| For This Sister Act, Everything's
Relative
by Melissa Balmain
For The LA Times
The Burton sisters haven't been nominated for an Oscar.
They've yet to pose on the cover of Vanity Fair or get a perfume
named after them or even sign very many autographs.
And still, wherever they go, these five filmmakers
are causing outbreaks of full-blown, star-magnitude jealousy.
"They so make me wish I had four sisters,"
a movie director says.
"What an awesome way to live," a producer's
rep sighs.
"Will you all be on one check?" asks a waitress,
but you can tell as she lingers at their table that she really wants
to ask, "Will you adopt me?"
The reason for all this Burton envy is as easy to
find as it is hard to fathom: They actually get along. The whole
dark-haired, bright-eyed bunch of them. You suspect this from the
way they squeeze each other's hands (affectionately) and laugh at
each other's stories (loudly and often). You know for sure when
you learn that they've made two feature-length films together without
a single attempted sororicide.
The Burtons' first movie, "Just Friends,"
is a romantic comedy about a young man whose ideal woman is engaged
to someone else. It has played to enthusiastic crowds at medium-tier
festivals around the world and will be featured late this month
at the International Family Film Festival in Albuquerque. A reviewer
from Variety saw an early cut and called Maria Burton, 32, the oldest
sister and the film's director, a "talent to watch." The
Burtons have sold "Just Friends" to a number of foreign
buyers and are negotiating a deal for a cable television premiere
this summer or fall.
Their second movie, "Temps"--now in the
last stages of post-production--is a comedy about young adults struggling
to forge long-lasting careers and relationships.
Both films combine little-known performers with established
character actors (Hal Linden as an insurance company boss in "Just
Friends," Seymour Cassel as a film studio president in "Temps").
True to the name of the Burtons' Santa Monica-based company, Five
Sisters Productions,the sisters do everything from writing to fund-raising
to acting in key roles on-screen.
"I can't even think of any three-sibling teams,
let alone five-sibling teams, other than the Burtons," says
Jack Lechner, executive vice president for development and production
at Miramax and a friend and admirer of the sisters. "And I
think it's absolutely remarkable that they not only work together,
but they work together so well and happily. And how well adjusted
they all are. Almost to a shocking degree."
How the Burtons got so shockingly sane, and have managed
to stay that way in a field that's anything but, is the sort of
story you'd never believe on film. It starts in a suburb of Buffalo,
N.Y., where the sisters spent most of their childhood. "We
were always together," says Charity, 24, the youngest. "And
family was the first priority."
Their parents--Gabrielle, a novelist and screenwriter,
and Roger, a psychologist and musician--had everyone tell true stories
about their daily lives as they ate at the family's big round dinner
table. (After meals, those doing the dishes got fictional stories
read to them by those who were not.) They often took their daughters
to movies. (Everyone liked to sit through them twice and critique
them afterward.) Each summer, they splurged on family trips to such
places as Alaska, China and India. (The sisters formed a singing
group, Buffalo Gals, that performed at restaurants, hotels and nightclubs
along the way.) Sibling arguments were frequent but short. For one
thing, the Burtons say, it was boring to sulk alone. For another,
their parents made sure they talked problems out.
"You had to articulate what was wrong, what had
happened," says Jennifer, 31. "You'd say, 'She's mean,'
and Mom and Dad would say, 'No, what she did is mean.' "
"Or you'd say, 'She made me feel bad,' "
Charity chimes in, "and theywould say, 'No, the way you feel
is up to you.' " If talk didn't do the trick, the Burtons weren't
above getting physical. "One time," Jennifer says, grinning
at the memory, "Dad brought home cream pies for us to throw
at each other." The sisters put on bathing suits and ran into
the backyard for a lemon-meringue and chocolate-cream war.
Not that in-your-face was the family's usual style.
The sisters successfully ran lemonade stands together and sold doughnuts.
They shared clothes, chores, a paper route. One time they even,
unwittingly, shared an obscene phone call. (The girls were under
the impression that a dying man was on the other end--he sounded
so out of breath, poor guy -- and they took turns on various extensions
trying to calm him down.)
It was probably inevitable that the Burtons would
end up sharing a production company too. At first, though, after
graduating from Yale, Harvard-Radcliffe and Denison universities
with all sorts of theatrical experience, they started down separate
paths.
Maria acted, produced and directed in Boston, New
York and Los Angeles. Jennifer studied Japanese theater in Tokyo
and got a PhD in English literature at Harvard. Ursula, now 29,
became an actor in New York. Gabrielle, now 26, pursued creative
writing in Boston and studied directing and screenwriting in France.
And Charity worked for Americorps, organizing and teaching in literacy
programs in New Orleans and East Los Angeles.
About six years ago, Ursula and Maria combined forces
to produce and act in the musical revue "A . . . My Name Is
Alice" in Los Angeles. They took a couple of years after that
finding another project they really loved--and at last optioned
the script for "Just Friends" and went into the movie
business. Gabrielle, fresh from film school, became their co-producer.
Jennifer and Charity signed on during post-production.
"I saw a cut of 'Just Friends' and I was just bowled over,"
Jennifer remembers. "This was like a real movie! I joined the
company. I'm no dummy." Echoes Charity, "I'm no fool."
Now Maria, Ursula and Charity live in Santa Monica,
and Gabrielle is bicoastal. Jennifer, the only married sister, lives
in La Jolla.
Not content until Five Sisters Productions was really
Five Sisters and Two Parents, the Burtons have optioned three screenplays
by their mother. They've acted alongside both parents in "Temps."
And they've never stopped heeding Mom and Dad's advice.
"We still try and talk problems through,"
Maria says. One afternoon six months ago in a New York sound studio,
Ursula, Gabrielle and Maria leaned toward a huge video screen with
their hands identically folded in front of their chins. They were
watching two "Temps" characters kiss after their first
date.
"I think we should keep the music up the whole
way and lose the lines," Gabrielle said. "I liked that
surging feeling."
"But," Ursula said, "there'll be the
annoying thing of what did they say?" "But," Maria
said, "all we lose is the 'good night,' right? I agree with
Gabrielle." "OK," Ursula said amiably. So it went,
hour after hour, point by point. Sometimes one sister's opinion
held sway, sometimes another's, but always the Burtons kept talking
until everyone seemed happy. No cream pies necessary. Of all the
problems they've addressed this way, the thorniest may be the Great
Directing Dilemma.
The Burtons' third film--likely to begin shooting
by fall--will be based on one of their mother's screenplays. It
will, if fund-raising continues to go well, be their most expensive
effort yet.
While the sisters were shooting "Temps,"
Gabrielle said she'd like to direct Film No. 3. But Maria, after
honing her skills for two movies in a row, was hardly eager to step
down. "We just couldn't see what a solution would be,"
Maria recalls. So the whole family talked and talked, parents included.
"I think it was Mom who thought of splitting it up." Which
is just what Maria and Gabrielle plan to do: Each will direct half
the movie. "For this company to last," Gabrielle ex-plains,
"we all have to be able to get out our long-term goals."
They also have to work out the short-term matter of sister overload.
"We have enormous fun together," Maria says. "It's
just our own time we'd like to have more of." Private time.
Down time. But when your colleagues are your sisters and your best
friends, that's tough to find. The Burtons have tried setting rules
about not discussing work after certain hours. Amid some crisis
or other, the rules always fail. "After a while," Charity
laments, "you're just like, 'I've seen you for 82 hours straight
and I really would like a break.' "
Once their company is more established, the Burtons
aim to hire other people to do some of the round-the-clock work.
That will free up the sisters to pursue individual projects in acting,
teaching, writing and so on--and give them more energy for the aspect
of Five Sisters that they enjoy most. "We all feel strongly
about telling stories," Ursula says. And they feel strongly
about how to tell them. "The idea of throwing in a random sex
scene for the sake of getting the film distributed is not something
we would compromise on," Gabrielle says. Ditto for a random
scene of violence. "We don't have any gratuitous smoking, either!"
Maria says. What the Burtons do have are movies that, like the sisters
themselves, brim with hope. In "Just Friends," a wallflower
finds the love of her life. In "Temps," a poet learns
to be happy despite her lack of professional success.
"Our films aren't optimistic, though," cautions
Jennifer, who wrote her dissertation on the literary construction
of hope. "Optimism is an idea that everything is great in the
world. Hope is you believe that it could get better. . . . You don't
just say everything is wonderful in the world, you know, Pollyanna,
because that's just false. But at the same time, if you give your
characters a cynical vision where they are defeated by difficulties,
I think that actually has a negative effect on the people watching
the film." A hopeful vision, on the other hand, can have a
positive effect--especially on veteran observers of the independent
scene.
"I see a lot of new filmmakes, so many of them
unsuccessful, trying to be cynical and pessimistic, making a lot
of films with a lot of attitude but no substance behind them,"
says Robert Hawk, a member of the competition selection advisory
board for the Sundance Film Festival, where the Burtons work each
winter. "Both of the Burtons' films have a humane, humorous
spirit that I think is lovely."
Will that spirit find a flesh-and-blood following?
Will the Burtons one day get the big bucks, the big stars, the Vanity
Fair cover? The sisters are--surprise!--hopeful. Among the movies
they see themselves making are two more based on screenplays by
their mother, one based on a novel by Jennifer, and at least eight
based on ideas of Gabrielle's and Maria's. The movies would run
the gamut from a courtroom drama to a sci-fi blockbuster. "Basically,"
Maria says with a laugh, "we're booked for the rest of our
lifetimes."
Burton watchers say the sisters have a good shot during
those lifetimes at making a splash. "They certainly have the
talent and the tenacity," Hawk says. Jeff Dowd, a producer
and producer's representative who has worked with the Burtons and
with filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen, believes the sisters--like
the brothers--combine to create an "amazing source of energy
and trust." "I want to see the situation," he says,
"where four or five of those sisters are going to a major actor
and asking her to be in a movie--because I think they'll get that
actor if the script works. You know, she'll want to hang with these
people, she'll want to spend time with these Burton sisters."
And, chances are, she'll wish she were one of them.
Copyright 1998 / Los Angeles Times
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