Writing Comedy
eBook - ePub

Writing Comedy

How to use funny plots and characters, wordplay and humour in your creative writing

Lesley Bown, Lesley Hudswell

  1. 256 Seiten
  2. English
  3. ePUB (handyfreundlich)
  4. Über iOS und Android verfügbar
eBook - ePub

Writing Comedy

How to use funny plots and characters, wordplay and humour in your creative writing

Lesley Bown, Lesley Hudswell

Angaben zum Buch
Buchvorschau
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Quellenangaben

Über dieses Buch

Learn how to write comedy that makes people laugh. Masterclass: Writing Comedy will reveal to both beginners and experienced writers the distinctive features that mark out comedy from other forms of creative writing. Having identified these, it will help you then to unlock your inner anarchist, and explore the different elements of comedy, using a combination of practical exercises, insight and creative inspiration. Whatever your preferred comic genre, you will find guidance on everything from wordplay and visual humour to plots, comedy characters and different styles.A section on performance will help you to hone stand-up skills, while chapters on stage and screen will give techniques and tips on how to craft a sitcom or create a sketch show. Finally, there is a uniquely frank but useful section on the realities of the markets, and the actualities of going it alone with self-publishing and self-promotion - or the tools you need to successfully pitch an idea or comic manuscript.ABOUT THE SERIES
The Teach Yourself Creative Writing series helps aspiring authors tell their stories. Covering a range of genres from science fiction and romantic novels to illustrated children's books and comedy, this series is packed with advice, exercises, and tips for unlocking creativity and improving your writing. And because we know how daunting the blank page can be, we set up the Just Write online community, at tyjustwrite.com, for budding authors and successful writers to connect and share.

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Information

Jahr
2015
ISBN
9781473602205
1
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Comedy basics
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It’s pretty difficult to fake laughter: ask any actor. It’s also hard to stop laughing once you’ve started: again, actors will tell you about the nightmare of ‘corpsing’ – when they break character by getting the giggles on stage and being unable to stop. It can also be just as hard to start laughing if you’re not in the mood. We really don’t have much control over laughing and perhaps that’s why we value it so much.
So what makes us laugh? Or rather, what is there in common between the various things that make us laugh? In this chapter you will learn about the many ways of creating laughs, including surprise and recognition, and about visual, verbal and physical comedy.
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Alan Ayckbourn, director and playwright
‘If I had to give just one piece of comedy writing advice it would be: for God’s sake take it seriously.’
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Key idea
The two main factors in creating laughs are surprise and recognition.
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Most laughs come from surprise: the sudden unexpected event, the twist that you didn’t see coming, the moment when the penny drops. A lot of surprise laughs are created when an audience thinks they recognize what’s about to happen, and are taken by surprise with what actually does happen.
We usually laugh at moments of recognition in a less explosive, more thoughtful way. It’s a rueful, ‘Yes, I do that too’ sort of laugh. Observational comedy makes great use of recognition precisely because it is based on everyday life, but to be successful it has to include some surprises too. Recognition laughs are very useful as laughs along the way, as you build up to the big surprise punchline.
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Create surprise
To practise creating surprise, have a go at this job applications exercise.
Who would be the worst possible applicants for these jobs: heart transplant surgeon, TV weather forecaster, massage therapist? There are no correct answers, but whatever you choose will only be funny if it’s surprising.
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Focus point
The key concept in creating both surprise and recognition laughs is incongruity, because the incongruous is also the unexpected. This works at every level of comedy, from the simplest joke to the most complex plot.
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Create incongruity
To practise creating incongruity, try this simple exercise. First choose a character from list A and another from list B.
List A: doctor, maths teacher, High Court judge, politician
List B: used car salesman, streetwise teenager, hairdresser, plumber
Now write a short speech for one of the characters using the type of language you’d expect from the other character. For instance, the doctor could be looking at a patient’s operation scar and saying ‘What cowboy did this, then? I could sort it out but it won’t be easy, can’t get the parts you see, could fit you in Tuesday week, cash in hand all right with you, Squire?’ and so on. Choose your own incongruous characters and try the exercise again. You can use specific people (such as the Prime Minister) or fictional characters (such as Robin Hood).
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Creating laughs
Let’s look at ways of creating incongruity, surprise and recognition in more detail, but first a couple of exercises.
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What do you find funny?
Make a list of the words and objects that you personally find funny.
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The more boring the better…
Write about something boringly ordinary and humdrum that you did yesterday. It could be something like travelling to work, watching TV or buying carrots – as long as nothing interesting exciting or amusing happened. Describe what you were doing and the environment you were in. Maximum 750 words.
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OPPOSITES
Opposites provide instant incongruity: big and small, happy and sad, funerals and weddings. This is why double acts often exaggerate the physical differences between them; for instance, Laurel was thin and Hardy was fat. The casting of Only Fools and Horses must have...

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Cover 
  2. Title
  3. Dedication
  4. Acknowledgments
  5. Contents 
  6. Meet the author
  7. Introduction
  8. 1 Comedy basics
  9. 2 The comedy writing mindset
  10. 3 Getting started
  11. 4 Language and style
  12. 5 Jokes
  13. 6 Stand-up
  14. 7 Simple characters and situations
  15. 8 Quickies and sketches
  16. 9 Creating more complex characters
  17. 10 More complex situations and plots
  18. 11 Sitcoms
  19. 12 Character development and deeper plotting
  20. 13 Editing, polishing and unblocking
  21. 14 Writing for different media
  22. 15 The practicalities of placing your work
  23. Appendix A: Other types of comedy writing
  24. Appendix B: Comedy styles and genres
  25. Appendix C: Doing it yourself
  26. Appendix D: Figures of speech
  27. Appendix E: Works mentioned
  28. Appendix F: Full texts of examples
  29. Appendix G: Taking it further
  30. Copyright
Zitierstile für Writing Comedy

APA 6 Citation

Bown, L., & Hudswell, L. (2015). Writing Comedy ([edition unavailable]). John Murray Press. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/3179436/writing-comedy-how-to-use-funny-plots-and-characters-wordplay-and-humour-in-your-creative-writing-pdf (Original work published 2015)

Chicago Citation

Bown, Lesley, and Lesley Hudswell. (2015) 2015. Writing Comedy. [Edition unavailable]. John Murray Press. https://www.perlego.com/book/3179436/writing-comedy-how-to-use-funny-plots-and-characters-wordplay-and-humour-in-your-creative-writing-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Bown, L. and Hudswell, L. (2015) Writing Comedy. [edition unavailable]. John Murray Press. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/3179436/writing-comedy-how-to-use-funny-plots-and-characters-wordplay-and-humour-in-your-creative-writing-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Bown, Lesley, and Lesley Hudswell. Writing Comedy. [edition unavailable]. John Murray Press, 2015. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.