's This Is Us.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ "Enemy biggest movie winner at Canadian Screen Awards". Toronto Star, March 9, 2014.
- ^ "Mastai's screenwriting". The Province, August 21, 2014.
- ^ "The F Word gave screenwriter chance to use his own voice". The Globe and Mail, August 22, 2014.
- ^ a b "A wild ride for F Word's screenwriter; B.C. native 'dropped into deep end' of Hollywood while in grad school". Ottawa Citizen, August 22, 2014.
- ^ "Elan Mastai taps family history for F Word". The Jewish Independent, August 22, 2014.
- ^ "Film studies students screen short features". Kingston Whig-Standard, April 29, 1996.
- ^ "Frankfurt Book Fair 2015: Screenwriter's Debut Fetches Seven Figures". Publishers Weekly, October 8, 2015.
- ^ "The Week in Reading: The Best New Book Releases for February 7, 2017". Newsweek, February 7, 2017.
- ^ Lea, Richard (2017-03-30). "Elan Mastai: 'I wrote about my mother's death, but I used time machines to do it'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
- ^ "Canadian 'This Is Us' writer Elan Mastai brings own experiences to the hit show". CP24. Canadian Press. November 16, 2020. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
External links
[edit]- Elan Mastai at IMDb
- Canadian male screenwriters
- Canadian male novelists
- Canadian science fiction writers
- 21st-century Canadian novelists
- Jewish Canadian writers
- Writers from Vancouver
- Queen's University at Kingston alumni
- Concordia University alumni
- Queen's TV alumni
- Living people
- Best Screenplay Genie and Canadian Screen Award winners
- Canadian people of Israeli descent
- 21st-century Canadian male writers
- 21st-century Canadian screenwriters
- Screenwriters from British Columbia
- Canadian screenwriter stubs