Lee Henman
Tuesday 11th November 2008 4:26pm
5,183 posts
Quote: David Bussell @ November 11 2008, 11:00 AM GMT
Hit the ground running. Don't waste time showing us who the characters are through conversation - put them in a situation and pit them against each other. Make it funny from page one. Always have a B story.
That's the best advice I can offer.
The Bussell speaks the truth.
I'd also add, make absolutely sure that you've set up the main story by page 3, and your B story by page 4 at the very most. I've read a lot of sitcoms people have sent me recently and the one common mistake I see being made is too much waffle at the start. You MUST hook the reader into the story early on or they'll bin your script, in exactly the same way as me or you would give a new tv programme a few minutes before switching channel because nothing's happened.
And try to start with a bang, whether that be a visual joke or a killer line or displaying a really interesting character trait or whatever. Don't ease into it gently. Start big, then build on it. If you've got the reader interested in the first few pages you've got them for the rest of the script.
Good luck