During Gray's internship at
Star Trek, she re-wrote an episode
(Violations) which was used.
A Walk on the Moon was later adapted into a play and produced at the
American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco. In a 2018 interview with Taylor Steinbeck, Gray reflected on the teenage zeitgeist the story represents:The 1960s was an era similar to today when teenagers had a stake in what was happening politically. I’ve heard young gun control activists from Parkland, Florida, saying, “People of our age group haven’t had a voice since the ’60s.” Just like the kids of today, the kids in the ’60s didn’t trust their government, but they didn’t believe they were powerless. In
Moon, Alison says that Woodstock is going to end the war in Vietnam. There was this belief in the power of youth.Gray then signed with
Miramax and wrote
Music of the Heart, a fictional story about the life of violin teacher
Roberta Guaspari directed by
Wes Craven and starring
Meryl Streep. In a 2010 interview with FF2 Media's
Jan Lisa Huttner, Tony Goldwyn commented on Betty Anne Waters's character:You know Betty Anne's great survival skill—I realized getting to know her—her great survival skill is her understanding of what it means to love another person. That, to me, is her great heroism and the source of her courage and her strength. Betty Anne, because she just impulsively and instinctively loves the people in her life, she has this network of people that adore her.Gray's film
Megan Leavey (2017) tells the true story of a young woman (played by
Kate Mara) who joins the Marines to escape her small New York town, and forms a bond with a combat dog named Rex. The film received positive reviews with 87% on Rotten Tomatoes. For television, Gray wrote episodes for
Once and Again in 1999 and for
The Divide in 2014. ==References==