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Mary
Stuart Masterson, Director
and
Jayce Bartok, Writer/Actor
Pusateri:
What steps did you take to make yourself ready to
transition from acting to directing?
Masterson:
I think sometimes people think directing is a
promotion from acting, and that’s just not it. I
didn’t want more control or power. If I had been
in the movie and I was directing it, maybe. I’ve
always wanted to direct. I’ve always written. I
had a bunch of projects for years…sixteen years
since I wrote the first draft of one script that
had three casts, four production companies, people
with suitcases full of money, Japanese attaches,
girlfriends…and it’s all true. None of those
movies got made. Two that I was directing that I
didn’t write that I was working on with various
producers. In part, I’ve been writing a lot for a
lot of years…re-writing mostly is what writing
is…and developing material. I spent a lot of time
doing that, sort of like my day job for 10 years,
despite the fact that occasionally I had to take
work to making a living as an actress. A lot of
times projects that I was working on would fall
apart when I was taking a job as an actress. For
The Cake Eaters , Jayce and I had the same agent
and he gave me the script and I thought it was
wonderful and had great characters and great
heart. We started working on the script together
for a number of months and I was presented the
opportunity to do a Broadway musical and I said,
if I do this, this is going to fall apart again.
So the gamble paid off. I did a lot of homework, a
lot of reading working with great actors, great
directors over the years, and really bad
directors. And then I directed a half-hour film
for Showtime that is a science fiction short.
That’s great training, a half-hour short…a stupid
length. It’s too long, it’s too short. Don’t do
it, don’t try it. But it was great
training.
Q:
What about this material spoke to you and how
involved were you in the casting
process?
Masterson:
The material I thought was very unusual in that it
had an innocence and timelessness about it.
Instead of trying to change that, we just embraced
it full on. For one thing, the names, come
on…Beagle, Easy! These are great character names.
I think it’s a world that is lovely and kind of
rare. The struggle that we had in terms of
developing the script to be ready to shoot was he
wrote so many stories in this one story and it was
hard to tell, was this The Last Picture Show or
Nashville , that kind of many, many character
stories. That was a challenge that we both
struggled with. I was very involved with casting.
We had a casting director and casting sessions.
The horrible part was sometimes they brought
people in that I already knew or had worked with
or liked or was friends with to read a three-line
part. I wouldn’t have asked my friend to read that
part for me and put it on tape. It’s embarrassing.
And yet the amazing thing was that the people who
did come in and read that I didn’t ask to read…the
incredible preparation and the choices that were
made, it was really beautiful how many people came
out and wanted to be a part of this. Then there
were people who didn’t audition. Kristen, I had
just met. She loved her character and was willing
to go the distance with the research and didn’t in
any way, shy away from extra time spent on the
role. And I also I just met Aaron. Bruce, I wrote
a letter and Elizabeth claims I seduced her, but I
think it was the other way around. The woman made
me drink a half a bottle of wine.
Q:
Was pre-production or post-production more
difficult?
Masterson:
The obvious answer for this project might be post
because we made some changes and actually went
back and did a little extra shooting. We just
re-wrote the material and restructured it a bit.
In a way, that was more difficult, but we had a
great situation where we had support from our
producers and our financiers to really get it
right and approach it in the most thorough and
appropriate way. It was never terrible. I loved
prep. We had months and months together working on
the script before we even got a green light to do
it, so that wasn’t hard. I think a movie is made
in three drafts for a director. Your first draft
is in prep… how you visualize it on the page, how
you set it up so you can shoot it realistically on
budget and on time. And then your second draft is
what happens when you’re actually shooting. And
the third draft is in the editing room. You just
see it fresh and start from scratch. Hopefully it
all fits the way you planned. You just have to
embrace that as part of the process.

Mary
Stuart Masterson (center) with CWNY Co-President
Geralyn Abinader, board members Nyna Sargent,
Ylana, Maria Pusateri and intern Julie
Praetzel
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Pioneer
audience
Q:
How did you get Duncan Sheik to compose the music
in the film when he was working on the Broadway
musical Spring Awakening?
Masterson:
I was interested in the idea. His agent made that
a possibility. He’s really got a great sensibility
for this because he’s very sensitive to these
characters in this world and gets it and writes
mostly beautiful melodies. He also understood in
particular Beagle’s character and his not wanting
to make it sound too small town and hokey. He used
electric instruments instead of just acoustic. I
thought his instinct sounded really good. It just
seemed right, however, her was about to go into
rehearsal for Spring Awakening. I had done a
Broadway musical a couple of years prior and
thought, dude, do you have any idea what you’re
about to go through?
Q:
What kind of dynamic did you and Mary have on set
in terms of actor and director? What was the most
difficult process of
directing?
Bartok:
We had a good dynamic on the set. The
pre-production I think was very intense. It was
the hardest thing I’ve ever done. We spent
countless hours talking about it passionately
trying to find the story. Once the process of was
over for me as an actor, then I went to the set to
take on another job. I think that was great
relief. It was like a whole other chapter in the
process.
Masterson:
This dynamic in a way was the most difficult
because we were both equally passionate about it.
Some things we disagreed about, ultimately
fighting for the story and the characters. And
then to step into the other relationship, which is
I want to nurture you and love you and help you do
your best. The other part of that relationship is
that some of this material is personal to Jayce
and I didn’t want to know how that was personal to
him, because I tend to be a bit of a caretaker,
and I wanted to be kind of a hard ass if I needed
to be and not know that’s my brother you’re
talking about. I probably inadvertently was kind
of hard core about things.
Bartok:
In a good way.

Mary
Stuart Masterson and Jayce Bartok
Masterson:
I still don’t know. Most difficult in general is
probably not losing your own vision and voice as
you go through with a lot of people’s opinions
coming at you…mostly in post. I don’t think I lost
that at all in any point till post. Everybody’s
got a valid point and were all talking about
different things, and I was losing focus. I just
wanted everybody to get along.
Bartok:
It was good for me to have that perspective
because it was my first script and was personal.
If Mary Stuart hadn’t come along and had that
perspective, it wouldn’t have become a film.
That’s just the reality. These processes are very
artistic and intense. When you get through them,
you’re like wow, I’m really proud I went through
that process and didn’t go cuckoo.
Pusateri:
You worked with your brother who was the
cinematographer. What was that like?
Masterson:
He did a great job. I love my brother a lot. We
have a short hand and it’s very easy. He was
actually living at my house while we were doing
this. We drove 40 minutes to and from the set
every day and talked about the work, what happened
or what we could do better. We shot on HD. My
brother is sort of a technological wizard and
hadn’t shot HD before and did a lot of homework.
Fortunately, we made sure to do some camera tests.
We both learned a lot about HD and what we could
do to get more of a film look.
Q:
Can you talk about the title of the
film?
Bartok:
It’s a term that was used in Pennsylvania where I
grew up to describe the wealthy andthose who had
their lives kind of laid out for them…the cake
eaters who live up on the hill in a nice house.
When I wrote these characters, I thought they are
so not the cake eaters. And through the course of
these couple of days, they sort of get the cake
and eat it too. I liked it as this sort of
mysterious metaphor for this kind of band of
misfits. It definitely raises some opinions.
People get excited and passionate about The Cake
Eaters title.
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Mary
Stuart Masterson, Jayce Bartok and Jesse
Scolaro
Q:
What are your plans for
distribution?
Scolaro:
We started a distribution company and are going to
put it out ourselves. This came after a lot of
research and talking to a lot of different
distributors out there and getting their take on
what they would do with the movie versus what we
wanted to do with the movie collectively, and what
the audiences were telling us as we traveled
around the country showing it. It was the first
movie I’ve ever been involved with where theater
chains were saying, we want to show your movie,
but distributors were not really putting forth
anything that was very sensible. In lieu of that,
we said, we’re filmmakers so why not do that part
of filmmaking that very few filmmakers do and
actually distribute the movie as well. This way we
know everything from development through
distribution and we don’t need to rely on other
people to tell us if our movie is good or bad. I
think more filmmakers are going to start doing
that. They’re going to say, if my movie has an
audience, which hopefully it does, there are ways
to get your movie to that audience and it’s not
brain science. It just takes hard work and some
thought and a lot of time. It’s going to be
released around Valentine’s Day next year. We’re
going to start in the South in Arizona, Texas and
Florida. We’re going to work our way north as the
weather gets a little better.
Q:
With the culture of independent film being what it
is with the small independents folding into their
bigger studios, what is the future of independent
film and distribution?
Masterson:
The state of things is a little scary right now. I
think everybody’s wondering what’s going to happen
with digital downloads? All the deals are being
re-negotiated for direct output deals of DVD sales
or the payroll companies even. Everything’s up for
review all at once, and of course all these
strikes. Everybody’s kind of trying to figure out
where the money coming from…who gets part of what
revenue. Financiers specifically don’t know how to
break even anymore. There’s a lot of new models
for distribution being presented. I think some
combination of all of these things is definitely
going to work differently for each film. It used
to be, when I started out, you market a film doing
regional junkets. You went to Chicago, Dallas, New
York, LA and sometimes Japan and Europe. You
actually did a lot of press everywhere that you
went. You didn’t just rely on these giant
pipelines of Time Warner or whatever these massive
companies bring to bare. For independents to try
to penetrate this crazy market, it’s really hard.
There will be more and more ways. It’s just going
to be, I think, on an individual basis. You have
to decide what makes the most sense for your film.
I don’t think films at film festivals are really
going to necessarily get advances for theatrical
release anymore. That’s kind of a thing of the
past. Maybe it will come back. Eliminating the
middle man makes a lot of sense for an independent
film that’s living so close to the bone. Like
Jesse said, on our film, we had personally gone to
all these different places and talked to people
about what they did and didn’t like. We’ve seen
age group responds and which ones are less
interested. We kind of know how to target it
pretty much. Who cares more than us about it?
Nobody. Nobody taking a fee is going to care more
than we do. If there is a way to get it into
theaters or whatever DVD deals we make later, then
why don’t we just do it ourselves? I think a lot
of people will if they have the opportunity.
They’re making more service deals than ever before
where some company takes a percentage and find a
creative way to release the movie. I think it’s a
scary and very interesting time. It frees up a lot
of bandwidth for people whose movies have just
gone to festivals and not been released. There’s
going to be an alternative…I hope.

Mary
Stuart Masterson and Jayce Bartok
This way to the afterparty
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