Blenkinsop
Monday 26th January 2009 4:29am [Edited]
2,014 posts
I think Lee's right inasmuch as many scripts I've read are not particularly funny off the page.
I have both sets of The Office scripts and if I read them coldly and without imagining the actors playing those characters then they don't get anywhere near the total result of script, actors and production all working in harmony.
I believe consequently that it's a sort of black art that needs all the parts functioning together.
I think that the vision to get these shows made and to produce classics like The Royles and the Office etc must evolve in a lot of pre-production meetings where the characters' traits and subtle nuances are discussed and then built upon.
One of my favourite shows of all time is Early Doors and although I haven't read the scripts I know the lines well enough to imagine that, once agiain, the brilliance of this show is not purely down to the written word.
The written word is the keystone that everything else is built upon and it would be difficult to underestimate its importance in the process, however there is more to it than just the word, it's that certain je ne sais quoi,
La plume de ma tante Rodney!...hark at me will yah? Wittering on there like some kinda media studies graduate.