Judith Rascoe
- Writer
- Additional Crew
A niece of critic Burton Rascoe, who often gave her television scripts
to read, Judith Rascoe was born and raised in California, attending
Stanford University's writing program under Wallace Stegner. Early in
her career, she caught the notice of literary critic Mark Schorer, who
noted in Esquire magazine that she was one of the most interesting
young writers of the early 1970s. Spent a year as a Fulbright Scholar
at the University of Bristol and taught school in England for a while.
Returned to the US and studied for a brief period at Harvard; she also
worked as a reader for Atlantic Monthly at this time. Eventually
settled at Yale University as a fiction instructor. Producer Joseph Strick
read her story "A Lot of Cowboys" and asked her to write him a
screenplay, which became Road Movie, The (1974). Author Robert Stone
was so impressed with her literary abilities that he recommended her as
screenwriter for the adaption of his novel DOG SOLDIERS, which became
Who'll Stop the Rain (1978).