San Diego Union-Tribune

Triathlete’s workouts led to Oscar-nominated movie

- DIANE BELL Columnist

Which of the following is true?

• A San Diego five-time world champion triathlete is executive producer of an epic film up for nine Academy Awards.

• She mentally “wrote” the screenplay while on cycling and running workouts on the streets and trails of San Diego County.

• She used money from winning races over 16 years to pay for renewing the movie option rights.

If you answered “yes” to all three, give yourself a gold star. That’s only a small slice of the story of Lesley Paterson, a 5-foot-2-inch, 100-pound dynamo who is coscriptwr­iter and executive producer of the modern remake of the movie “All Quiet on the Western Front.”

The longtime San Diegan’s tenacity and competitiv­eness have paid off big time.

Her antiwar film, streaming on Netflix, was nominated for 14 BAFTAs,

the British Academy of Film and Television Arts version of the Oscars, and shocked the cinema world when it collected seven of them last month. Included were best picture, best director and best adapted screenplay, an award jointly shared by Paterson, cowriter Ian Stokell and movie director

Edward Berger.

Now the German-language movie is up for nine Oscars, including nomination­s for best picture, best internatio­nal feature, cinematogr­aphy and adapted screenplay, heading into Sunday’s Academy Awards ceremony.

“It’s unbelievab­le. We have to keep pinching ourselves,” says the Scottish-born Paterson, who moved to San Diego in 2002.

I caught up with her Thursday by phone in Los Angeles, where the British Broadcasti­ng Corp. was filming the fitting for her gown by British couturiers Kolchagov Barba.

“We designed it together,” Paterson says.

The “P” in Paterson also stands for perseveran­ce. She has won the Xterra World Championsh­ip three times — in 2011, 2012 and 2018 — and the ITU Cross Triathlon World Championsh­ip in 2012 and 2018. She triumphed in the 2015 Xterra Costa Rica triathlon with a broken shoulder.

A day before the competitio­n, she took a nasty tumble on her bike, then strategize­d as to how she could still compete in the race. She needed the prize money to help pay for the five-figure option renewal fee for book rights to “All Quiet on the Western Front” — her dream project.

“In order to retain the option for the novel, I had to win races,” she says.

Paterson rationaliz­ed that she could still bike and run with her injury — but swimming nearly 1 mile competitiv­ely with one arm?

Her husband, former San Diego State University sports psychologi­st associate professor Simon Marshall, who moved over to UC San Diego as an associate professor in family medicine in 2012, convinced her she could do it.

Coming out of the initial swimming portion, she was 12 minutes behind, rose to second place after the mountain biking event, then ran to victory. The winner’s purse was hers.

Paterson springboar­ded from a master’s degree in theater, television and film at SDSU and acquired the option rights to the 1929 novel by Erich Maria Remarque with co-writer Stokell in 2006.

Selling the idea of making a World War I film from the perspectiv­e of German soldiers in German with subtitles proved a challenge.

“We tried to get it made 12 years ourselves, and it was like pushing a boulder up the hill. Everybody was scared of it,” Stokell told journalist­s covering the BAFTA awards.

“When we finally found Edward Berger, it was like a dream come true, then, obviously, Netflix came on board,” Paterson added. “We’ve really fought to get this film made.”

Many of the scenes of “All Quiet on the Western Front” were formulated during Paterson’s daily four-hour workouts on local running and biking paths — through San Diego Mission Trails, the Laguna Mountains, Palomar Mountain, Mount Soledad, Pacific Coast Highway and elsewhere.

“Most of my ideas, to be honest.” She credits the workouts with stimulatin­g the creative part of her

brain.

Paterson had wanted the movie to portray the horror and futility of war through the eyes of a 17-year-old German soldier. It was not fun and games, as many of the young, gullible German boys were encouraged to believe.

She also came up with the image of a girl in a red coat, which viewers of “Schindler’s List” might remember as a symbol of innocence of Jews being slaughtere­d in the Holocaust.

She used the imagery of the recycling of a dead soldier’s uniform. It was washed, bullet holes were stitched up, and it was carefully folded to be reissued to an unsuspecti­ng recruit.

Bob Babbitt, co-founder of Competitor Magazine and member of both the Ironman and USA Triathlon halls of fame, calls Paterson an amazing runner and tenacious competitor. “She is just so tough,” he says, noting that, as a youngster, she joined an all-boy rugby team. She even became team captain.

There is much more to come from Paterson. “Today, Simon and I write and produce and have our own production company. We have various projects in different stages of production,” she says. Her husband contribute­d to the script,

although he wasn’t given screenwrit­er credit.

Paterson is juggling three careers — triathlete, their Braveheart Coaching business, which just ran a sports camp in San Diego in January, and several film projects that are in the works.

The couple have written a new script set in the Scottish Highlands between World War I and World War II. She hints that the plot centers on a married couple on the run from something suspicious.

“All Quiet on the Western Front” has been streaming on Netflix, but with all the award buzz, it now is returning to theaters for bigscreen viewing.

“A lot of my friends’ children are telling their parents to watch this film — the themes are universal,” Paterson says.

On March 20, she and her husband, who moved into a rental in Los Angeles last year, will return to SDSU to share their movie screenwrit­ing story. The free event will be at 2 p.m. at the Conrad Prebys Aztec Student Union theater. It is open to the public and will be followed by a Q&A.

“The whole thing is incredibly authentic, and that’s why it resonates with people,” Paterson says.

 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Triathlete-turned-writer Lesley Paterson and screenwrit­er Ian Stokell with their BAFTA for “All Quiet on the Western Front.”
JUSTIN TALLIS AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Triathlete-turned-writer Lesley Paterson and screenwrit­er Ian Stokell with their BAFTA for “All Quiet on the Western Front.”
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 ?? REINER BAJO AP ?? “All Quiet on the Western Front” has been nominated for nine Academy Awards.
REINER BAJO AP “All Quiet on the Western Front” has been nominated for nine Academy Awards.

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