The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

THIS IS HER

Vera Herbert, who wrote for popular TV series, pens a similarly emotional tale, ‘Don’t Make Me Go’

- By Mark Meszoros mmeszoros@news-herald.com

Once you’ve seen the new film “Don’t Make Me Go,” it won’t come as a surprise that its writer, Vera Herbert, spent years penning episodes for and producing the recently concluded hit NBC drama “This Is Us.”

Debuting this week on Prime Video, the movie about the complex relationsh­ip between a father and daughter who go on a road trip shares the ability the series had to tap into your emotions without falling into the realm of the overly sappy.

“Interestin­gly,” Herbert says during a recent phone interview, “the script much predates the show. I wrote it and initially sold it 10 years ago.

“This movie just took a long time to get made and sort of went through a lot of different directors, different casts — trying to get all the people lined up.”

Herbert, too, has had a winding journey to this point.

She’d already lived in Texas, New York state and even South Africa before landing in Youngstown for her final two years of high school. Her parents, Robert and Barbara NykielHerb­ert were college professors; her late father eventually went into university administra­tion and became the provost at Youngstown State University, where her mother joined the English department.

In “Don’t Make Me Go,” John Cho’s Max is given a terminal diagnosis and struggles with the decision of whether to undergo a procedure that likely would lead to his immediate death or to spend what is estimated to be about a year of remaining life caring for daughter Wally (Mia Isaac) and trying to set up a future without him.

Although the film is far from what you’d consider autobiogra­phical, Herbert’s father died, unexpected­ly, about a month before she graduated from Ursuline High School in Youngstown.

“That was definitely the impetus for writing the script, like four or five years later — just sort of still kind of figuring out as a young adult, how was I going to live my life without my dad? And we had been really close, especially in high school, especially those Youngstown years.

At the time, her mother, she says, was involved in a university exchange that saw her work at a university in Taiwan.

“She was gone for months at a time teaching, and so

there was a lot of just me and Dad one-on-one time that involved trips to visit colleges and that kind of stuff,” she says.

Herbert went to college at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem and spent her senior year completing her coursework remotely from Los Angeles, where she’d scored a position with the MTV series “Awkward.”

She then spent time trying to develop shows. And although none went forward, a studio she’d worked with, which was then 20th Century Fox Television, thought she’d be a fit for a show it was green-lighting, “This Is Us.”

“They were like, ‘We think you’d be really great as a writer on the show,’ so they sent me to Dan Fogelman, who created it,” she says. “He read my sample, and I met with him and it was a really great meeting.

“It was really a sensibilit­y match, that I already was writing the kind of stuff that was the same tone as the show.”

Herbert — whose episode “The Trip” won the 2017 Writers Guild (WGA) Award for Outstandin­g Writing

for Episodic Drama, while another she wrote, “Still Here,” was nominated for an NAACP Image Award in 2018, according to the production notes for “Don’t Make Me Go” — says working under Fogelman was beneficial.

“(His) being able to (turn) dramady and emotional, heartfelt stuff into a really commercial­ly successful show that everybody watched was really inspiring,” she says.

In “Don’t Make Me Go,” Max has been feuding with his increasing­ly rebellious teen daughter when he gets what amounts to a death sentence, news he can’t bring himself to deliver to her.

He decides to attend a college reunion many states away, insisting Wally come with him. As a sweetener, he promises to let Wally drive, but, unbeknowns­t to her, he also plans to visit her mother, who left them when Wally was very young.

The film is directed by Hannah Marks, who helmed the indie comedy “Mark, Mary & Some Other People” and co-directed another indie, “After Everything.”

“It was really a sensibilit­y match, that I already was writing the kind of stuff that was the same tone as the show.”

— Vera Herbert, writer of the new movie “Don’t Make Me Go,” on being hired as a writer on “This Is Us”

 ?? COURTESY OF AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES ?? Max (John Cho) and his daughter, Wally (Mia Isaac), go on a tension-filled roadtrip in “Don’t Make Me Go,” which debuts this week on Prime Video.
COURTESY OF AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES Max (John Cho) and his daughter, Wally (Mia Isaac), go on a tension-filled roadtrip in “Don’t Make Me Go,” which debuts this week on Prime Video.
 ?? COURTESY OF AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Vera Herbert, the writer of Amazon Studios’ “Don’t Make Me Go,” attends a screening of the movie in Los Angeles on July 11.
COURTESY OF AMAZON STUDIOS Vera Herbert, the writer of Amazon Studios’ “Don’t Make Me Go,” attends a screening of the movie in Los Angeles on July 11.

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