FFS gets us started.
Question from a non-writer. What the hell is a "beat"?
Any new element in the story.
Think of the story as the spine and beats as the vertebrae.
Examples of beats:
A couple starts an argument.
A father shows his son how to tie a knot.
Bob takes out the ring and proposes.
Fred arrives with the Christmas tree.
In an outline you start with the beats. First this happens, then that, then the next thing. It gives you an overview of the story. Are there too many things (beats) happening in this act? Are there not enough? Is it repetitious? Is there a step missing?
Once you’re satisfied that all the vertebrae are in the right place, and the story spine holds up then fill out each beat.
The couple that starts an argument. Over what?
Father showing son how to tie a knot? Does the son not want his help? Is this a bonding experience?
Bob takes out the ring and proposes. Is he clumsy? What is his proposal? Was she expecting it or surprised? Does she accept or reject his proposal? I would say that’s a separate beat. The story very much turns on whether she accepts or not.
Hopefully you get the idea. I write my beats on the computer then move them around. A lot of writers use index cards. One beat per card. You can also use note cards in certain scripture programs.
Ere I Saw Elba asks:
What would be your personal theme song, if you got to have one?
From an existing TV show? “Mr. Lucky.”
From Lorimartian:
Have you ever talked about working with Nathan Lane? He is so talented, and I remember that series. Was it a good experience?
It was a wonderful experience!
I directed three episodes of his short-lived NBC sitcom, ENCORE ENCORE. I found him to be a delight. He’s very inventive and nimble.
There are two sides to Nathan Lane— “on” when he’s performing, and “off” when he’s very quiet and introspective.
If I had to tell one story about working with Nathan, it would be this: Episode 13, our final episode in the series order. Two days into rehearsal we get the word that ENCORE ENCORE has been canceled. (There would be no “encore” much less two.) Everyone knew this episode would never air.
Nathan had a choice. He could just pull the plug and not bother or tough it out another three long days. Nathan chose to complete the episode because he didn’t want the crew to lose out on a week’s pay.
And not only that, he worked just as hard or harder those final futile three days. The man is the consummate professional and a mensch. I would work with him again in a second.
And finally, from Bill Slankard:
I recently read how The Big Bang Theory wrote around Kaley Cuoco's riding accident and it made me wonder what happens when the unexpected happens, and the writing staff has to come up with a fix immediately and some future episodes. Does this happen a lot? And what do you do?
It happens all the time. You just have to deal with it. A cast member gets sick and you have to write him out of the episode… or several episodes. Someone breaks their foot is on crutches. You have to explain it away.
During the course of a season I just expect curve balls like that. You have to film a show after 9-11. Your star is doing a movie and you have to shoot all his scenes separately for next week’s episode. One of your stars goes into rehab. The guest star you had planned cancels on you the night before you go into production. The possibilities are endless.
Current TV writers have had to readjust their scripts to accommodate shooting during the pandemic. They’ve had to remove crowd scenes, any scene with extras really. Even four or five characters in a scene is now two scenes with two or three characters.
Bottom line: you just gotta roll with it. You can’t prepare. Consider it another challenge and why they pay you the big bucks (or bigger bucks than you’d make at Starbucks).
What’s your Friday Question?
from By Ken Levine
Comments
Post a Comment