The Only Woman in the Room

Episodes in My Life and Career as a Television Writer

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Pub Date Sep 01 2015 | Archive Date Mar 28 2018
Hal Leonard | Applause Theatre & Cinema Books

Description

Rita Lakin was a pioneer a female scriptwriter in the early 1960s when Hollywood television was exclusively male. For years, in creative meetings, she was literally "the only woman in the room." In this breezy but heartfelt remembrance, Lakin takes readers to a long-forgotten time when women were not considered worthy or welcome at the creative table. Widowed with three young children, she talked herself into a secretarial job at Universal Studios in 1962, despite being unable to type or take dictation. With guts, skill, and humor, she rose from secretary to freelancer, to staff writer, to producer, to executive producer and showrunner, meeting hundreds of famous and infamous showbiz legends along the way during her long and unexpected career. She introduced many women into the business and was a feminist before she even knew she was one. The general public did not know her name, but Lakin touched the lives of millions of viewers week after week, year after year. The relevance of her personal journey charming yet occasionally shocking will be an eye-opener to present-day who take for granted the abundance of female creative talent in today's Hollywood.

Rita Lakin was a pioneer a female scriptwriter in the early 1960s when Hollywood television was exclusively male. For years, in creative meetings, she was literally "the only woman in the room." In...


Advance Praise

"Every woman in the entertainment business should read this book as an example of courage, fortitude, and self-confidence. It's a survival manifesto. And every man in the entertainment business should read this book as a cautionary tale of arrogance, conceit, and privilege. Rita Lakin is a smart, funny, savvy professional who climbed the slippery ladder of success with no one pushing her up from behind or pulling her up from above. She did it herself, with talent, attitude, and hard, hard work. I have known Rita for many, many years. I was a kid at Universal, and she took me under her wing, no doubt as no man professionally had taken her under his wing. Her tale is inspirational, and I would advise every woman successfully navigating our business today to read this wonderfully entertaining book for its history, its heart, and its inspiration."

—STEVEN BOCHCO, Creator/Writer/Producer of Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, NYPD Blue, and Murder in the First

"At turns hilarious, tender, and tough, this is the fabulous memoir of a woman who forged her own path to the writers’ room in an industry dominated by men.

If you like classic television, you’ve probably seen Rita Lakin’s work. Dr. KildarePeyton PlaceFlamingo RoadMod Squad. In an industry dominated by men, Lakin worked her way up in the writers’ room—and worked her way into a better life for her and her children as she made her mark on the small screen.

The Only Woman in the Room chronicles how Lakin crafted a new career out of necessity, and what a bonus that it was a fabulous, successful career. She had just lost her loving husband and had three children to raise. It was the early 1960s, an era not kind to a widowed young mom. She ventured out, talking her way into a secretarial job at Universal Studios when she couldn’t even type. She ventured even further out, trying some script writing through a kind boss willing to vouch for her with his colleagues. From there, piece by piece, gig by gig, TV series by TV series, she built a great reputation in the field and nabbed some plum jobs, plus the better house and life that went with it.

Lakin is at turns tender in remembering her late husband and tough and honest in relating the incidents where she got trashed. She’s wise to what was going on around her, yet unafraid to admit how insecure she was in her work. She writes, “I never chased after an assignment; each one I did came to me. And I took whatever was offered. I had no ego. … And here I was, a successful woman in spite of myself.”

Jobs weren’t the only things that flitted strangely into her life. Lakin’s tales of the mobster who wanted to “keep” her and the sheik in the elevator are hilarious, the sort of truths that are stranger than fiction. Her writing style is effortless, seamless. The pages zoom right along. Two veins of glossy color photos in the book nicely provide faces with names.

Lakin can only be admired—by both women and men—for forging a marvelous path through fears and heartbreak. Was it a charmed career? No. One clearly earned."

Foreword Reviews


"Every woman in the entertainment business should read this book as an example of courage, fortitude, and self-confidence. It's a survival manifesto. And every man in the entertainment business...


Marketing Plan

—Rita Lakin is available for radio, TV and podcast interviews

—Requests for print interviews and articles will be reviewed for consideration.

Please address all inquiries to David Ivester david@author-guide.com


—Rita Lakin is available for radio, TV and podcast interviews

—Requests for print interviews and articles will be reviewed for consideration.

Please address all inquiries to David Ivester...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9781495014055
PRICE $29.99 (USD)

Average rating from 8 members


Featured Reviews

I really loved this book. This autobiography reads like one of Rita Larkin's Movies of the Week. The book is divided by decades and ends when she decides to retire from Television. She does a very good job of describing how hard it was and still is for woman in Hollywood. This book reads very quickly and is hard to put down. There are lots of behind the scenes and famous names. While she was successful in her professional her personal life was not as easy. Pick this book up for a peak behind the scenes in early television. Enjoy

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I love books about show business and thi one doesn’t disappoint. Larkin, a supremely


talented writer tells how hard it was to break into the tv writer boy’s club Her stories will shock you, but maybe not so much, give
the current political climate. Recommended

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