Local
Filmmakers To Premiere 'Lot Lizards'
Husband and wife team take
their visions to the masses.
By Jason
Hartke
May 3, 2006

R-0503-138 Behind
the camera, filmmakers and married couple Paul
Awad and Kathryn O’Sullivan take a moment to
discuss a scene.

R-0503-139 Above is
a screenshot from Paul Awad and Kathryn
O’Sullivan’s short titled, “Lot Lizards,” which
premieres May 4 in Baltimore.
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Paul Awad and
Kathryn O’Sullivan, a husband and wife team steeped in
the art of moviemaking, have tried to be living examples
of the old adage “practice what you preach.”
Awad,
who teaches digital filmmaking, and O’Sullivan, who
teaches drama and play- and screenwriting, have always
advocated to students a “do-it-yourself” approach to
filmmaking if barriers crop up. In the movie business,
the biggest barrier has always been money, keeping the
industry closed and selective.
“I tell my students
that this is such a great time to be writing screenplays
because the technology allows them to get a camera and
go out and create,” said O’Sullivan. As sophisticated
digital video-cameras and editing software becomes more
affordable, moviemaking becomes less dependent on large
coffers, she explains. The lesson is simple: “If you
can’t find someone to do it, do it yourself,” said
O’Sullivan.
IN THE LAST few years, the local
couple has taken their own advice, collaborating to
produce two short movies. “It almost started as an
experiment to see if [the advice] was really true,” said
O’Sullivan, explaining the couple’s foray into movie
production.
Their latest film, “Lot Lizards,” a
16-minute short about three truck-stop prostitutes who
ponder leaving their profession, will premiere this
Thursday, May 4 at Gardel's Supper Club in Baltimore.
The couple’s other film, “Sweet Dreams,” which Awad
wrote and directed, will also be shown. The 21-minute
short, which was produced by O’Sullivan, premiered last
year at the D.C. Independent Film
Festival.
O’Sullivan wrote “Lot Lizards” three years
ago as a comedy/drama for the theater. During its run at
the Source Theatre in Washington, D.C., which has since
closed, the 10-minute play was well received, winning
second place at the Washington Theatre
Festival.
“When the play debuted, there was a lot of
laughing,” said Awad, who directed the play and the
movie.
Awad and O’Sullivan both teach at the
Manassas Campus of Northern Virginia Community College,
where Awad has worked with video production classes and
O’Sullivan teaches speech and drama. When the couple
decided to produce “Lot Lizards” as a movie, several
students from their classes joined the production crew
to gain valuable real-world experience.
The
filmmakers also attracted three experienced theater
actresses, including Mildred Marie Langford of
Alexandria, Lydia Mong of West Virginia and Kristy Van
Meter. Langford, who studied theatre at George Mason
University, and the two other actresses have performed
with several theatre companies.
ON A TIGHT budget
— the couple spent $1,500 to produce the film — they
shot the film quickly. “It took about three days over
three weekends to film,” said Awad.
But the quality
of the film and its low budget continue to be examples
to aspiring film students. “We’re living proof it can be
done inexpensively, and I think that’s exciting,” said
O’Sullivan.
The couple’s next project, a script
O’Sullivan has started to write, is a comedic Dracula
dating story. It’s about Dracula muddling through the
difficult world of dating and trying to find “Mrs.
Right,” all the while his overbearing mother is
pressuring him to get married. While O’Sullivan says she
enjoys putting ideas to paper, she loves to see her
“visions come to life” on film. When the time comes,
Awad will direct. “I’m lucky, I found a director who I
trust with my work,” joked
O’Sullivan.
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