Black List 2021 Features Kanye West and Shania Twain Biopics, Wild Mickey Rourke ‘Masked Singer’ Adventure
By Matt Donnelly | Variety | December 13, 2021
The Black List, an annual ranking of Hollywood’s best unproduced screenplays, has unleashed its 2021 edition — a smattering of delicious pop biopics, true crime and even a psychodrama about Mickey Rourke appearing on “The Masked Singer.”
Founded in 2005 by Franklin Leonard, the list surveys top studio and development executives asking them to share the scripts they adored but haven’t yet greenlit. The rankings are then cross-referenced, and popularity is calculated by the frequency a title appears (the “mentions”).
The top script on this year’s list is “Cauliflower,” an intense drama from writer Daniel Jackson.
“Under the cruel guidance of a mysterious coach, an ambitious high school wrestler struggles to become a state champion while battling a bizarre infection in his ear that both makes him dominant in his sport and threatens his sanity,” the synopsis reads. The script was mentioned 32 times across rankings. Jackson is repped by UTA and Bellevue. The film has Fuller Media attached as a producer.
Other notable titles include: “The Villain,” which exposes the rise and fall of notorious “Pharma bro” Martin Shkreli by Andrew Ferguson; Thomas Aguilar and Michael Ballin’s “The College Dropout,” about young Kanye West’s quest to make his first game-changing album; and a biopic of Canadian chanteuse Shania Twain from Jessica Welsh.
Our favorite entry by far is “The Masked Singer” from writers Mike Jones and Nicholas Sherman. In the script, Oscar nominee and comeback kid Mickey Rourke “loses his mind after he’s forced to take a gig on television’s highest rated show: ‘The Masked Singer.'”
Read the full 2021 Black List, interspersed with videos announcing the projects:
“Shania!” by Jessica Welsh: Eilleen Edwards rises from an impoverished upbringing in rural Canada to transform into 90’s global country-pop superstar Shania Twain, only to face her greatest challenge yet: putting her life and career back together after losing her voice. Agency; CAA (Norris Brooks, Stevee Jo Eads, Brian Kend) Manager: Bellevue (Kate Sharp) Financier: Sony Producer: Montecito Picture Company Mentions: 10
Jessica Welsh ’14 Wrote One of 2021’s Best Unproduced Screenplays
Welsh’s script about singer Shania Twain made Hollywood’s annual Black List
By Jennifer Altmann | Princeton Alumni Weekly | March 30, 2022
When screenwriter Jessica Welsh ’14 was 5 years old, she was obsessed with her mom’s Shania Twain album Come On Over. “I’d listen to it over and over,” she recalls. After seeing the movie Coal Miner’s Daughter, about country music star Loretta Lynn, Welsh realized that Twain’s story of escaping poverty in rural Canada to become a globally known singer would make a great film in the popular genre of movies about music legends.
Welsh’s screenplay, Shania!, which she wrote on spec, was selected for the 2021 Black List, an annual ranking of the year’s best unproduced screenplays and a list that generates lots of buzz in Hollywood circles. Just before the list was published, Welsh’s screenplay was purchased by Sony Pictures. It currently is in development at the studio.
Welsh studied screenwriting at Princeton with lecturer Christina Lazaridi ’92. She was an English major with a concentration in film history and theory, and for her thesis, Welsh wrote a screenplay about a female superhero who rebels against the writer penning her tale after he cuts her out of the story.
Two weeks after graduation, Welsh moved to Los Angeles and landed a job as a director’s assistant, where she worked on the set of films such as the thriller The Disappointments Room. Her responsibilities ranged from making sure all the gummy bears on the set were made by Haribo to creating a path through a jungle in the Dominican Republic for a scene in a remote cove and serving as a hand double for a film’s lead actress.
She now is a staff writer for Stillwater, an animated series on Apple TV+ for preschool-aged children that tackles topics such as grief and loneliness. She started on the show as a script coordinator, which gave her an opportunity to be in the writers’ room and pitch story ideas.
In her free time, Welsh penned her script about Twain, using the research skills she honed at Princeton. Mining books, interviews, and fan websites, Welsh studied the dramatic ups and downs of Twain’s life. The singer, who grew up in a household unraveled by domestic violence, went on to record several albums that shattered sales records, but lost her voice at the peak of her career after contracting Lyme disease. Then in 2008 she announced she was separating from her husband, who produced her music, after he had an affair with her close friend.
Welsh credits the Scriptnotes podcast, hosted by Craig Mazin ’92, for providing essential guidance in forging a career in movies. “It’s a free film school in a podcast,” she says. Welsh adores movies, but she also hopes to work in other entertainment fields down the road.
Another Princetonian who inspires her is Winnie Holzman ’76, a writer who was able to achieve success both in television — with shows such as thirtysomething — and on Broadway by penning the book for the hit musical Wicked. Says Welsh, “I’d love to be able to do what she did.”
I want to say a HUGE congratulations to Jessica Welsh on her screenplay 'Shania!' being selected for the 2021 Black List and being picked up by Sony Pictures! It's so awesome to see young women who are determined in making their vision a success. It takes a lot of guts to do brave things. When I took control of my career, I wanted to kick the door down, I didn't want to shuffle through it. And I knew that was a big risk, especially as a woman in the country music industry. Those are the moments I live for and I'm inspired by those moments every single time I see another woman, like Welsh, doing just that. Kick those doors down! Let's go girls! 💥🔥