Here Woodruff dreamcasts an adaptation of her new novel, The Trade Off:
Someone recently asked me for a one sentence, Hollywood-style pitch for The Trade Off and I said: “It’s The Great Gatsby meets The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Wall Street.” Not to compare myself for a single moment to Fitzgerald or Amy Sherman-Palladino, but my book is set in the roaring ‘20s and examines the “have and have nots” of the era. And, as I was writing my protagonist, Bea Abramovitz, I always had Rachel Brosnahan’s Midge Maisel in my mind. So, it might be a bit too on the nose, but it’s hard for me to envision anyone but her in the movie version of my book.Visit Samantha Greene Woodruff's website.
Bea is a first-generation American daughter of Russian Jews who immigrated to the US to flee the pogroms, losing everything along the way. Bea has a gift for numbers and, in the stock market boom of the 1920s, wants nothing more than to become a broker in the very male world of Wall Street. But she has three strikes against her: she’s female, she’s poor and she’s Jewish. Bea doesn’t share Midge’s background or career goals, but she has a similar spunk, likeability and determination that conjured Brosnahan’s Midge in my imagination.
For Bea’s friends, I pictured Christina Hendricks Ă la Mad Men for Henrietta, the dazzling rich Jewish secretary who wants to be a “modern gal” and make it on her own; Taylor Swift for Milly, the awkward girl who finds herself; and Dakota Fanning for Sophie, Bea’s Lower East Side Italian-immigrant best friend.
I pictured the women in the book more than I did the men, but if I were casting Jake, Bea’s alluring, handsome brother, I’d look for Justin Hartley crossed with Owen Wilson and a dash of Vince Vaughn (if age were no issue). Jake is a striking guy with incredible charisma, a natural salesman who can get anyone to do anything based on his good looks and charm. For Bea’s love interest, the kind, handsome and successful banker Nate, I see Glen Powell. He has the both magnetism and the ability to endear.
My Book, The Movie: The Lobotomist's Wife.
--Marshal Zeringue