Andrea Mann

Andrea Mann is a British screenwriter

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The Myth Of The ‘Undeniable’ Spec Script

04.23.2025 by Andrea Mann // 5 Comments

My debut spec screenplay was optioned by a Golden Globe-winning producer, and later Oscar-nominated actors were attached. Was it ‘undeniable’? No.

No art is perfect (although Moonstruck comes pretty close)

Screenwriting bros (who are like screenwriting gurus, but spend more of their time on social media) are fond of saying, well, many things. Some of which I agree with (eg ‘link your story beats through cause and effect’), others (eg ‘never put songs in your scripts, are you CRAZY you total AMATEUR’) less so.

Into the latter category falls one piece of received wisdom about spec scripts which always has my eyes rolling so far back in my head that… well, according to Google’s AI answer, I’d have to seek help for nystagmus. (Google AI isn’t very good at expressions. Or much else, to be honest. But I digress.)

Spec scripts – ie a screenplay you’ve written speculatively, as opposed to having been hired to write it – are the scripts that often launch us writers into the film/TV world. They’re the ones we’ve crafted (usually) on our own, in our own time, for free – with a hope that they will then get attention/be produced/serve as a calling card script. Or hopefully all three.

And the piece of screenwriting/industry advice about spec scripts that really gets my goat (I’m not going near Google AI with that one) is this:

‘Your spec script has to be undeniable’.

Now, I’ve been lucky enough to have two spec screenplays taken on by producers – the first one did indeed launch my career (and has served as a calling card script); the second was a movie musical I wrote a few years later.

I can tell you right now that neither was ‘undeniable’. Indeed, both of them were very much denied by various producers.

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Categories // Musings Tags // creative advice, creativity, creativity tips, screenwriting, screenwriting tips, spec screenplays, writing, writing tips

Those Three Little Words That Mean So Much

03.30.2025 by Andrea Mann // Leave a Comment

Learning to ‘trust the process’ can change your life. Trust me. (And the process).

Trust the Post-it

I’m in the first draft of a feature script at the moment, with all the ups and downs that entails.

The ups include thoughts like: I’m writing a film script! I used to manage a cinema and now I’m writing a film script!! – inwardly screaming and running around the house like Olive when she’s told she’s through to the finals of the Little Miss Sunshine pageant.

The downs include rather different thoughts, like: What the f— am I doing? Should I really put that there? Is this rubbish? Oh god, it’s rubbish. Is this script going to be any good? At any point? I bet Mike White’s scripts are great off the bat! …and so on.

I often talk to other writers and creatives about how a) the voice of your Inner Critic never goes away but b) you can help it to become quieter, and less frequent, by doing such things as nurturing the voice of your Inner Best Friend instead.

When I’m in the thick of a first draft, my Inner Best Friend reminds me that they’re known as Shitty First Drafts for a reason. That nobody will see this draft but me. That it doesn’t need to be good, it just needs to be written. That it doesn’t matter if it’s rubbish for now, as long as I push on through. That I should just keep swimming. At which point I realise that my Inner Best Friend is, in fact, a fish. Called Dory.  

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Categories // Musings Tags // creative advice, creative process, creative tips, creativity, creativity tips, screenwriting, writing, writing advice, writing tips

You’re Not Too Old, And It’s Not Too Late

02.23.2025 by Andrea Mann // Leave a Comment

Not writing screenplays until my 40s, I thought I was a late bloomer. Then my 88-year-old mum published her first novel.

They’re not an obvious pairing, but bear with me: what do my 88-year-old mum from Leeds and 53-year-old Mexican actor Carlos Diehz, star of hit movie Conclave, have in common?

Apart from both having great taste in necklaces, the answer is: they’re both late bloomers.

Carlos Diehz – who plays the crucial role of Cardinal Benítez in the BAFTA-winning, Oscar-nominated film – was an architect for 30 years (still is, in fact), and didn’t start taking acting lessons until the Covid pandemic hit. Conclave is his very first feature film. 

My mum, Annette Mann, was a primary school teacher her whole working life – then in her retirement wrote a novel: an imagined sequel to Jane Austen’s Persuasion. This year, 250 years since Austen’s birth – and 88 years since Mum’s – we finally put Pride and Persuasion out in the world:

My mum isn’t the only person I know of smashing it out of the park at this point in her life, either.

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Categories // Musings Tags // acting, creative advice, creativity, creativity tips, jane austen, novel writing, songwriting, writing, writing tips

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