2. AGENDA
Project #3 Due
Writing Exercise
Form New Groups 3-5
Terms 10-18
Discussion: Short Plays
Lecture:
Guided Writing
3. CREATE A CHARACTER
EXERCISE
Get out two pieces of paper.
Create two complete characters, one on each piece of paper.
Do not put your name on the paper.
4. NAME: BETSY CARBEANOR
Age: 25 Likes: Puppies
Height: 5'5 Dislikes: Horror Movies
Weight: 105 lbs Needs: A New Shower Curtain
Hair Color: Red Biggest Vice: Ice Cream
Hair Style: Pony Tail Strength: Generosity
Uses: Glasses Weakness: Too Trusting
Eyes: Green Others would describe as: a very
Skin: Tan/Smooth bubbly personality, always willing to
Wears: Jeans & Tank Tops help
Lives in: One Childhood Memory: Her dad
Seattle, Washington bought her a balloon at a fair, and it
Hometown: flew away into the sky
Everett, Washington Deepest Desire: To become a great
Job: File Clerk at Court novel writer
House Biggest Secret: Closet Pot Smoker
5. NAME: HENRY HOBSON
Age: 14 Dislikes: Art
Height: 5'9 Needs: More friends
Weight: 150 lbs Biggest Vice: Keeps to himself to
Hair Color: Brown much
Hair Style: Shaggy Strength: Extremely smart
Uses: Anxiety Medication Weakness: Social anxiety
Eyes: Hazel Others would describe as: Keeps to
Skin: Black himself mostly, bit of a nerd
Wears: Dress pants and vest- One childhood Memory: In 4th grade
sweaters the school bully stuffed him in his
Lives in: South Park, Colorado locker
Hometown: Deepest Desire: To have one friend
Ephrata, Washington who truly understands him
Job: Student Biggest Secret: Thinks he might be
Likes: Physics gay
7. NEW GROUPS
Get into new groups for your final project.
Remember the rules:
1. You must change at least 50% of your team
after each project is completed.
2. You may never be on a team with the same
person more than twice.
3. You may never have a new team comprised of
more than 50% of any prior team.
10. 10. Theme
The idea of a literary work abstracted from its details of
language, character, and action, and cast in the form of a
generalization.
10. Complication
An intensification of the conflict in a story or play.
Complication builds up, accumulates, and develops the
primary or central conflict in a literary work.
11. Dialogue
The conversation of characters in a literary work. In
fiction, dialogue is typically enclosed within quotation
marks. In plays, characters' speech is preceded by their
names.
11. 13. Diction
The selection of words in a literary work. A work's
diction forms one of its centrally important literary
elements, as writers use words to convey
action, reveal character, imply attitudes, identify
themes, and suggest values.
13. Tragedy
a drama where the hero loses.
15. Tragic flaw
a mistaken action or defect in character. In modern
tragedy, the hero can be an ordinary person destroyed
by an evil force in society.
12. 16. Cue
a signal for an actor to enter or to speak.
17. Soliloquy
A long speech in a play that is meant to be heard by the
audience but not by other characters (there generally
aren’t any others on stage). The soliloquy represents the
character thinking aloud. Hamlet's "To be or not to be"
speech is an example.
18. Aside
Words spoken by an actor directly to the
audience, which are not "heard" by the other characters
on stage during a play. In Shakespeare's Othello, Iago
voices his inner thoughts a number of times as "asides"
for the play's audience.
14. TEN-MINUTE PLAYS
Ten-minute plays have become very popular in
recent years with the advent of The Actors Theatre
of Louisville contest. A good ten-minute play is not
a sketch or an extended gag, but rather a
complete, compact play, with a beginning, middle
and end. It typically takes place in one scene and
runs no more than ten pages.
16. 1 Know what your play is about. This will
keep your characters on track and give
your play a sense of unity.
2 Avoid exposition. Dive into your story;
after all, you have a ten minute
limit. Beginning this way offers a puzzle for
your audience to unravel. Remember—we
are fascinated by the unknown!
3 Connect every detail to the action of the
play. There is no time for extraneous
dialogue. Nothing is random. If you are
writing a play about murder, when the
curtain goes up, there should be a body on
the stage.
17. 4 Write character dialogue that moves the play forward.
All characters have an agenda of sorts. That makes them
interesting. Keep your characters talking in ways that
further their own interests and desires.
4 Write your characters to be real. Real characters are
excessive in some areas and deficient in others. They are
nice sometimes and angry at other times.
5 Don’t waste time talking about anything you can show
easily. Images are more powerful than words. Think about
how to communicate through images and props.
18. 7 Every protagonist must have a journey. He or she should
end up someplace (physically, emotionally, or spiritually)
radically different from where s/he began.
7 Write in a point of no return. Once the protagonist crosses
the line, there is no turning back!
7 Do not let your characters off too easy! If you do, what
the journey won’t be significant They may
escape with their lives—but just barely!
19. 10 Use a universal theme in your script. This
allows readers to relate to your world.
10 Include a climax so the audience is rewarded for
their attention.
10 Bring every detail together in the end. You must
get the reader back to the “body”!
21. WITH YOUR GROUP MATES, SORT THROUGH THE
CHARACTERS YOU WROTE EARLIER.
Check for combinations of characters that fit together in some way.
Search for a protagonist and an antagonist.
Do you have a hero? An antihero?
What genre might your Do your characters call to mind a
characters fit? basic plot?
• Mystery • Overcoming the Monster
• Romance • Rags to Riches
• Science Fiction/Fantasy • The Quest
• Suspense/Thriller • Voyage and Return
• Western • Comedy
• Horror • Tragedy
• Young Adult • Rebirth
22. CONSIDER THESE
POSSIBILITIES
Write about someone who goes to such lengths to
impress, or get attention, that he or she goes one
step too far.
Write about an encounter or incident on someone's
first visit to either a big city or the country.
Write about a car accident with an odd, difficult, or
interesting outcome.
Use a song or book title to inspire your story.
Use a newspaper or magazine story to inspire you.