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Topic: Groping Towards A Vision

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Forum Home > The Drama of Screenwriting > Groping Towards A Vision

stonekingseminars
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Posts: 5

The only people who belong in schools are learners.”

(Neil Postman)

 

 

Creativity is the art of relinquishing control. It is what happens in the process of cultivating your neuroses.

 

Understanding drama is understanding yourself.

 

Characters are aspects of YOU.

 

Stories worth telling start from your own experiences.

 

To understand a character’s story, you need to view it from the inside out. Short of an intimate understanding there can be no emotion, only emotional cliché.

 

Dramatic storytelling involves both creative exposure and creative hiding.

 

The dramatic storyteller must be aware not only of what he/she is trying to communicate, but also, what he/she is trying to hide.

 

Examine your values - what you believe and disbelieve, what you love and don’t love, what is admirable in human life and what is not so admirable. In short, find and tell those stories that are true to yourself, and tell them completely.

 

We don’t know the story we are trying to tell. If we did, we wouldn’t need to tell it.

 

Knowledge is useless. Finding the story requires ridding yourself of everything you know.

 

What we know stands in the way of what we might discover.

 

Finding the story is a voyage of discovery – self-discovery.

 

 

Love is the ability of not knowing.”

(John Cassavetes)

 

 

To be is to be anxious. To be creative is to endure the anxiousness – to use it, shape it, transform it, into something that transcends anxiety.

 

As storytellers we are custodians of a “dreaming” which we are obliged to attend to and work with and birth, in order to share the dream with others in all of its potency.

 

An appreciation of the inspiration and obsessiveness of storytellers who have gone before can help break down the sense of isolation. Those who have gone before have drawn from the same pool you will draw from, and those who come after will do the same. We are family. We are part of a tradition, whether we know it or not. There is courage to be found in this understanding…

 

Acquaint yourself with different kinds of storytelling from all sorts of oral and written traditions, including short stories, autobiography, letters, and oral histories (e.g.: Idriess Shah’s Sufi Tales and Studs Terkel’s Hard Times, Working, etc. ).

 

Know what it is you do not know.

 

The art of storytelling doesn’t begin and end with a script… it is a way of being in the world; a way of seeing and hearing the world; a way of letting yourself be touched by the world. (i.e.: by yourself).

 

Every person, place, memory, image, dream, song, smell, and shadow, is potentially a story, or at least the beginning, middle or end of one.

 

The expression of “modernism” in poetry is the materialisation of the idea that the power of art resides in what is not stated, or shown, but implied. (Pound’s ideogrammatic method, for example, and Eisenstein’s concept of montage)… the same applies to good dramatic storytelling… it is often what you leave out – what you don’t express (overtly) that has the power to move an audience and give it the experience of transcendance.

 

Poets are the most succinct storytellers; their poems, the most succinct form of the story: the brief-but-vivid image, the relationship of one image to another, the implied comparisons, the particularity of voice, the exactness of phrase, the thumbnails of dramatic structure – it’s no accident the world’s greatest dramatist was a poet.

 

The inspired writer is alone but seldom lonely. His/her characters have more substance than the strangers posing as cut-outs in the queue at Cole’s.

 

 

Everyone has talent. What is rare is the courage

to follow the talent to the dark place where it leads."

(Erica Jong)

A script is a reply to the unseen, the unheard, that gnaws in the darkness of ignorance. An artist is a person who cannot ignore the gnawing, must address it, deal with it, play it out.

 

Scripts can and should speak not only for the writer but for those who cannot speak… for those who have no voice. Justice comes into it.

 

Storyellers must be courageous. Without courage where does one find the strength to confront the unknown - to consider something from a unique or unexpected point of view?

 

Research, research, research - not for the sake of gathering information but as a way of freeing yourself from it, as a way of building confidence, so necessary in the quest to find the story that wants to be told.

 

Learn to convey stories without employing words. Focus on the non-verbal and the imagistic.

 

A script is not a list of facts… it is an illuminating dance of relationships.

 

 

The world is made of stories, not of atoms.”

(Muriel Rukeyser)

Good writers care about what they are doing, enough to seek out the meaning behind the meaning… the heart behind the intellect…

 

The world’s greatest storytellers tell the same stories over and over again.

 

What is your story? What is your obstacle? What is it you can’t get over?

 

Effective writing and reading involves more than seeing; it is also about HEARING.

The voice is an essential tool in the writing process.

 

Become familiar with the nuances of your own voice, and you will begin to discover the other voices that live within you.

 

Talk about your characters and their stories as if you know them. Gossip, embellish, fabricate. Don’t simply write them down. Live them, breathe them, dream them. Eat them!

 

Embrace genuine criticism. Cultivate a readiness to listen to and receive the reactions of others.

 

A well-told story has rhythm. Where there is a problem with the rhythm you can bet there will be a problem with the character and/or the story.

 

Drama is a very specific form of human expression. It is NOT merely people walking around, waving their arms and talking.

 

What is DRAMA specifically?  A present-tense investigation of the nature of human desire and its consequences. It grows out of a character’s need, and the threat posed if that need is not met or satisifed.

 

Though a character might be constructed of endless traits and habits, he/she won’t be a successful dramatic character unless we are able to witness how he/she behaves when something is at risk.

 

Risk, pressure, identification go hand-in-hand with well-conceived characters caught up in acts of obstructed desire.

 

The art of dramatic writing is a time-art.

 

Story development is story structure, and story structure is really about character navigation, and how time is managed.

 

A writer makes choices for his/her characters until they are able to choose for themselves; at which point it behooves the writer to let them do as they will and simply manage the time it takes them to do it.

 

A story progresses according to a character’s needs, fears, plans, and obstacles (i.e.: what stands between the character and his/her goal). A successful story structure reveals both the character’s strengths and weaknesses. It injects a sense of urgency into the character’s motives and actions, and enhances the stakes.

 

What is a stake? A recognizable human need that is under threat. Something we can identify with, which impacts emotionally.

 

Without the struggle for some recognizable human value, there can be no empathy or identification, and thus, no drama.

 

Drama IS specific. And it is this specificity that makes it so pleasureable to watch and so difficult to write.

 

Re: collaboration - an unambiguous delineation of roles and expectations is beneficial in any creative endeavour. The clearer the roles and expectations, the more freedom there is for genuine interaction and authentic expression.

 

The most important member of the team is the story itself.

 

Proprietorial insecurities in any guise should be left out of creative collaborations.

Leave your ego at the door.

 

No one has power unless the story itself has power.

 

Only the story can empower you. You cannot empower yourself. Nor can you humbly or otherwise bestow your power upon the story. You are not a dog; it is not a tree.

 

It is the job of collaborators to find the story that is trying to get itself told, and then tell that story, even if it means forsaking your own identity. Who are you anyway? I mean, really?

The onset of creative thinking/feeling is signalled by the arrival of problems.

 

Working to solve these problems produces a sense of intimacy with the characters, who also have problems.

 

The business of telling a story is working out the problems that are caused by wanting to tell it.

 

You cannot solve all the problems and then proceded to tell it; the problems are the story you are trying to tell.

 

The more you seek an intimate relationship with your story and its characters, the more you flee from it and them.

 

You do not choose your story. It chooses you.

 

Writing is essentially about catching not pitching. It is about listening, and keeping open.

In the midst of writing to pay the rent, leave time to do the writing you really care about.

Writers write… and re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write re-write, and rewrite, and re-write and re-write and…

who said a script is never finished, only abandoned?

 

 

 

06:38 PM on 06/08/2009 Flag Quote & Reply

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