Writing Your First Play
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Writing Your First Play

Roger Hall

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eBook - ePub

Writing Your First Play

Roger Hall

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About This Book

Writing Your First Play provides the beginning playwright with the tools and motivation to tell a story through dramatic form. Based in a series of exercises which gradually grow more complex, the books helps the reader to understand the basic elements of drama, conflict, and action. The exercises help the reader to become increasingly sophisticated in the use of dramatic formats, turning simple ideas into a viable play. Topics include:
the role of action in drama;
developing action and conflict to reveal character;
writing powerful and persuasive dialog;
writing from personal experience: pros and cons;
how to begin the story and develop the storyline. This new edition is thoroughly updated and contains new examples based on contemporary plays. The author has added additional writing exercises and a new student-written one act play. It also contains a new chapter on how to sell your play once it is written.With examples based on student work, this text both inspires and educates the student and fledgling playwright, providing solid tools and techniques for the craft of writing a drama. Roger A. Hall, a professor of theatre at James Madison University, had taught playwriting for nearly 20 years. Many of his students have gone on to write for theatre, television, and the screen. He has written numerous plays and articles and has acted and directed extensively in the theatre.

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2012
ISBN
9781136082139
1
• • • • • • • •
Action
Exercise 1 Describe an Action
Write a description of an action taking place. Describe only those things that can be seen. Use no dialogue, although you may use other sounds. The scene should take place in one location, but don’t worry about stage terminology. Minimum length: 1–2 pages.
Drama is the imitation of an action. Unfortunately, most of us experience plays by reading them rather than by seeing them. It seems hard to believe, but countless individuals have never seen a live play performed. Even for those of us who have seen scores of plays, we’ve undoubtedly read more than we’ve seen.
When we read a play, we see characters’ names and the lines they speak. Very little of what the characters do is described. That’s particularly true of classical plays. Shakespeare’s plays, for example, which are often an individual’s first exposure to drama, have little in the way of stage direction or descriptions of particular actions. Rather, in those plays most of the action must be deduced from the spoken line.
When Macbeth returns from killing King Duncan, only a reading of one line of dialogue three–fourths of the way into the scene informs us that Macbeth has thoughtlessly brought the murder weapons with him instead of leaving them behind. In performance, of course, the action would provide that information immediately. We would see the knives in Macbeth’s hands as soon as he entered, and we would continue to see him holding them throughout the scene.
The fact that most of us receive our introduction to plays through print rather than performance has serious consequences for beginning playwrights. Since for the most part we only read the lines spoken by characters, is it any wonder that we come to think of plays as dialogue between characters in which the words are all–important and tell us everything we need to know? And is it any wonder that when beginners sit down to compose a play, what usually develops is a group of characters sitting around talking?
Our first task, then, is to create a different perspective on what constitutes a play. We must find a way to present drama in terms of actions rather than words, in terms of what people do rather than what they say.
Action is one of the building blocks of drama. Drama is about what people do, and what people do is action, so it is worthwhile to look at the idea of action in some detail.
Action is when someone does something. But the concept of action is really much more complex and multilayered. Let’s look at an example: A woman walks into a fast–food restaurant. She stops and looks up at the items available and their prices. She gets into line. She pulls her wallet from her purse and takes out money. She reaches the front of the line and requests, “A cheeseburger, small fries, and a small orange.” She pays for the food, takes it, walks to a table, and begins to eat her meal.
There are numerous actions taking place in this brief scene. Walking into the restaurant is one action. Reading the menu is a second. If the woman puts on a pair of glasses while she’s reading, that’s a third. And so on. It quickly becomes clear that not all her actions are equally important. Walking in is probably not as important as ordering the food, or as eating it. Hence, even the simplest actions have a hierarchy of importance with respect to other actions. Playwrights as well as directors and actors must understand how actions fit together and decide which actions are most significant.
While not all actions are equally important, all actions can be important in different ways. I suggested that walking into the restaurant was not as important as ordering or eating the food. Nevertheless, walking in is essential in that it gets the woman into the restaurant. The rest of the scene can’t take place without it. In some instances the entrance of a person might be the most significant action. The woman, for example, might hurry into the restaurant and then look carefully behind her out the window.
Reading the menu constitutes another action. Is it important? In one sense it isn’t. It could be eliminated, and the woman could still get her meal. But that action provides revealing information. That the woman looks at the menu might indicate that she doesn’t frequent the restaurant, that she’s indecisive, or that she’s concerned about how much things cost. Any of those elements might be extremely significant. Consider how different the scene would be if the woman simply entered, walked up to the counter, and ordered.
In both cases, whether she reads the menu first or not, the woman gets her meal, and here is where actions become multilayered. This scene contains many actions. Taken together, however, they constitute a larger action: A woman buys her lunch. If we also saw her eating her meal and leaving, the whole action might be “a woman lunches.”
The same layering of actions occurs in any play. In one moment Hamlet praises an actor. That is one action. A series of actions taken together might constitute a larger action: Hamlet sets a trap. All of those actions taken together form an action that absorbs the character throughout the play: Hamlet avenges his father’s murder. In acting terms, that overall action is what is meant by such terms as through line, superobjective, or spine.
The recognition that small actions fit together to create larger actions is just as important for a playwright as it is for an actor.
Taken simply, an action is someone doing something. The action can be small in scope or large; it can be a simple action or a complex action composed of numerous smaller actions. It can be static action—such as sitting or sleeping—or frenetic action—such as running or dancing.
Most modern theater practitioners also recognize psychological action—a thought process, a decision, or a point of view. For instance, if a lawyer tells you to do something, his authority might compel you to do it without even the slightest actual physical action on his part. There is a psychological force at work.
Harold Pinter is famous for the silences written into his scripts. Pinter knows that silences represent critical moments because people make decisions in those pauses and silences. We, however, cannot see the decision. What we do see is the physical manifestation of the decision: The character does something or says something based on her decision.
Working with beginning playwrights, I’ve found it especially helpful to consider thought and decision as preceding physical action. Picture, for example, a woman in a department store. She looks at a bracelet. Then she looks around. Thought occurs. A decision is reached. The woman taps a bell on the counter to call a salesperson.
At the moment the woman is looking around, we may think she is considering pocketing the bracelet. The action that followed—tapping the bell—reveals the thought process that preceded it.
At this beginning stage, we want to focus on basic action—such as the woman ordering her lunch—that is large enough to comprise several other actions. It is sufficient for now that we understand that the action may in turn be part of a larger, more complex whole.
Dramatic Action Provokes Questions
Writers understand that action by itself—no matter how many cars you blow up—does not guarantee interest. Now for some circular thinking. For an action to gain the interest of the audience, it must be dramatic action. But what is dramatic action? And how is it differentiated from other action? Dramatic action is action that gains the interest of an audience.
William Archer, a British dramatist and critic and the man who translated Henrik Ibsen for English-speaking audiences, wrote nearly the same thing. His turn-of-the-century study of playwriting, which still represents sound thinking, defined dramatic as “any representation of imaginary personages which is capable of interesting an average audience assembled in the theater.”
The first time I read that, I regarded it as totally inadequate. Surely, I thought, we should be able to determine what is dramatic within the context of the script itself. But Archer realized, as I did only somewhat later, that the audience is essential, and a play must undergo the test of an audience or experienced readers to determine its dramatic content.
Dramatic action is realized only when what the author thinks is dramatic is effectively conveyed to others.
A perceptive playwright can gather some notion of what is likely to be dramatic activity. To explore that, let’s look at dramatic action from several different angles. One approach is to see dramatic action as action based on the desire of a human being to attain a goal. A man walks onto a stage with a painting and an easel and begins to set up the easel. It falls over. He tries again. It falls again. He carefully inspects the easel, looking at the legs and hinges. He tries yet again to set it up.
In this instance we understand the goal—to set up the easel. Perhaps we infer the larger action—to display the painting. As the man tries to accomplish his goal another element of dramatic action comes into play— namely, tension or conflict. The human will to attain the goal is thwarted by the obstacle of the inanimate object. The man is in conflict with the easel. As a result of the conflict, tension arises.
The human will to attain a goal. Conflict. Tension. All of those elements work together to induce questions. Will the man succeed in setting up the easel? What if he doesn’t? What will he do then? What does he want to do with the painting?
The scene could continue in a variety of ways. The easel falls again. The man picks it up and bashes it to pieces. Then he picks up the remains of the painting and calmly walks off the stage. An alternative: The easel falls again. The man goes offstage, comes back with a chair, sets that on the stage, and displays the painting on the chair. Another alternative: The easel stays up. The man sets the painting on the easel. In all cases the questions have been answered and the action is ended.
Ingmar Bergman, the Swedish director and dramatist, once commented on how he formulates ideas. Bergman explained that he literally has visions. He might visualize people in a pink room. One might be turned away, looking out a window. Bergman would ask himself questions about his visions. Why was the one woman turned away? What was outside the window? Why was the room pink? What was going on between the two women? If the answers to his questions were interesting to him, he’d ask more questions until, perhaps, he had something to write. Essentially, said Bergman, he wrote not because he had something to say but because he had questions to ask.
Jon Jory, the producing director of Actors Theater of Louisville and one of the primary forces in the development of new playwrights in the United States, has said that a play should always pose a question within its first five lines. Two or more questions, he noted, would be even better.
But, significantly, the questions need not come in the form of dialogue. In fact, in good drama the questions are usually inherent in the action, and the dialogue—questions expressed verbally—simply adds to the questions already raised implicitly by what we see occurring.
The opening scene of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman illustrates how dramatic action provokes questions. Willy Loman, the 60-year-old salesman, enters carrying two large sample cases. He crosses to the doorway of his dimly lit house. He unlocks the door, comes into the kitchen, and sets the cases down. He feels the soreness of his palms and a word-sigh escapes his lips. He closes the door and carries the cases into the unseen living room. We see Linda, his wife, stir in her bed. She listens to Willy’s entrance, then gets up and puts on a robe. The dialogue begins:
Linda: Willy!
Willy: It’s all right. I came back.
Linda: Why? What happened? (Slight pause) Did something happen, Willy?
Willy: No, nothing happened.
Linda: You didn’t smash the car, did you?
Willy (with casual irritation): I said nothing happened. Didn’t you hear me?
Linda: Don’t you feel well?
Willy: I’m tired to the death.*
We see the action as a tired old man enters his house late at night. We see a woman obviously concerned about the man. He wants to rest. She wants to know what’s going on. Each person wants to attain certain goals. We see the man dismiss her concern. The human wills are in conflict. We see a relationship straining. Tension.
This excellent opening scene induces numerous questions. Why is he coming in so late? Why is he tired? Why is she concerned? Those are merely three questions out of many. And all of that has been provoked by the simple action that occurs even before a line has been spoken.
Miller then uses a variety of questions in his first few lines to focus our questions. Some of them are significant. “What happened?” asked twice tells us that Willy wouldn’t be there if something weren’t wrong. The question about the car informs us he has the capability of smashing it, as he does at the end of the play.
There are significant elements that are not present in my summary of this opening scene. In my condensation of Miller’s opening stage directions I omitted, among other things, the following reference to Willy: “… his exhaustion is apparent.” I omitted it because I wanted you, the reader, to make that conclusion based on Willy’s actions: feeling his sore palms and sighing.
Dramatic Action Employs Verbs
Just as Willy’s exhaustion is exposed through his actions, so dramatic action is expressed in verbs, in what people do, not in moods. It is extremely difficult for an actor to play a general mood such as anger, and it is well nigh impossible for a playwright to write an effective general mood. The dramatic mood arises from the specific actions undertaken.
When we ...

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