亚洲AV

The Write Stuff

Body

Henry 鈥淗ank鈥 Jones, BA English 鈥07, MA 鈥10, first dreamt of becoming a film and television writer in graduate school. He attended writing courses at film festivals, read scriptwriting books, and watched any movie he could on Netflix. 鈥淭his was back when they still mailed DVDs,鈥 he says.

portrait of Hank Jones
Hank Jones. Photo by Van Green

His study of the craft has paid off, with writing credits that include shows such as Motown Magic, Family Reunion, The Neighborhood, Grown-ish, Bel-Air, Truth Be Told, The Game, Black-ish, The New Edition Story, and Dear White People. He is currently a writer and producer on ABC鈥檚 Will Trent.

Jones, the first African American Mason alumnus to write for a dramatic network television series, says the road to success was not easy. 鈥淚 faced self-doubt, doubt from others, poverty, joblessness, breakups, isolation...I can keep going.鈥

He recently shared what he鈥檚 learned from his journey and what鈥檚 next.

What were your career goals when you enrolled at Mason as a freshman in 2003?

I transferred to [Mason] after changing my major from communications (advertising) to English. My freshman composition instructor at my previous college told me I needed to focus on writing as a career. I still wasn鈥檛 sure what type of writing鈥攁nd I knew I loved movies鈥攕o I concentrated on film and media studies with the thought of being a movie critic/entertainment journalist.

Which actors have been the most fun or interesting to work with?

Anthony Anderson was great on Black-ish. That guy can do anything you ask in a scene. [He would say] 鈥淐an I play ping-pong? Sure! I won a tournament.鈥 鈥淏reak-dance? You know I used to be a semi-professional break-dancer, right?鈥 He really was. Google it. Outside of work, Anthony would throw parties or pay for a table at a party and invite everybody out鈥攅ven the assistants (me). It was always a great time.

Jenifer Lewis was amazing to work with, too. She was never not funny, and she told the best stories. Other greats include Erika Christensen, Wood Harris, Michael Rappaport, Regina Hall, and Lala Anthony.

What advice would you give to someone who wants to break into TV writing?

Write from the most personal place you can with your samples. Don鈥檛 worry about what you think audiences might like or what鈥檚 hot right now. Your truth will always be more interesting and evergreen鈥攁nd that鈥檚 what people will respond to the most. Afterwards, revise your script until you hate it. Once that鈥檚 done, submit it to any writing contest or program. Sundance, American Black Film Festival, Austin Film Festival, Film Independent鈥檚 Episodic Lab, and Project Involve are all great options. This will get you the attention you need to get into TV writing鈥攅specially if you鈥檙e doing it from outside Los Angeles.

What can we expect from you next?

2023 is the year I get both feet into the feature [film] world. I have a few projects I鈥檓 writing and hoping to sell. I鈥檒l keep y鈥檃ll posted!