ToddB
Friday 27th May 2011 11:36pm [Edited]
Townsville
563 posts
Quote: sootyj @ May 26 2011, 7:00 AM BST
I would suggest you get a script from a sitcom you liked and go through identifying the gags and where they come from.
Often they are taking characters and finding diferent ways to over and over again remind us who they are and why they fail.
What I have noticed here is that a lot of comedy comes from subtle, physical reactions to what is said. I have read some scripts of shows that I like, where they do not indicate this in the script, and the script reads as much less funny than the end result on camera. Others I have read do this more - and the comedy is crearer. Sometimes it is not necessarily the line alone that makes it funny, it is the insincerity or sarcasm with which it is intended to be said. Similarly, some of the humour comes from looks that other characters give each other after a character has said something. This is something that we do when performing it live, obviously, but have not as yet transfrred to the page successfully.
As a playwright, I don't venture into doing this too much, as it is often frowned upon to dictate to actors too much in the script, but when writing for film, and for a reader who has never seen it, it probably is needed.
Also, I notice in the sitcom threads that you don't like some of my favourites - which could make this tricky...