Monday 20 October 2014

Writing for theatre

I was discussing writing for the theatre with another writer the other day. Here are some thoughts on getting it right

The power of words is crucial when writing for theatre, as is a technical understanding of the staging process. Writers need to do the following:
* Think where the person was before entering the stage and where he/she goes to eg if he/she has come in from the cold remember to write cold references of actions (stamping feet etc )

* The writer needs to consider what the characters are doing as well as saying - a walk across a stage can take a long time as can a passage of speech. Find something for them do, making tea, putting the kettle on etc. It gives the scene more movement and avoids problems for actors who feel all they can do is stand like a plank and spout their lines

* Think how long words take to say and how they will play in an audience. An intimate aside in a small room can fall flat in a large theatre

* Comedy needs to big and bold, drama can be more subtle and considered (in drama, the actor can be more introspective, address the audience, reveal much about what they are thinking)

* Dialogue is crucial. The actor will make much of the business up themselves but they need guidance and that comes from the words.

A recap of dialogue rules:
A lot of the time, we do not speak in correct sentences/We often use short sharp phrases

We assume the listener knows a lot about us

Dialogue can impart information but we try to make that information interesting, lacing it with humour, personal interpretation etc

We can tell a lot about a person in a short snap of conversation - a few words of dialogue can say a lot about a character.

Dialogue needs to be crisp (and humour needs to hit the gag and move on, good comedy relies on timing and pace)

Needs to be in character

Must take the story on

Be not packed with extraneous information.

If you need to slot in information, find a way of doing it subtly
John Dean

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