Chattanooga Times Free Press

Writers@Work reels in author of ‘Big Fish,’ Daniel Wallace

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

Chattanoog­a State Community College has reeled in two prize catches for its next Writers@Work program.

Daniel Wallace was the first trophy. The author of the 1998 best-seller “Big Fish,” popularize­d by director Tim Burton’s 2003 film adaptation, had agreed to a weeklong campus visit in April to culminate the two semesters in which students had studied his work. When the coronaviru­s wiped spring schedules clean, Wallace’s visit was postponed until this month. But the same challenges were present for fall.

Rather than canceling, organizers converted live events to virtual ones, to be presented free of charge Sept. 21-25. The schedule is still rich in programmin­g. The only one that got away was the chance to see the author of “Big Fish” speak at

the Tennessee Aquarium.

But the COVID restrictio­ns also meant that organizers could cast a wider net, just as they did for last week’s virtual YA-hoo Fest, which drew participan­ts “from across the country and from, literally, around

the world” in celebratio­n of young-adult literature, says English professor Joel Henderson, Humanities Department chairman.

“In addition to opening the doors to a larger audi

has allowed us to expand our programmin­g in ways that would prove cost-prohibitiv­e if we tried to make it happen in person,” he says. “So, once we decided to go virtual, we started to brainstorm. That’s how we ended up with Andrew Lippa.

Lippa is the lyricist and composer of the musical version of “Big Fish,” which played on Broadway in 2013 and has toured nationally and internatio­nally since.

“Though we wouldn’t have been able to afford to bring him to Chattanoog­a for an interview, he was gracious enough to agree to a live Zoom interview, offering attendees the chance to look into the process of transformi­ng Wallace’s novel into an award-winning Broadway musical,” Henderson says.

“Big Fish,” which is subtitled “A Novel of Mythic Proportion­s,” is about a young man (William Bloom) trying to reconcile the fantastica­l tales told to him by his father (Edward Bloom) as his father lies dying. William believes his father has never told the truth, until he begins to investigat­e the stories.

Four main events are scheduled for Writers@Work: an interview with Wallace about his novel and craft; a multimedia interview with the author about the film version of his book; an interview with Lippa; and a livestream of selections from the musical.

“Back in the spring semester, our Fine Arts Department was on the cusp of performing the full version of ‘Big Fish: The Musical.’ COVID restrictio­ns made that impossible, but all the hours of rehearsal won’t go to waste since the performers will be offering socially distanced selections via Zoom,” Henderson says.

Writers@Work was founded in 2011 as a way to enhance literary analysis from the college’s Compositio­n II classes through the reading of a common novel focused on Southern culture and people. It has since grown into an annual arts experience in which participan­ts have been able to interact with a who’s who of authors. Previous guest artists have included Terry Kay, Ishmael Reed, Jill McCorkle and Rick Bragg. The 2021 featured author will be Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Jericho Brown.

To register for any of this year’s events, go to https:// www.chattbigre­ad.com/.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER/DAVID BUNDY ?? Actor Ewan McGregor (as young Edward Bloom) carries a St. Bernard puppy through a burning house in a scene from the Tim Burton film “Big Fish.”
AP FILE PHOTO/MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER/DAVID BUNDY Actor Ewan McGregor (as young Edward Bloom) carries a St. Bernard puppy through a burning house in a scene from the Tim Burton film “Big Fish.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States