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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • Page 190

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
190
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WESTSIDE Topics Scholarship: Loyola Student Bound for London A Loyola Marymount political science student has won a scholarship to study British politics in London next year. Gabriella Gomez, a 21-year-old political science major, will attend the London School of Economics and be an intern in the House of Commons with Labor Party member Graham Allen from January to August of 1995 as a Hansard Scholar. Allen, a fellow at the Loyola Marymount University Tnctitnto fm LAI CASSY COHEN Los Angeles Times Actressauthor Diane Shalet brings characters in her book, "Grief in a Sunny Climate," to life by acting them out. Actress Enjoys Latest Role as Author Gabnella Gomez Leadership Studies, taught "Politics: EnglandU.S." this summer at Loyola Marymount The Hansard Society for Parliamentary Scholars Programme seeks to expose American students to the British political system and encourage good relations between the two countries. Diplomacy: Bosnian Ambassador to Speak Bosnia-Herzegovina's ambassador to the United States is scheduled to speak Saturday at a Brentwood synagogue.

Ambassador Sven Alkalaj, appointed earlier this year, plans to speak at University Synagogue, 11960 Sunset on the pending peace plan between his country and Serbia. He will also discuss Secretary of State Warren Christopher's recent Middle East trip. The ambassador, an active member of Bosnia Herzegovina's Jewish community, will speak at 9 p.m. State Government: Assembly OKs Computer Bill Westside Assemblywoman Debra Bowen (D-Marina del Rey has won Assembly support for a bill intended to ensure that state agencies don't waste public funds when purchasing computers. Bowen's bill, which has won Assembly approval and is scheduled to be considered in the Senate next week, would create a peer review body to consult with state agencies buying computers.

The measure would also place a moratorium on future computer acquisitions until the review body can examine them. On Wednesday, a state auditor's report found that the Department of Motor Vehicles wasted $50 million on a failed computer system. she won the Santa Barbara Writers Conference first prize for fiction writing. Yet instead of building her confidence, winning the award made her more insecure. "I had a big block after I won the prize," Shalet said.

"It was like a burden on my shoulders. But those feelings finally exhausted themselves when I decided I had to. have fun writing." To help her just have fun and get the creative juices flowing, Shalet used a tool that came more naturally to her acting. She created mini stage settings complete with props and, using her improvisational skills, played all the parts herself. "When your imagination takes over, you become a better writer," she said.

Shalet's comedic talents proved to be handy as well. She did not want Babe's story to be one of merely tears and gloominess, so she has Babe go through a series of slapstick adventures on her journey of self-discovery. "Grief is not neat," Shalet explained. "It's a loopy roller coaster" that takes one through a range of emotions from sadness and despair to finding humor in mundane scenarios. Shalet borrows a quote from British dramatist and critic George Bernard Shaw to describe her feelings about humor and bereavement: "Life does not cease to be funny when people die, any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh." "We'll go mad if we don't laugh," she said.

in plays, radio, television and feature films during her 30-year career, writing was a private hobby nothing she had ever considered doing professionally. But the shift in careers has proved to be successful. Released by St Martin's Press in June, Shalet's book has been praised by critics. The New York Times lauded her in a recent book review for crafting a "deceptively silly story to disguise some serious lessons about sorrow and dependency." Figuring out how to develop her story line and characters was the biggest challenge for Shalet. When she first began writing what eventually became "Grief in a Sunny Climate," she said she had no intention of becoming an author.

The book is loosely based on her own experience. Like the protagonist Babe, Shalet had a hard time dealing with her husband's death. After Shalet's spouse of 11 years died more than a decade ago, she roamed bookstores looking for self-help texts to guide her through grieving. But the books she found offered her no comfort, so she began keeping a journal instead. During that time, she also joined a Santa Barbara-based writers group to learn more about writing techniques-something she had always wanted to do but hadn't had the time.

When Shalet mustered enough courage to share her journal entries with group members, they unanimously told her she had a novel in the works. Her entries read more like short stories, she was told, and the unfinished work was so impressive, By DONNA BIRCH TIMES STAFF WRITER Actress Diane Shalet began to rehearse the role of a recently widowed woman. The petite, strawberry-blonde sipped a glass of lemonade while gazing across the street at two Jehovah's Witnesses. The widow watched the couple as they walked from house to house, knocking on doors. They looked at her house and approached.

Looking a bit surprised and unsure of what to do, the widow decided to let them in. She opened the door, welcoming their company. Satisfied with the scene, Shalet did not go before the cameras to shoot a take. She sat down at her typewriter and pounded out a chapter. That is literally how all the characters in Shalet's new book, "Grief in a Sunny Climate," came to life.

The book, which chronicles the often-comedic experiences of a widow in her 40s trying to get her life back on track after the death of her husband, is Shalet's first venture as a novelist. Instead of waiting for divine inspiration to help her create characters and scenarios, once she had an idea, she acted it out at home using props. Shalet wrote only if, after performing a scene, it seemed realistic. "I wasn't trained as a writer and the process of putting lives and lines on paper intimidated me," said Shalet, a veteran actress who divides her time between West Hollywood and New York City. Although she has landed countless roles I a VOS, ANPES TIMES.

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