Seefacts
Monday 11th August 2008 1:23pm
4,203 posts
Quote: SlagA @ August 11 2008, 10:13 AM BST
Unless the sketch character is recurring, I'd agree. To do that sort of analysis for a one-off disposable sketch is too much. But to take your example, the man who eats porridge is different from the man who chooses Coco Pops or Full English. I don't often go into that sort of detail (unless it's a sitcom / film / novel project) but when I do, I find that the type of character you're working on often predetermines the answers in any case. It's not a case of characters telling me (I hate that concept), I tell them and they bloody listen. And that's the only time people listen to me.
When I started out writing I gave characters biogs with what bands they liked, their clothing style - but I just found it incredibly pompous.
I prefer to find out about them as I go along. Slag A you say you hate the concept of the characters telling you, but have you never written something, looked at it and gone 'Oh, X seems not to like Y' and that's only come out in the way you written it, unintentionally?
I LOVE finding out about the characters as I go along. In my current script it was supposed to be an ensemble, but for someone reason one character stood out as a lead. Don't know why, wasn't intended to be that way. But one had more depth than the others. His jokes seemed to add more to do him compared to others, and I think that's the kind of brilliant subconscious stuff that throws itself up that negates the need to write down what his favourite biscuit is.
Quote: Griff @ August 11 2008, 10:17 AM BST
Yes, this shows whether they are gluttonous or health-conscious or childish or traditionalist or whatever - but really, do you need to ask these kinds of artificial questions to get to know your characters ? I guess what I'm complaining about is the "checklist" of questions to ask about your characters which you often see in writing books or on courses.
I'd agree.
I start with just a name, a look and a vague set of personality traits. I let the rest come out in writing.