Some Questions for each scene or monologue...
Some Questions:
Where are you?
What time is it?
What do you want?
How badly do you want it?
What are the obstacles?
How can you overcome them?
How do you want to change the other person to get what
you want?
What is your relationship to the place?
What are you physically doing?
What is on the fourth wall?
Why are you talking?
What’s the bottom line?
Get out of your head.
Make choices that move you.
Personalize - find personal meaning in what you are doing.
Commit and become fully engaged in the moment.
Take these words and use them, and feel free to toss
them on the floor, pick them up as needed. This work is not linear.
Ask yourself what you need.
Journal.
Perfectionism is not relevant; Stay in process.
Any one of the above can offer to inform you (via your creativity) about the character's life in the scene:
-the character's relationship to self,
-specific relationship to place (including 4th wall),
-relationship to the other character.
Behavior communicates.
Words in a scene are a fraction of the life,
a fraction of the storytelling.
Choices can inform and find expression in behavior.
Sometimes big and sometimes small, but behavior that arises from a choice we have made.
Any one of the above can offer to inform you (via your creativity) about the character's life in the scene:
-the character's relationship to self,
-specific relationship to place (including 4th wall),
-relationship to the other character.
Behavior communicates.
Words in a scene are a fraction of the life,
a fraction of the storytelling.
Choices can inform and find expression in behavior.
Sometimes big and sometimes small, but behavior that arises from a choice we have made.
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