Tips for Writing Plays
Overview
Writing a play or script can be as simple as telling your friends what happened last night at the park. In fact, that may be exactly what your play is about -- something that really did happen to you and your friends. At least that's the way you will want your play to sound. More than any other form of creative writing, a play can bring your personal experiences (or your imaginings) to life in a "dramatic" way. The tips which follow should help you transform your best ideas into exciting dramas worthy of any classroom or stage.
The Playwriting Process
The first thing you need to know about writing a play is that it truly is a process of discovery. You can't possibly imagine how your play is going to turn out before you write it. In fact, if you choose real-life characters based on people you know, or through research, they will actually write part of the play for you.
All you need to do is put these characters "on stage," give them a problem to overcome, and then watch and listen to what they say and do. You become as much a reporter taking notes and recording conversations as a struggling playwright. Remember this as you write your play.
Setting: (Describe where and when the story takes place. )
Main problem: (What is the main problem faced by the characters in the play? What do they have to do to overcome this problem?)
Complication: (What complication or added problem makes it difficult for the characters to find a solution to the main problem? How can this complication help you to add humor or suspense to your play? What can your characters do or say to help solve or further complicate the situation?)
Solution: (How do they finally solve the problem and bring the play to an end?)
Message: (What, if anything, does your play have to "say" about life to your audience? Is there a moral, a lesson, a point?)
Play Structure
A play should begin with a dramatic situation so strained and so unstable that it leads to action. This action either progresses, delays, or reverses the events. Either way, it presents a new situation that is often less stable than the first. This process repeats itself until certain events result in a stable situation. The following is an outline of plot structure:
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OPENING SITUATION: events at the rise of the curtain. (Includes the exposition that gives the background or reveals what has happened before the curtain rises.)
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INITIAL INCIDENT: first event that suggests there will be a change in the situation; an incident to which you can trace all future action.
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RISING ACTION: additional events leading to the climax
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CLIMAX: highest point of emotional intensity that occurs near the end of the play and to which all action has been leading.
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FALLING ACTION: brief events after the climax in which the outcome is resolved.
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